There
has been a steady increase in the number of letters being added to the name
“LGBT”: it used to be “gay and lesbian,” then, somewhere along the line, it was
decided that bisexuals—or some of them—are, after all, really bisexual (not just halfway-out-of-the-closet-homosexuals),
so we added the “B.” Then the “T” for transgender people was added. Because the
main reason for the additions was to reflect as accurately as possible the
diversity of the queer community, there was a felt need to add more in order to
include more: so we have “I” for “Intersex,” and “Q” for “queer” and/or for “questioning.”
As a side note, depending on what we
mean by “queer,” it could be that we might just as well use the “Q” and only
the “Q,” in place of the longer acronym, which is a suggestion that Jonathan
Rauch makes in “It’s Time to Drop the ‘LGBT’ from ‘LGBTQ’” (The Atlantic, January/February 2019).
This is because if it means something like “anything that is not
heteronormative” (whatever this means), then it would refer to all the
identities we wish to refer to and future ones that we have not yet imagined,
as long as they are not heteronormative: gays, lesbians, bisexuals, transgender
people, intersex people, and more. The problem with “Q” is that, despite its
tidiness, efficiency, and the ease with which it rolls off the tongue, it does
not properly reflect the diversity by
referring to each group using its own initial—it fails to recognize each group. It also faces the problem of being too inclusive, depending on how many
more identities it includes, which opens the door for perhaps some groups that
are not very morally wholesome, even though they are sexual minorities or
non-heteronormative.
So we are left with the daunting possibility
that the initials can keep expanding. Consider one such expanded version—LGBTQQIP2SAA,
which stands for “lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, questioning,
intersex, pansexual, two spirit, asexual, and ally” (mentioned in Rauch’s
article and in Jeffry J. Iovannone’s; https://medium.com/queer-history-for-the-people/a-brief-history-of-the-lgbtq-initialism-e89db1cf06e3). This is not only a mouthful, but one
with the potential of becoming more of a mouthful given that it can be expanded
with new identities, such as another “B” for “bigender” and “GQ” for
“genderqueer.”
Another variation is adding the “+”
at the end to arrive at “LGBTQI+.” Although some might see the “+” as a sign of
open-ended inclusion, it might as well be seen as a sign of desperation, in
effect saying, “We can’t keep up, so we’ll just add the ‘+’ to include
whichever identity comes up.” Using the “+,” however, is in effect the same as
using only the “Q,” but one put in place after the realization that the
addition of more letters had failed in the face of more and more incoming
identities. And its problems are the same as those of using just “Q.”
The problems that plague decisions
as to which letters to include in the acronym can be seen as the result of a
crucial yet unanswered question: Whom are we trying to group together under
this acronym? Is it non-heterosexual sexual orientations? Is it non-cis genders?
Is it people whose sex does not belong to the common sex binary? And to answer
this question, a more important one is why
we want to group together whomever we want to group. Is it because these groups
share a common property? Or is it because it is politically advantageous to do
so? I will discuss in this post some reasons for joining together these groups,
and raise problems with each of them. The discussion, I think, is interesting
and leads to fascinating issues.
One puzzling thing common to all these
suggested acronyms is the lumping together of sexual orientations with non-sexual
orientations. Consider LGBTQQIP2SAA: the “L,” “G,” “B,” and “P” (and maybe the
first “A,” depending on how we understand asexuality) refer to sexual
orientations, while “T” and “2S” refer to gender, while “I” refers to sex, while
others’ reference is ambiguous (both “Q’s,” the second “A,” and maybe the first
“A,” again depending on how we understand asexuality). My concern is
specifically with transgender and sexual orientation, and I will approach the
acronym in general through these two aspects—sexual orientation and gender—of a
person’s being.
What are some proffered reasons for
keeping them together? The website of the Cambridge University Students’
Campaign for LGBT+ (https://www.lgbt.cusu.cam.ac.uk/resources/trans/the-t-within-lgbt/) lists several reasons for why trans
people and gay people should be placed together. Let’s briefly examine them. (Reasons
[5] and higher on the following list are not from this website but mine.)
