The Trouble with Token Panels #wfc2009

So this year we have had an LGBT panel at Worldcon and an LG panel at World Fantasy. In both cases the write-up of the panel was all about whether the subgroup in question is now fully accepted by society, with the underlying premise that the answer to that question was “yes”. In both cases the people on the panel answered the question with a resounding “NO”.

Yeah, sure, President Obama has just signed the Hate Crimes Act, and lifted the ban on HIV positive people entering the USA. But you know, if queer people were fully accepted by mainstream society they wouldn’t need hate crimes legislation, would they?

So do you think that maybe next year we could not have any more of those panels, and maybe talk about something else with LGBT themes instead?

It all comes down to tokenism in the end. Having a token gay character in a book might be progress from not having at characters at all, but having just one gay character who appears to stand for all gay people, and whose portrayal is heavy on the stereotypes, and whose function in the story is to highlight the problems of gay people in society, is still all about gay people being a problem. And so are panels like this.

Sadly they are still necessary, because one of the first comments from the audience was someone going on about how as a reader if he discovers that a character is gay he immediately wonders why the author has chosen to make that character gay. And that means that in his mind being gay is somehow exceptional, not “normal”. Being white and male heterosexual is “normal”. Anything else the author is expected to justify in some way. -sigh-

But we did have a good panel today. One comment of Malindo Lo’s that I tweeted got a lot of notice. She said she has got a lot of questions about how realistic it was to have a fantasy world in which there is no homophobia, because didn’t she know that in medieval times people were really homophobic. And she tends to answer those questions by pointing out that her book has fairies in it too. Is it really easier to believe in fairies than in a society that is free from homophobia? Apparently it is.

I also discovered the Doselle Young is a really awesome panelist, so if he’s coming to a convention you are running make sure that you use him.

And finally, to get back to the question of tokenism, I got in a comment about how a single L, G, B or T person tends to get seen as standing for the entire group, which makes writing that character quite difficult. I think it was Grá Linnaea who said, “You know, it is really odd for a gay character not to have any gay friends.”

Cruelty Beyond Belief

In February 2007 a woman was taken ill on board a cruise ship in Miami. She was rushed to hospital, but the prognosis was not good and she died very quickly. Her partner and children had accompanied her to the hospital, but once the patient had been whisked away by hospital staff they were not allowed any access to her until the last rites were read. The children were not allowed to see her at all. Why? No, there was no infectious disease or anything like that. It was simply because the dying woman and her partner were lesbians and, in the words of one hospital worker were, “in an anti-gay city and state.”

The story is news again today because, after a long court case, a District Judge has ruled that the hospital was perfectly within its rights. Because lesbians cannot marry in Florida, it is perfectly legal to deny their families access to them when they are ill.

Nicola Griffith has more on the story.

What boggles me about the whole thing is that the hospital staff could be so consumed with hatred for a particular group of their fellow human being that they could be that cruel to two complete strangers and their three young children.

When is a Sex Offender Not a Sex Offender?

When she is a female Intersex or Transsexual person and lives in Australia, apparently.

I got this story via Kate Bornstein on Twitter. It sounds too crazy to be true. (Kate had doubts at first as well.) But I have been checking it out and it looks real. Here’s the story.

A common issue for both some Intersex people and male-to-female Transsexuals is suppression of male hormones. For Intersex people who identify as female this can help avoid the masculinizing effects that their unusual biology forces upon them. So someone like Caster Semenya, who has grown up female and identifies as such, may take pills to stop the excess of male hormones in her body making her look too much like a bloke.

For male-to-female Transsexuals such therapies are very important in the crucial period between being accepted for treatment and surgery. Most countries require MtFs to live as women for a few years to show that they can cope in their new gender role before allowing them to undergo surgery. That task is much more difficult for them if their bodies are still pumping out male hormones unchecked. Just think facial hair. Most FtMs can stop taking these treatments after a few years, but some, either through choice or because of medical conditions, are unable to have surgery.

A commonly used drug for these purposes is Androcur (the trade name of cyproterone acetate). It is even, as this site notes, prescribed to people who are raised female with no obvious intersex condition but who develop a problem with facial hair.

But not in Australia. Because in Australia, under this regulation, you can only be prescribed Androcur if you have prostate cancer or if you are a male sex offender who is being treated to reduce your sex drive.

