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- Path: sparky!uunet!newsstand.cit.cornell.edu!vax5.cit.cornell.edu!ikf
- From: ikf@vax5.cit.cornell.edu
- Newsgroups: soc.bi
- Subject: Re: Bisexuality and androgyny
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.230758.17075@vax5.cit.cornell.edu>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 23:07:58 EST
- References: <1993Jan18.060904.17015@udel.edu> <16B5A11EC5.SILVERI@QUCDN.QueensU.CA> <1k2a10INNq9o@network.ucsd.edu>
- Distribution: soc
- Organization: Cornell University
- Lines: 37
-
- In article <1k2a10INNq9o@network.ucsd.edu>,
- vanhoek@bend.ucsd.edu (Karen van Hoek) writes:
- > I recently read the book _Closer to Home_; many of the essays talk about
- > how the bisexual movement is going to do away with gender and lead us
- > to a truly androgynous society. It got me wondering -- _are_ we all
- > into androgyny, and if so, to what extent? Certainly I'm a feminist
- ...
- > notice or care about gender -- not true for me. I like men who look
- > masculine, with as many of the secondary sex characteristics as possible
- > (deep voice, body hair, muscles, etc.), and I like women who look and
- > dress feminine (I tend to wear skirts and makeup a fair bit, myself).
- > I wonder if I'm unusual, and if everyone else in the bi movement likes
- > the androgynous look for both sexes. Any comments?
- > Karen
-
- I think that androgyny encompasses far more than standards about dress and
- appearance and behavior. It's important to remember that much of the dress
- you describe is *enforced* by social approbation. An androgynous society
- would mean, for me, that there *isn't* a code of dress or behavior enforced.
-
- The fact that you can say, masculine characteristics, feminine characteristics,
- is indicative of a social construct relating a particular set of behaviors
- with a particular gender.
-
- Such constructs are a way of reinforcing gender-centered control, e.g. the
- patriarchy under which many of us suffer, because gender becomes a more
- visible and separable, and thus segregable, basis for judgement.
-
- Androgynous *appearance* helps to break down these constructs.
-
- For further reading, I suggest 'the lathe of heaven' by ursula le guin. She
- uses race in much the way I am discussing androgyny: the main character
- wishes racial tension to go away, and everyone turns grey. When this
- character moves to restore this later, some people remain grey while others
- move toward black or white. Likewise, I see androgyny as promoted by the
- bisexual movement to be a stage: we can reclaim difference later once the
- enforced constructs begin to be overcome.
-