(1) “[M]any trans people are gay,
lesbian or bisexual and conversely many gay, lesbian or bisexual people are
trans.” But this is not good enough, because by the same token, many trans
people are straight, and many straight people are trans, yet this does not give
us a reason to include straight people under the umbrella of LGBTQ. Moreover, given
this reason, an acronym made up only of initials that refer to sexual
orientation identities can still include transgender people who are oriented to
members of the same gender or sex. (I am assuming for now that transmen and
transwomen are, respectively, men and women in the sense needed for them to be
gay and lesbian, given that the concepts of gay and lesbian refer not only to
the target of the sexual attraction, but to the sex or gender of the person
with the attraction; to wit, a lesbian is a woman
who is attracted to women, and a gay man is a man who is attracted to men. However, please note that this is a controversial
assumption because the issue is much more complicated owing to the differences
between gender and sex, and to whether sexual orientation refers to a person’s
sex, gender, or both. So, if sexual orientation refers to the sex of the person
with the orientation—if a man is gay because his sex, not his gender, is male—then
it’s unclear whether transmen who sexually desire other men are gay or have a
different sexual orientation altogether. I shall return to this issue below.)
(2) Historically speaking, trans
people have always been part of the gay community and have played a crucial
role in the gay rights movement. This, however, provides merely a historical
reason, not a conceptual one. Granted that historically speaking trans people
were part of the initial struggle, is there a non-historical reason that trans
people and gay people should be grouped together? To see this point better,
suppose that, historically speaking, vegans were part of the initial movement
of LGBT rights (I am not claiming that this is actual history—I am imagining
history to have been different to make a point). This would give us at most a
historical reason to put together vegans and LGBT people under the same name,
but it would not give us a conceptual reason.
(3) Learning to accept one’s trans
identity can be similar to learning to accept one’s gay identity, including the
social pressures one is subjected to when one comes out. However, unless we
have a more basic reason to assimilate gender to sexual orientation, this reason
is not different from any other process of coming out, such as coming out as
non-Zionist to one’s Zionist family and social group. Yet this gives us no
reason to include non-Zionists under the LGBT umbrella.
(4) “We’re stronger together.” But
this reason gives us as much reason to include anyone who can make us stronger
(the second “A” above for “allies”) or with whom we can both be strong together
(e.g., vegans).
What we need is a reason that
combines both sexual orientation and gender using one or more criteria to which
sexual orientation and gender are relevant, while reasonably excluding
irrelevant features. (The rest of the reasons that I examine are not from the
Cambridge website.) So, we might try:
(5) We share a common history of
oppression on the basis of sex or gender. This is a good start. After all, what
seems to be common to all the groups joined together under the LGBT+ umbrella
is some connection to sex or gender. But we have to be careful. Consider sex:
it is an ambiguous concept in that it refers to various things, including
gender (which is often used synonymously with “sex”) and sexual desire, the
latter of which can include sexual orientation. But this only pushes the question
one step back: Given that sex and sexual orientation are different things, why
group them together under the auspices of “oppression”? Consider next gender:
Given that sexual orientation and gender are very different things, why group
them together under the auspices of “oppression”?
In response, one might argue that
the same social systems that oppress people on the basis of gender or sex also
oppress them on the basis of sexual orientation, because such systems aim to
control various factors related to sex and gender, such as sexual desire and
activity, reproduction, and gender roles.
This is a promising response, but it
requires further argument. This is especially true in light of previous
feminist arguments in favor of separating
sexual orientation oppression from gender oppression (e.g., Cheshire Calhoun’s 1994 essay, “Separating
Lesbian Theory from Feminist Theory” [Ethics
104: 3, 558-581), and in favor of grouping together non-sexual with sexual
oppression because, say, patriarchy’s reach is far and near-exhaustive (e.g.,
Karen Warren’s 1990 essay, “The Power and Promise of Ecological Feminism” [Environmental Ethics 12: 2, 125-146]).