As a result, doctors treating Intersex people and MtF Transsexuals in Australia — in the absence of a cancer diagnosis — have to register them as “sexual deviants” who are receiving treatment for dangerous behavior. Understandably some people in Australia are not too happy about this.

As I said earlier, this is so bizarre than both Kate and I were initially skeptical. However, I have since found this report by the Australian Human Rights Commission which clearly states:

the health system is not inclusive of people who are sex and gender diverse. Several responses mentioned that in order to receive specific hormone treatment a person must be labeled a sexual deviant.

I’m currently trying to find out exactly what the consequences are of this labeling, and whether the patients are necessarily aware of being so labeled. The explanation that I currently have suggests that the records in question are kept by a body called the Therapeutic Goods Administration, and they may go no further than that, but on the other hand they could be searchable by potential employers. I’m also interested in when the regulations came into effect. The information I have so far suggests 1995 or 1996.

If anyone in Australia has more information on this I’d be delighted to hear from them.

Update: More information here from Caitlin Ate who is a prominent Australian blogger and therefore hopefully won’t get accused of being anti-Australian for discussing the issue.

Update 2: More information on this comes from Zoe Brain. Two rather bizarre pieces of information. Firstly people in Australia can apparently be prevented from seeing their own medical records on “privacy” grounds. And secondly the list of “male” sex offenders kept by the TGA is apparently so discredited that being on it is no barrier to getting security clearance, especially if you happen to be a woman. Isn’t bureaucracy wonderful?

The Totem Pole of Oppression

Left wing groups and bloggers often accuse each other of playing a “more oppressed than thou” card – something which is also called “climbing up the greasy totem pole of oppression.” The idea is that whichever group or person can claim to be most oppressed has the moral high ground. It is a really awful way to do politics, but at the same time it has some basis in reality.

Consider: today the Gubernator of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger, signed into law several bills that the local LGBT community had been campaigning for. These include the establishment of Harvey Milk Day on May 22nd to celebrate LGBT rights movement, and agreeing to recognize same-sex marriages performed in other parts of the USA. This is all well and good.

However, as Monica Roberts reports, the Gubernator also vetoed a number of bills specifically designed to benefit trans people.

Politicians like Arnie don’t do things like this by accident. They make very careful assessments of the state of public opinion and act accordingly. Arnie clearly thinks that he can’t get away with being down on lesbians and gays (and indeed may sympathize with them), but he feels that he can’t be seen to be sympathetic to trans people (even if he is). He makes the LGBT lobby happy in some ways, and panders to the religious right in others. And because of the way the public views different parts of the LGBT community it is the T people who come off worst.

Pretty much the same is true in the UK. Today the Equality & Human Rights Commission issued a paper titled Beyond Tolerance which seeks to lay out guidelines for progressing LGB (but not T) rights in Britain. This particular quote caught my eye:

Seven in 10 lesbians (69 per cent) and gay men (70 per cent) felt they could be open about their sexual orientation in the workplace without fear of discrimination or prejudice. This contrasts sharply with only around two in 10 (23 per cent) bisexual men and three in 10 (30 per cent) bisexual women who felt the same.

In other words, public acceptance of bisexuality in the UK lags far behind public acceptance of homosexuality. Had trans people been included in the study in question I’m fairly sure that the number that felt they could be open about their status at work would have been well below 10%.

But with social acceptability comes a price. Trans people in the UK are, at least in theory, allowed to keep their status secret. If they are outed against their will by someone who needed to know (e.g. a pensions company) then in theory they can sue. The same is not true, as far as I’m aware, of LGB people. Indeed, the whole thrust of the Beyond Tolerance paper is that LGB people must be more open about themselves, and be prepared to stand up and be counted, specifically in government surveys, so that their place in society can be better understood and better catered for. The EHRC acknowledges that some people in certain professions, in certain parts of the country, and so on, cannot be as open as they might like, but it places the onus on those who are fortunate to stand up for their colleagues.

It is a messy business, this dealing with diversity, and I don’t envy people whose job it is to try to craft policies and make them work. Inevitably whatever you do cannot be right for everyone, so someone is bound to yell FAIL! at you. All that we can hope for is that we keep on moving forward.

National LGBT News Weekend

Today, October 11th, is National Coming Out Day in the USA, so the weekend has been full of LGBT related news. Here’s a quick round-up of things that caught my attention.

Actually I would like to start by saying that while it is great that we can have events like this, we should also spend a bit of time remembering all of those people who cannot have a coming out day because coming out would be disastrous for themselves and/or their loved ones. That’s just as important as celebrating the progress we have made.

