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Sports organization bans trans women & tells them to get therapy instead
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From the Julia Serano article I linked:
OK, so with all that context, let me try to address your comments and questions:
It depends heavily on the context. In scientific journal articles, what I see is the discussion is centered on "gender dysphoria" - they don't talk in terms of "being trans" or "transgender" anything, it's always "gender dysphoria". I think this won't work in the community because a lot of people feel that centering dysphoria is gatekeeping and excluding trans people who don't feel dysphoria or only feel euphoria, etc.
It's not even clear to me exactly what "transgenderism" encompassed, I feel that binary trans women who medically transition end up getting a lot of the attention from media, and most mainstream narratives about trans people center binary trans women who medically transition. So when someone says "trans" or "transgender" I think most people think of a binary trans woman who medically transitioned.
This creates a lot of problems because the history of how those terms even came about was as an umbrella term to include more gender-diverse people than just "transsexuals" (i.e. trans people who medically transition; as an aside, I don't like that this term has become taboo, I think it's a succinct term to communicate what I mean and I think we should actively resuscitate the term and take it back from the pseudoscience gatekeeping transmedicalists who seem to have made such a stink on it).
"Trans" and "transgender" is supposed to include non-binary folks, genderqueer people, cross-dressers, drag performers, agender people, bigender people, etc. - it's meant to be a big tent term under which all of us can identify and cooperate against the common struggles we face in a society that punishes gender non-conformity.
OK, back to your comment:
Let's try a few sentences out like you suggested:
Yes, at this point, the community will think this sounds right-wing and transphobic, and the average person on the street will think you're talking about how crazy the world has become because trans people exist now.
I agree this is a little awkward - "being trans" does feel a bit out of place.
But what about:
or even:
I think what you might be missing is that we don't need to perfectly substitute "transgenderism" with a single word or phrase that means the same thing in all contexts. If we drop that requirement and just focus on communicating what we're trying to mean, I think the words will just come.
There are lots of different ways to convey that idea too, in a comfortable context with someone I know and trust, I might just bemoan:
Of course this wouldn't sound great outside the context (an anti-trans person would certainly say the same thing, but mean a very different thing), but the context allows for the meaning to flow the right direction and not imply the wrong thing (i.e. you're not saying trans people didn't actually exist, you're saying there was so much less awareness and tools for understanding trans experience then, and more trans people were stealth or in the closet as a result, less visible - but still there).
So I guess I just wouldn't get too hung up on it, it's just good to be aware of the additional anti-trans connotation "transgenderism" has gained so you don't accidentally signal you are anti-trans yourself, but I think language should be open and we should feel free to carve out meanings of our own in our own spaces and contexts as they support them. Maybe there will be ironic uses of "transgenderism" that will allow the term a foothold in our community again, maybe the term will find new life that way, or maybe not.
Either way, the point isn't to become rigidly scrupulous about our language and police ourselves and others, it's more about raising awareness of the meanings that words carry in different contexts.