That is, there is no clear consensus one way or another about grouping these
issues together. This might be extended to argue that oppression on the basis
of binary genders is also different from oppression on the basis of
transgender. For instance, there is no reason to believe that the oppression of
ciswomen is the same as that of transwomen, and surely transmen face
obstacles that cismen do not. My point is that we need better arguments to
focus on and identify that precise system of oppression that oppresses on the
basis of the sexual in such a way that it includes both sexual orientation and transgender
identities. Vague references to patriarchal systems or to sexual minorities might
be insufficient given that the mechanisms and bases of oppression can differ in
ways that depend precisely on whether the target is sexual orientation or
gender.
(6) An interesting reason for
grouping sexual orientation and gender together is anchored in the popular
conception of sexual orientation. Some background is necessary before
explaining this reason.
Our current, popular conception of
sexual orientation is what I would call “dualist” or (as the philosopher Kathleen
Stock calls it), “reflexive” (“Sexual Orientation: What Is It?”; unpublished
manuscript in which Stock defends the popular conception of sexual orientation,
which she calls “the orthodox view”): it involves not only the sex (or gender) of
the object or target of the attraction, but also the sex (or gender) of the
person with the attraction. For instance, a lesbian is not only someone who is
sexually attracted to women, but is someone who is herself is a woman (hence we
often say that lesbians are attracted to other
women, with “other” implying the womanhood of the person with the orientation).
In general, homosexuals are attracted to members of the same sex, while heterosexuals are attracted to members of the opposite sex. The words “same” and
“opposite” imply a reference to the sex (or gender) or the person with the
orientation.
This dualist conception of sexual
orientation is different from a monist
conception, one which emphasizes only the target of the attraction. (A monist
conception could refer to only the
person with the orientation, but that would be a mere possibility and utterly pointless.)
An example of the monist conception was recently defended by the philosopher Robin
Dembroff in “What Is Sexual Orientation?” (Philosophers’ Imprint 16 [3], 1-27), in which
Dembroff conceives of sexual orientation only in terms of the sex and gender of
the object of the sexual attraction. Dembroff’s conception, that is, has no
reference to the sex (or gender) of the person with the orientation.
(Dembroff’s view is one example of the monist conception because their view, which
Dembroff calls “Bidimensional Dispositionalism,” considers the sex and/or
gender as bases of the attraction, whereas monism could elect only one of these
two as the basis.)
On the dualist conception, straight
men and lesbians have different sexual orientations, even though they have the
same type of object of desire. On the monist conception, they would have the same
sexual orientation. The current, popular or orthodox conception of sexual
orientation is the dualist or reflexive one, not the monist conception.
One thing to note about the dualist
conception is that not only does it link the sex (or gender) of the person with
the sexual orientation to the sex (or gender) of the target of the orientation,
but it does so in a very strong way, by making the sex (or gender) of the
person with the orientation primary.
What does this mean? It means this: if someone’s sexual orientation changes,
this does not change the sex (or gender) of the person. But if the person’s sex
(or gender) changes, this does change the person’s sexual orientation. For
instance, if Rafael used to be straight and, somehow, becomes gay, this would
not change Rafael’s sex (or gender), not unless Rafael decides to take the
additional step to make the change. But if Omar, who is, let’s say, straight,
changes his sex (or gender), he also changes his sexual orientation, without
needing to take any additional steps. Omar now becomes a homosexual woman
whereas he was once a heterosexual man. It is in this way that the popular or
dualist conception of sexual orientation strongly links a person’s object of attraction
with their own sex or gender.
The point is that this popular
conception of sexual orientation, by forging a strong link between one’s sex
(or gender) and sexual orientation, gives us a crucial reason to group together
gender and sexual orientation.
But despite its being a strong
reason, it is not ultimately convincing. This is because the popular conception
of sexual orientation makes essential reference to the person’s own sex (or
gender) only as far as sexual
orientation is concerned. This sounds trivial, but it actually is not. To
explain: the popular conception refers to one’s sex (or gender) only to
elucidate one’s sexual orientation. When we say that X is attracted to women, we need to know X’s sex (or gender) in order to know X’s sexual orientation. This means that the popular conception is
not concerned with someone’s sex (or gender) as such, which means that it gives us no reason to group gender
with sexual orientation just because
that someone has a particular gender. Thus, if we are trying to group together
identities on the basis of sexual orientations or on the basis of gender, it
still makes little sense to group transgender people with LGB people using this
conception of sexual orientation.