And talking of progress, last night President Obama addressed a gala HRC dinner in Washington as part of the National Equality March (NEM). Video of his entire speech found its way onto YouTube. Monica Roberts has the whole thing. As with most Obama speeches, it is very inspiring. Here’s hoping he can actually deliver on those promises. I can imagine how difficult it is going to be.

Meanwhile there are grumblings in my Twitter feed about how Bi and Trans people are being erased from the whole NEM process. Mara Keisling, who is in Washington, says this is something of an illusion created by the media and the reality on the ground is rather different. Nevertheless, while Obama did say “LGBT” a few times, and “gender identity” once, his speech concentrated pretty much exclusively on gay and lesbian issues. The only good news is that he spent much of the time talking generally about civil rights and equality issues.

I’m trying not to be picky here, but this weekend in the UK (where we celebrate National Coming Out Day on the 12th instead) there was a fairly serious row in the LGBT community over one gay man’s attempt to run a protest on behalf of trans people. Unfortunately he managed to offend much of the trans community in the process. Roz has the sorry details.

This reminds me of something that happened while I was living in Melbourne. A local LG activist group decided to set up an operation to fight for trans rights. Any trans people who came along to the initial meeting were presented with a pledge that they were required to sign in return for help from the lesbian and gay community. That pledge asserted that gender dysphoria was a myth, that there was no biological basis to being trans, and that as trans people they were simply making a choice to adopt gendered behavior that was different from that normally expected of people of their actual biological sex. Needless to say, the group didn’t get very far.

Thankfully by no means all “LGBT” groups are so unwilling to listen to their members. I’ve been very impressed with the Outer Alliance folks so far. They are running a blogging festival in conjunction with National Coming Out Day. When there’s a link list available I’ll point you at it.

And finally, a quick reminder of the LGBT issue of Crossed Genres which is due out on Nov. 1st. It has an article by me in it, and the nice CG folks have kindly listed me above Kate Bornstein in their list of star contributors, which is a bit scary.

A Little Link Salad

Very briefly:

At the Washington Post Michael Dirda seems much more happy with Transition than Patrick Ness was. Goodness only knows how he finds it “wildly entertaining.”

In The Literary Review of Canada Robert Charles Wilson explains that Margaret Atwood’s The Year of the Flood seems pretty amateurish in places to those who have made a career of writing speculative fiction. There’s some rather subtle snark in there.

The New York Times has a profile of Carolyn Porco, my pick for Ada Lovelace Day.

And finally my good friend THE…. Sodomite Hal Duncan!! has a new column up at BSC Review in which he talks about the founding of The Outer Alliance and why some of us think it is such a good thing.

Imagine a World…

World Fantasy is now only a month away. I’m obviously very much looking forward to seeing California again (and especially to seeing Kevin), but there are lots of old friends I want to catch up with, and many new friends I want to make. One of the people I’m looking forward to meeting is Malinda Lo, whose debut novel Ash I am planning to buy. If you are interested to know why, check out this post on Nicola Griffith’s blog and listen to Malinda talk about imaging a world free of homophobia.

There Need Not Only Be One

Around this time last year I read Memoirs of a Master Forger by Graham Joyce (to be published soon in the US by Night Shade as How to Make Friends With Demons). It is the book that won this year’s British Fantasy Award for Best Novel (a.k.a. the August Derleth Award), beating Neil Gaiman’s Graveyard Book in the process. It is indeed a very fine book, but when I blogged briefly about it last year I said, “As always with Graham, it is great stuff. There’s one small thing I want to have words with him about, but as I won’t be at World Fantasy I shall miss that opportunity and I’ll probably have forgotten about it next time I see him.”

That was very prescient, because I had forgotten about it. Graham, however, had not, and at FantasyCon he took me aside to have those words. The issue, as you may have guessed, is that the book contains a trans character, and she’s not portrayed very sympathetically – not horribly, just not very sympathetically. Because I know Graham well, I knew that wasn’t a piece of deliberate transphobia on his part. Having heard his explanation as to why the character is the way she is I quite understand why he did it. Indeed, just about every character of any significance in that book is a liar or a fake in some way, and given that the portrayal of the trans character could have been much worse. So all is well with Graham, but the conversation got me thinking about this whole issue.

