[personal profile] rax
So my goal in giving this talk was to get through a coherent arc explaining gender theory and why you should care in 12 minutes and then have time for discussion. (KFA time slots are 20 minutes long.) I left out roughly a zillion things, which is OK, because that was sort of the point; I also think I actually did a good job, and got people thinking, and sparked interesting discussion, and hopefully encouraged people to do some further reading and/or conversing.

In giving the talk, I set myself the challenge of not using the words "discourse," "problematic," or "deconstruct." Obviously (or at least obviously if you talk to me a lot) this is not because I think those words have no value; I find them important in how I understand the world around me and if anything overuse them. Arguably, though, theorists and genderheads as a whole if anything overuse them, and it's something people have explicitly said turns them off to thinking about theory at all, and so I figured in a basic brief talk, I should avoid them. Another word I've been told is a major turn-off, although I didn't explicitly set out not to use it in this talk, is "oppression;" I've as a result been trying to think twice before using it. Unlike the others, which generally have less loaded (if also less usefully loaded) synonyms, not using "oppression" makes me nervous for calling-a-spade-a-spade issues. I'm torn, and I figure "thinking about it" is the right place for now.

You can watch the presentation video by clicking on this link. I'd embed it but I'm pretty sure LJ won't let me do that due to the recent security issue; just in case, here it is:


Gender Theory and Why You Should Care from maymay on Vimeo.


I'd really love to know what people think. I'd especially love to hear from people about what you think the most important things missing are; I have some thoughts but I want to hear other perspectives before I share them all. A bit of explanation (not that it necessarily negates potential criticism) --- I wasn't sure how to introduce myself because I wanted to avoid using identity labels but also wanted to express that it was worth spending twenty minutes listening to me talk about this topic. In general (and I blame [profile] circuit_four in part for this, as well as the whole ##crawl-offtopic gang) I've been trying to hold both "identity affiliations are powerful" and "identity affiliations reinforce things I don't like" in my head at the same time lately. It takes a lot of energy, but they do interesting things when put in the same place; I think that the end of this talk is one of them. If you have suggestions for things I should go read by other people who have been holding those ideas in their head together for much longer than I have, I'd love them; in particular I recently read Covering by Kenji Yoshino (Amazon link) and while he doesn't focus on that duality, he does touch on it. Really, though, that book should be its own post...

Anyway, I'd love criticism, and I'm also in a mood where I could really go for any praise you've got lying around, too. :)

(no subject)

Date: 2009-09-28 09:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bookofjude.livejournal.com
That was great! First of all, I have to agree with the other commenter up there who said you have a great speaking voice. You do! It's really nice to listen to.

I have to agree that 'intrinsic' or 'immutable' sexuality certainly isn't the way to look at it--neither is 'born with it' or 'decided to do it', because really, why does it matter? If someone suddenly decided they wanted to be gay, I don't think there should be anything to stop them, nor should gender discrimination laws suddenly not apply to them. Likewise, were this a cyberpunk novel, I don't think that racial discrimination laws shouldn't apply to someone just because they used cybernetics to change their skin colour.

I'll need to re-watch later, though, when my Internet isn't running slow and making it buffer every ten or so seconds.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-09-28 11:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rax.livejournal.com
I agree that none of the "born with it," "decided to do it," &c. models are perfect, if only because different people could get to the same place different ways and the path (usually, I'm not comfortable saying always without thinking really hard about it) shouldn't matter.

(sorry)

Date: 2009-09-29 03:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] davidglasser.livejournal.com
That's a very conservative way of looking at it.

Re: (sorry)

Date: 2009-09-30 03:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rax.livejournal.com
...I don't get it?

Re: (sorry)

Date: 2009-09-30 05:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] davidglasser.livejournal.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservative_force

... yeah sorry.

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