(7) Another reason for keeping the
“T” and the “LGB” together is the following. (I beg your patience because this
will be a bit complicated.) I have been writing as if sex and gender are
interchangeable for the purposes of sexual orientation. For instance, I have
been writing that the popular conception refers to the sex (or gender) of the
object of attraction and of the person with the orientation. But some believe
that the popular conception refers primarily to the sex, not the gender, of the
person with the sexual orientation and of the object of the orientation. (Kathleen
Stock, in her essay, defends this claim though she does not explain why sexual
orientation works this way—a difficult task by all means. Dembroff, in their
essay [p.3], states that the popular conception is a “conceptual jumble” when
it comes to a number of points, including lack of clarity as to whether sexual
orientation is about sex or gender.) That is, a gay man is gay because his sex
is male, and he is attracted to other men because they are sexually male, not
merely because their gender is male. Of course, their gender is usually the
epistemic entryway to one’s desire: Muhamad, as a gay man, is attracted to Owen
(partly) because he perceives Owen to be a man, and he perceives Owen to be a
man (partly) on the basis of Owen’s perceptible gender or gender presentation.
In addition, as Stock explains in
her essay, to claim that the concept of sexual orientation primarily refers to
sex, not to gender, is to claim that in a large number of cases (and this is of
course ultimately an empirical claim), what sustains Muhammad’s desire for
other men is Muhammad’s belief and perception that they are male—that their sex
and body is male. It is also to claim, as a corollary, that were Muhammad to
discover that Owen is a transman, Muhammad’s sexual desire for Owen likely ceases
or weakens, and that additional elements have to be present for his desire for
Owen to continue. For example, his attraction to Owen on the basis of Owen’s
physical looks is so strong that it sidelines his lack of attraction to him on
the basis of his belief that Owen’s sex might not be male or typically male
(though how far this strong attraction takes Muhammad is unclear: maybe to make
out with Owen, but not to engage in sexual activity or certain forms of sexual
activity).
Is it plausible for the popular
conception of sexual orientation to primarily refer to sex, not gender? One
argument that it is plausible goes as follows: Sex, not gender, is primary in
the concept of sexual orientation because the attraction—gay, straight, or
other—to other people is sexual, and
sexual attraction is strongly tied to the role that the person’s sexed-body and
genitalia play in the attraction. Put differently, sexual attraction to others
is sex-dependent in that it is tied to what we believe their bodies are like,
including their sex organs. This does not mean that people are attracted to
each other only after they have seen each naked or seen each other’s genitalia,
or that people are attracted only to each other’s genitalia or that when they
have sex they focus only on the genitalia. Instead, it means that the belief
that the object of one’s sexual attraction is male, female, or a specific configuration
of sex and genitalia typically animates and sustains the attraction for the
other. It forms the background condition for desiring someone. The other’s body
is seen as attractive in light of beliefs about their sex. For instance,
imagine seeing a pair of hairless legs but in such a way that you cannot see
the rest of the person’s body and are thus unable to form beliefs about their
sex. Coming to know or to form beliefs about their sex will likely affect your
sexual attraction to the legs: if you are straight and you come to know that
they are the legs of someone of the same-sex, this will likely deflate your
attraction to them. (I say “likely,” “primarily,” and so on because these are
all generalizations and variations in human beings’ sexual attractions are well
known.)
The focus on sex has an explanation likely
based in evolution and the role that the sex organs play in procreation. Beliefs
and perceptions about the sexual organs and sex of the other are likely crucial
in the formation of desire because this would be nature’s way of getting us to
copulate heterosexually. It would make little sense, evolutionarily speaking,
for us to feel sexual desire regardless of our beliefs of the other’s sex
because this would have led to less-than-efficient mating strategies. Again, this
does not mean that every time a heterosexual couple desires to have sex they
also desire to procreate, let alone that gay couples want to procreate whenever
they desire to have sex. Sex to us is
crucially a mental matter, and on the
surface sexual desire has many goals (primarily sensual and non-sensual
pleasure, but also status, conquest, etc.), but the historical formation of sexual desire likely has an evolutionary
explanation, and this is what we need in order to explain the role that sex and
sex organs play in desire, even when they deviate from heterosexual statistical
norms, as they do in same-sex attraction or in cases of attraction to mixed-sex
bodies.