There are two common stereotypes that the LGBT community really hates in fiction. The first is the lone good gay character who is the only one who dies at the end of the story. The other is the lone bad gay character who is an extreme stereotype of a gay man and is also one of the major villains. You see these ideas repeated again and again in fiction, and people rightly get annoyed about it.

Unfortunately if you call people on this they often react badly. It generates conversations similar to RaceFAIL, in which one side berates the other for being EVIL and the other side complains it is being censored, obliged to implement quotas, having its creativity constrained and so on. Often, of course, it is the people who are actually bigoted who complain loudest about being challenged, because they want to have excuses to parade their phobias in their fiction. On the other hand, honest writers get very worried because they are afraid of being accused of being bigots.

One thing I don’t want to happen here is have people become afraid to put LGBT characters in their fiction for fear of being accused of using an offensive stereotype. We’ll do much more for the advancement of LGBT rights if LGBT people are commonly featured in all sorts of fiction, just like straight people are. Indeed, I’m all in favor of books in which some characters just happen to be lesbian, or happen to be trans, or whatever, and this isn’t actually a major plot point. Because, you know, being lesbian or trans or whatever isn’t a major plot point, it is just who people are.

So how is a writer to go about writing LGBT characters without fear? As far as I’m concerned, the most useful thing to do is to remember that that old Highlander motto isn’t true: there need not be only one. It is a bit like the Bechdel Test – there needn’t only be one woman in a book, and they needn’t only be there to talk about the men. Well there need not only be one LGBT person in the book, and those people need not only be there to die, or be villains. If your book really has to include a gay person who dies at the end, include another one who doesn’t. If there is a good reason why a particular gay character has to be an unpleasant person, include another one who isn’t.

Why does this work? Well, if you have only one character from a particular subgroup in your book then that character will appear to many readers as standing in for all people in that subgroup. It doesn’t matter whether you intended that or not, people will still read your book that way. And the more oppressed a subgroup is, the more likely it is that members of that subgroup will assume bigotry as the explanation, because so often it is. So you have to make it clear that you didn’t intend the bad example to be typical by providing a counter example of someone more likeable, or with a less horrible fate.

I’ll admit that this is more difficult with trans people. There’s really little excuse with LGB folks. If your book has more than 10 characters then the chances are that at least one of them is not straight. Trans people are rather more rare, so you might wonder about how you can justify including two of them. Well, one possibility is that members of minority groups tend to stick together, so if you have one trans person in your story the chances are that she has friends who are also trans. That’s a very easy way to introduce another character without seeming like you are writing a novel all about trans people.

If that doesn’t seem possible for some reason, and it is absolutely essential that your trans character have a bunch of negative traits, have your other characters talk about him. Remember, whether you like it or not, readers will tend to assume that you are talking through your characters. You can stop them doing that by providing a mixture of different messages from different characters. So if Jim is trans, and also a nasty piece of work, have Sally complain about Jim in a bigoted way, and Simon say that no, that’s just Jim, he happens to know other people who are trans but not like Jim at all. Obviously such a conversation can come over very stilted, but you are a writer, it is your job to be able to make such things natural and believable.

I know writers get very defensive when readers assume that their characters are speaking for them, or that the author approves of ideas expressed in a book. For a good writer that is by no means always the case. Nevertheless, it is sometimes true. Writers do sometimes advance ideas in their books, and even if they don’t readers may assume that they are doing so. Everyone approaches a book on their own terms. That’s just one of those things we have to live with. So if you don’t want your book to be yelled at by LGBT activists, or any other sort of activist for that matter, a little thought as to how they might read it, and perhaps a small amount of corrective action, can save a lot of heartache later.

I sent this post to Graham before publishing it to make sure that he was happy with my doing so. He asked me to add the following:

I was glad to have good chat with Cheryl about this issue. I try to make sure that nothing in my work reinforces negative stereotypes of minority groups. I don’t give a damn what other writers think about that: it’s just a position I adopted a long time ago. I don’t want to be adding to the pot of meanness and prejudice that’s at large in society by rehearsing it in a book that I’ve written.

Though there is a clear tension between that position and creativity, and if you’re not careful your character becomes an innocuous cipher rather than a blood-and-bone human being. I’ve erred on both sides of this.

Cheryl was very helpful on some differences in the psychology of trans people and some general issues where my understanding is weak. From a writer’s perspective I like to make all my characters flawed in some way (I’m a flawed human being – why shouldn’t my fictional characters be, too???) though if you’re writing about an Asian person (for argument’s sake) you have to be sure that nothing looks like a comment on all Asian people. Racist-minded people would certainly be happy to interpret things that way (heck a certain species of anti-racist would often like to see it that way too so that they can impose their agenda).

