gender & sexuality issues in fandom, some thoughts
(Icon used semi-ironically!)
So I'm following unfunnybusiness@JF to keep updated on a lot of outrageous things (good source for interesting news actually though I need to find another place with more gender/LGBTQ-specific issues and China-issues) and it's been very educational and also very...rage-inducing.
ffrantsrants is entertaining especially for fandom meta; possibly I should start following
metafandom?
sf_drama?
Anyway, the point is that I've run across a lot of gender/LGBTQ current issues lately that, paired with my readings for my Sexuality and the Law class, are fascinating and make me wish I had the time to meta about how fandom (as I've encountered) deals with these issues. Genderswap, for instance, is poorly-named, when it's actually changing the physical sex of the character in question. Is it propogating stereotypes? Is it enforcing the mainstream view of binary genders and binary sexes? Of course, "it's just a kink" and that may (or may not) excuse it to some degree, as long as the people who enjoy it are still aware of the actual issues in the world involving genderqueer individuals. (After all, rape fantasies are only just fantasies and I wish people would learn to distinguish liking a kink from supporting something IRL. Also: YKINMK.) I don't know that I have much (or any) authority to be speaking on these issues but I do know I want to learn more.
Though always to keep in mind is this comment by
alana_r (in this mess of a post about gender identity):
Sadly I don't have a lot of time today or this week to really get into an in-depth discussion about these issues or thoughts - I don't even know if the flist is interested. Kpop fandom as a whole, in my experience, has not been as keen to discuss these issues as other fandoms. But that's just my experience and I suppose factors like the average age of fandom, the fact that there seem to be a lot more non-native English speakers active in fandom (i.e., they are therefore less likely to hold debates about serious issues where they are unfamiliar with the nuances of terminology, like I would never try to bring up a discussion of these issues in Chinese), and other things contribute to the non-debate. I don't know. Just speculating.
Also relevant is the fact that the "canon" is an entirely different culture from what native English speakers know. Not that that should preclude discussion, but it is something that affects how the whole binary gender, gender roles, LGBTQ culture, etc. are viewed (within the culture).
I don't even know what I'm trying to say except these issues/topics fascinate me and have been on my mind lately and here! This is me sharing. Pretentious post is pretentious, probably, but hay I gots learnings, let me show 'em off! No, really, just some random thoughts about things I'd like to learn more about.
/eyes the post critically. After reading too much wank (the stuff you learn!), I'm super-wary about any turns of phrases or unintentional messages I may be sending that offend. Pretentious I can probably deal with; offensive, I'd rather not be.
TL;DR - Sometimes I do more than flail superficially at hot people! And sometimes I think that's worth sharing.
So I'm following unfunnybusiness@JF to keep updated on a lot of outrageous things (good source for interesting news actually though I need to find another place with more gender/LGBTQ-specific issues and China-issues) and it's been very educational and also very...rage-inducing.
Anyway, the point is that I've run across a lot of gender/LGBTQ current issues lately that, paired with my readings for my Sexuality and the Law class, are fascinating and make me wish I had the time to meta about how fandom (as I've encountered) deals with these issues. Genderswap, for instance, is poorly-named, when it's actually changing the physical sex of the character in question. Is it propogating stereotypes? Is it enforcing the mainstream view of binary genders and binary sexes? Of course, "it's just a kink" and that may (or may not) excuse it to some degree, as long as the people who enjoy it are still aware of the actual issues in the world involving genderqueer individuals. (After all, rape fantasies are only just fantasies and I wish people would learn to distinguish liking a kink from supporting something IRL. Also: YKINMK.) I don't know that I have much (or any) authority to be speaking on these issues but I do know I want to learn more.
Though always to keep in mind is this comment by
The world is bigger and more complicated than your studies have taught you, because the majority of academic writing about gender identity and sexuality has been done by cisgendered people who don't know a lot about what it's like. You've accidentally stepped in some poo because you think of sexual identity issues as a fascinating topic for study and you just ran into people for whom it's THEIR LIFE, so they took some things you said as offensive and you don't get why because academically, everything you said was accurate... but academia itself has a cisgender bias that transpeople can find hurtful. Read some writings *of* transpeople (I hear "Whipping Girl" by Julia Serrano is a great resource) and remember that academic study of humans absolutely requires objectifying them in order to study them objectively... but people who have been objectified all their lives can hear when you're doing it, and it upsets them. You have to learn to turn the academics off when you're talking to humans for whom your issue of study is not academic at all, but is their real life.
Sadly I don't have a lot of time today or this week to really get into an in-depth discussion about these issues or thoughts - I don't even know if the flist is interested. Kpop fandom as a whole, in my experience, has not been as keen to discuss these issues as other fandoms. But that's just my experience and I suppose factors like the average age of fandom, the fact that there seem to be a lot more non-native English speakers active in fandom (i.e., they are therefore less likely to hold debates about serious issues where they are unfamiliar with the nuances of terminology, like I would never try to bring up a discussion of these issues in Chinese), and other things contribute to the non-debate. I don't know. Just speculating.
Also relevant is the fact that the "canon" is an entirely different culture from what native English speakers know. Not that that should preclude discussion, but it is something that affects how the whole binary gender, gender roles, LGBTQ culture, etc. are viewed (within the culture).
I don't even know what I'm trying to say except these issues/topics fascinate me and have been on my mind lately and here! This is me sharing. Pretentious post is pretentious, probably, but hay I gots learnings, let me show 'em off! No, really, just some random thoughts about things I'd like to learn more about.
/eyes the post critically. After reading too much wank (the stuff you learn!), I'm super-wary about any turns of phrases or unintentional messages I may be sending that offend. Pretentious I can probably deal with; offensive, I'd rather not be.
TL;DR - Sometimes I do more than flail superficially at hot people! And sometimes I think that's worth sharing.

Page 1 of 3