If, then, sexual orientation links
the sex of the person who has the orientation to the sex of the object of
attraction, it is possible that a new category of sexual orientation (or more
than one category, actually) can arise for people whose sex does not conform to
the two binaries, for people whose sexual attraction is for those whose sex
does not conform to the binaries, or for people who are both. We can add
letters as we see fit to the acronym. Here, however, we have to be careful.
Consider Ahmad, who is sexually attracted to gender non-conforming individuals.
This attraction, on its own, does not usher in a new sexual orientation (if,
that is, we keep fixed the concept’s reference to sex and not widen it to
include gender) because it does not tell us what Ahmad’s attraction is to, as
far as the sex of the object of
attraction is concerned: it does not tell us whether Ahmad is attracted to
gender non-conforming individuals who are sexually male, female, or other. If
Ahmad is attracted to male gender
non-conforming individuals, then he would—or should—be classified as gay on the
popular conception. If he is attracted to female gender non-conforming
individuals, then he would—or should—be classified as heterosexual. (The
“should” is important because if the popular conception of sexual orientation
refers not only to the sex of the object of attraction, but also to the match between
the sex and the corresponding socially accepted gender, Ahmad’s sexual
orientation would be in limbo. What makes this issue even more complicated is
that “gender” can refer to various things, from basic bodily appearance to
comportment to mannerisms to clothes to other things.)
Going back to adding new letters to
the acronym: we can establish the existence of sexual orientations of and to people whose sex does not conform to the usual sex binaries. Because
on the popular conception of sexual orientation the sex of the person with the
orientation is either the same as or opposite to that of the object of the
attraction, and because the sex of non-binary people is neither the same nor
opposite to the binary sexes, we will have on our hands new sexual
orientations, using the popular conception as our template. We can, then, by
going beyond the sex binaries, add sexual orientations on the basis of the
non-binary sex of the person with the new orientation or on the basis of the
non-binary sex of the person who is the object of the attraction.
(There might be, however,
constraints that such orientations need to meet in order to count as genuine
sexual orientations, whatever this means; for instance, that they are
numerically large enough to matter, and that they are not variations on the other basic sexual orientations, though how to
fix these constraints is a philosophical headache.)
The point, however, of this
discussion is to provide a reason to group transgender people with LGB people.
Do we have this reason? We will have it only
if we make the following assumption: that people whose sex does not fall into
the sex binary are transgender people. It is this assumption that will take us
from the new sexual orientations to transgender identities. But, obviously,
this is a false assumption because of the crucial differences between sex and
gender that allow people of the same sex to have different genders and that
allow people of the same gender to have different sexes. Just because someone’s
sex is not one of the two sexes does not mean that they will be transgender. So
this reason, interesting, fascinating, and instructive as it is, fails.
(8) One final reason for grouping
together sexual orientation and transgender was suggested to me by my colleague
and friend, Andy Yang (though he does not necessarily endorse it). It goes as
follows: it makes sense to classify transgender people with LGB people because
the former were or will at one point be gay or lesbian themselves. How so? Consider
a cisman who becomes a woman: if he used to be straight, s/he will become a
lesbian upon becoming a woman; if he used to be gay, s/he will become straight
upon becoming a woman, but he was at some point gay. Either way, a trans person
will have at some point in their life a gay sexual orientation.
Interesting as this reason is, it
faces some difficulties. First, trans people who consider themselves to be
members of the LGBTQ+ community need not think of themselves as members of the
community because of the above
reason. They might think they are members because they are, simply, trans and
trans people have always been considered as part of the LGBT community. Now, I
admit that this difficulty smuggles in a constraint on what counts as a good
reason for the grouping together of transgender and LGB groups, a constraint
that I have not yet raised (but that’s because I hadn’t yet needed to), namely,
that a good reason for the grouping should cohere with the reasons that the members
of the groups themselves have for the grouping. I am, however, unsure of the
importance of this constraint because, though it might be important for
political cohesion, it is less important for conceptual reasons for the
grouping.