So you have to steer a path, and it’s a writer’s job so to do. Difficulty comes not with the major characters, which are easy to balance up if you’re prepared to give your creation a moment’s thought. With the minor characters, it’s much trickier, especially if they are just there to stand on stage and hold a spear.

If you have some very minor character who is gay (again just for example) and you want to invest them with some humane but negative traits, how do you do that without the patent and transparent solution of having another counterbalancing minor gay character? Hmmm. I’d like a world where we can call someone a dipshit and not have anyone think it’s to do with their colour, gender or orientation. Meanwhile we’re a long way from that, and la lotta continua.

Gender Round-Up

While I was away at FantasyCon the UK newspapers were of of stories about trans people. Mainly this appears to have been sparked by a 12-year-old kid whose transition was announced publicly at her school. Naturally the kids told their parents and someone immediately phoned The Sun. Goodness only knows what the school thought it was doing. However, not all of the stories have been bad. The Independent has a nice feature on Kim Petras, who appears to be a remarkably talented young lady. The Herald has an interview with Richard O’Brien that is purportedly about his new musical but is mainly about his struggle with his own gender identity.

The top story, however, continues to be poor Caster Semenya. The results of her “gender test” have still not officially been announced, but the IAAF appears to have enough leaks to sink a battleship and salacious rumors continue to fly. It is beginning to look awfully like the South African athletics authorities knew about her condition from the start and put her in competition anyway because they were greedy for medals, while people within the IAAF have been trying to embarrass the South Africans with no thought for the poor girl whose life they are ruining.

Yesterday’s Independent had a fascinating article by another intersex woman which really brings home some the issues. If you have been raised a girl from birth, and are happy with your gender identity, it must be awful to discover that in fact you have no ovaries and can never have children. To have people saying that you are “really” a man, and in Semenya’s case to have people doing so in newspapers and TV reports all over the world, must be unbearable.

Sarah Graham’s article also lays bare the web of deceit that is often woven around intersex children. Meddling doctors often remove some organs to “normalize” their victim’s body. Parents are either not told, or are so embarrassed by their “freak” offspring that they go along with the cover-up, not telling the child until it is way too late for objections. Having an intersex (or trans) child is still viewed as a matter of shame for a family in our supposedly liberal and civilized culture. About the only thing we don’t do to intersex kids is practice “honor” killings. It is time we started treating them with a bit of respect.

Me, Elsewhere in Finnish

The latest issue of the superb Finnish SF magazine, Tähtivaeltaja, has arrived in the mail. I have an article in there. The article is in Finnish (thanks for the translation, Liisa!) so I’m afraid there’s no point in most of you looking for a copy. I may post the English version at some point but obviously I need permission to do so.

This issue is guest co-edited by Anne Leinonen and while not quite women-only definitely has a strong female influence. My own article is about recent books with strong feminist themes. A number of Finnish ladies write about their favorite feminist SF as well. Many thanks to Toni Jerrman for turning his magazine over to Anne in this way.

FantasyCon Wrap

Last night I spent 3 hours on the phone to California for a World Fantasy Con committee meeting. That was followed by an hour or so in the bar where I ended up doing more WFC stuff. I also got to talk to Gail Z. Martin and Rob Shearman, both of whom turned out to be lovely people. Gail is a regular at Dragon*Con and confirmed everything Lou Anders has said about it having a vibrant and well-attended literature track. Rob is a multi-talented guy who sees himself first and foremost as a playwright, rather than a World Fantasy winning author or Hugo nominated scriptwriter.

I also had a chat with Guy Adams about the “Women don’t write horror” thing. Slightly to my surprise, no one had accused either Maura or myself of being “shrill” all weekend (at least not in my hearing). It is possible that Sarah Pinborough had rearranged a few people’s testicles to dissuade them from complaining, but if she did so then it was in classic horror writer fashion and done in a padded room where no one could hear her victims scream.

Anyway, Guy was very contrite, and quite aghast at how easily he failed to see the problem with what he was publishing. As I’ve said before, men do learn to ignore women’s writing as they grow up. It is often subconscious, but very powerful. Hopefully having made such a mistake once, Guy won’t make it again. He assured me that the other two books in the series do include interviews with women writers. Also the 2009 BFS Yearbook, which is an anthology, includes stories by women. Guy has posted an apology to the BFS web site.

