The Mainstreaming of Transgendered Identity
Recently, there has been an influx of transgendered characters in fictional TV shows and transgendered individuals on documentaries. I think this is a good development. In fact, I find the mainstreaming of transgendered individuals to be a step forward in the right direction. The media is so powerful that it has the capacity to make people more confortable with people of different sexual orientations and gender expressions.
Take, for example, the appearance of gay and lesbian characters on mainstream television shows in the past 10 years or so. If we grow accustomed to seeing gay and lesbian characters on television, does that make us more confortable with gay and lesbian individuals? I think that the answer is yes, especially for younger viewers. I would argue that growing up watching more diverse characters on television makes people more tolerant. So, what does this do for transgendered individuals?
The transgendered character on tv’s All My Children introduces a transgendered character to the daytime viewing audience. However, Zarf (the character in question) is strange at best. From what I have seen, Zarf’s eloquent speeches about being in the wrong body is coupled with a very strange personality with multiple identities. Another show that is scheduled to air a transgendered individual showcases a transgendered (MTF) woman with her wife (they were married before the husband transitioned) with a family of Wiccans and a variety of differently-abled individuals. Do these portrayals of trans individuals help or hinder the transgendered case? Is any publicity good publicity?
This hearkens back to discussions we’ve had about radical lesbian feminists. If Andrea Dworkin and her anti-porn legislation (or bra burners or protesters) are the only face a movement has in the media, does that make them more legitimate or less? Is mainstreaming even a good thing? Are we trying to build legitimacy within mainstream society for lesbian/gay/transgendered identity or do we want to embrace the full spectrum.
Links to TV shows with transgendered characters/individuals:
All My Children: http://abc.go.com/daytime/allmychildren/index.html
Michelle said,
February 13, 2007 at 1:21 pm
I am thinking about a couple of things when I read this entry. First, what do we mean when we use the word “tolerant”? I mean, I get how you are using it here, but I wonder what it implies. I have always had a real problem with the idea that we are “teaching tolerance” or that having exposure to queers makes others more tolerant. Tolerant of what, I wonder. I think of tolerance as a kind of neoliberal concept, one which begs questions about “the norm,” about who has the privilege to be tolerant or to deny tolerance. It’s sort of like the problem I have with the concept of “stereotypes.” What does the term “stereotype” mean about who does and does not have privilege? What does it mean about norms? How does it continue to police boundaries in problematic ways? Just some thoughts, a way of sharing my obsession with words and how they are used.