A second difficulty, and one
connected to the first, is that the suggestion relies on sexual orientation as
a description or property of who one is, whereas the letters in “LGBTQ+” might
refer to more than that, to an explicitly adopted or accepted identity, such that one is not merely a
homosexual but also gay, with all the cultural and political connotations that
come with it. Indeed, given the politics behind the acronym, it is best
understood as referring to political identities, not merely to one’s
descriptive property of, say, having a same-sex orientation. If so, then what
might matter to a trans person is their identity as trans, not their sexual
orientation as such, and what matters to a lesbian is her lesbian identity, not
merely her same-sex sexual orientation. (More on this below.)
A third difficulty is that the
reason’s convincingness rests on the dualist conception of sexual orientation.
If we change this conception to a monist one, we pull the rug from under this
reason. Since, however, I have been operating with the popular conception, this
difficulty is not severe.
A fourth difficulty with this reason
is that it cherry picks what it wants from the popular conception of sexual
orientation. On the one hand, it relies on the popular conception’s reflexivity
or dualism to make its point. On the other, it neglects what might be a crucial aspect of the
conception, which is its reference to sex, not to gender. (“Might” because this
aspect of the conception is debatable.) On the popular view, and given the
reference to sex, a straight man who becomes a woman need not become a lesbian
because the concept of lesbian is sex-dependent, and much will depend on the
transwoman’s body and how many female sex features it has. The point is that it
is assuming very much to claim that trans people become lesbians or gay if they
used to be straight (or straight if they used to be lesbian or gay). So this
last reason should not bank on it.
I have considered eight reasons for
putting together sexual orientation and transgender groups, and I have come up
mostly empty-handed. At the least, none of the reasons is straightforwardly
convincing. This should not be a surprise, because, in general, sexual orientation
and gender are very different kinds of thing. The first is primarily about
one’s sexual energies and attractions, and the second is about, well, gender.
It seems to me that the best reasons
for the grouping will have to be political—that is, that being joined at the
hip will allow these groups to attain political gains more efficiently, attain more
political gains, or (inclusive “or”) attain more political gains more
efficiently. But we have to remember that we are now in different times: in the
west, gay people have attained their rights, and though they suffer from
homophobia and other challenges every now and then and every here and there,
their war is almost won. Not so for transgender people. Moreover, there has
been some recent fractions among these groups, especially between gender
critical feminists and some transgender thinkers and activists, which indicates
that we need to get our political ducks in a row before we start speaking of
attaining these goals together.
Indeed, the need to get our political
ducks in a row is more evident if we understand the acronym to refer to the
political and cultural identities of being gay and trans, as opposed to sexual
orientation and gender descriptive aspects of one’s being (e.g., a reference merely
to one’s desires for members of the same sex, or merely to one’s feeling of
belonging to a different gender). For in the former case, political and
cultural identities imply political goals and postures not implied, or not
implied so obviously, by a reference to a description of one’s being. Given
that the acronym clearly refers to the political and cultural identities of
being gay and trans, coming to an agreement to what the respective political
and social goals are is a must.
However, to my mind, political reasons
for unity do not themselves have much cache unless they are grounded in
something else, something that gives us a good reason to group these groups together but not those. That is, the political reasons
themselves must be grounded in something that unifies LGBT groups with each
other as opposed to unifying, say, trans people with other groups, if unity
with these other groups is better for the hoped-for political and social gains.
The closest we have to unify LGBT groups is that they are all sexual minorities,
which might be a good enough reason to start with for political purposes,
though I worry, as I argued early on in this post, about using the ambiguous
concept of sex to justify this grouping.
I have conducted this discussion on
the basis of the popular or dualist conception of sexual orientation. On a
monist conception, whether Dembroff’s Bidimensional Dispositionalism or another
version of the monist conception, we do not have better reasons to join the two
groups together. Monist conceptions focus solely on the sex (or gender) of the
object of attraction, so there is no temptation to develop arguments that
proceed from a conception of sexual orientation that relies also on the sex (or
gender) of the person with the orientation.
Thus, the acronym “LGBTQ” needs to
be seriously re-thought. If we are to keep it intact or if we are to add more
letters to it, we should make sure we have a good reason for doing either or
both.
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