Invisible Again

I’ll be off to FantasyCon tomorrow, where I hope to catch up with a number of friends. One of those friends is Maura McHugh, who has been taking a look at the pre-convention publicity:

I immediately noticed the cover of a new book the BFS is launching at the convention: a collection of interviews with writers (the first in a trilogy) in which they discuss their genre. It’s called In Conversation: A Writer’s Perspective. Volume One: Horror. It’s edited by James Cooper, and is composed of 16 interviews with horror authors Ramsey Campbell, Tom Piccirilli, Greg F. Gifune, Conrad Williams, Joe R. Lansdale, Gary McMahon, Brian Keene, Stephen Gallagher, Jeffrey Thomas, Peter Crowther, Tim Lebbon, Ray Garton, Mark Morris, Gary Fry, Graham Joyce and Norman Partridge.

Not a single woman is interviewed.

Well, of course, women don’t write horror do they? Maura’s post has a good list of likely candidates, to which I would immediately add Caitlín R. Kiernan, Elizabeth Hand and Kaaron Warren. Of course the BFS might argue that they were looking for British writers (though by no means all of the people that they interviewed are British), but in that case I think the British horror novel that has received most critical acclaim this year is White is for Witching by Helen Oyeyemi.

It will give us something to talk about in the bar.

LGBT Rights: the Good and the Bad

Gordon Brown issued a formal apology to Alan Turning last night in response to the petition I mentioned last month. This is very good news, as indeed is the fact that over 31,000 people (last I looked) have signed the petition.

On the downside, over at The Outer Alliance there is news of a speculative fiction market that refuses to accept any LGBT material, or even an ad for such material elsewhere.

Personally I am happy for anyone to set limits on what they are prepared to publish. If I were running a fiction magazine there are things I would be reluctant to accept. Stories that get their “entertainment” value from violence against women, for example, or stories in which the main villain is a gross stereotype of a gay man and there are no other gay characters in evidence. I’ve spoken out against such things before, and been criticized for doing so, but I did so openly and I think that anyone not prepared to accept LGBT material should be open about it and be prepared to defend that stance.

More specifically I object strongly to the idea that to even mention same sex attraction, or the existence of trans people, is somehow explicit sexual content that is obscene and pornographic — something that should not be mentioned in polite company.

And finally, if you don’t mean to equate being gay with being a pedophile, don’t do it. If you do the whole “whoops, I did it again” thing, no one is going to take your apology seriously.

But basically all anyone has to do is read. Go take a look at what Gordon Brown has to say about gay people, and then take a look at what Jake Freivald has to say about them, and ask yourself which one of them sounds like the better human being.

By the way, the ad that caused all the fuss is now visible in my sidebar. I’ll have an article in that issue of Crossed Genres (I was asked to provide it when I was in Boston last month). It will be about Heinlein.

Women in SF in Finland

It being the season for digging about in piles of numbers, Tero has been looking at gender balance in Finnish short fiction awards. And lo, it appears that since the turn of the millennium the ladies have almost totally taken control. Awards for novels don’t follow the same pattern, as far as I recall, but it is interesting all the same.

#outeralliance Pride Day 2009

Outer Alliance Pride Day 2009

Shortly after Worldcon, John C. Wright, a man whose bizarre ideas about sex and gender should come as no surprise to anyone, posted a deeply homophobic rant (since deleted) on his LiveJournal. This prompted a group of people to found The Outer Alliance. Those who have signed up (of which I am one) adhere to the following:

As a member of the Outer Alliance, I advocate for queer speculative fiction and those who create, publish and support it, whatever their sexual orientation and gender identity. I make sure this is reflected in my actions and my work.

Today is the first ever Outer Alliance Pride Day. Members around the world are posting about queer issues. I have a number of posts I’d like to highlight.

I have finally completed the write-up of the Future of Gender panel that I moderated at Worldcon.

As part of that I had to write a brief Gender 101, which I have posted here.

Given that book reviewing is something I do, I have written a review of a book by a lesbian author which has a lesbian central character: The Red Tree, by Caitlín R. Kiernan.

And finally, as almost everyone else is posting fiction, I figured I had better point you at something. This is something I wrote last year: a short tale of gender confusion in ancient Greece. It isn’t very good, and I keep meaning to find the time to work on it, but it is all I’ve got.

A round up of all posts can be found here, but here are a few highlights I have seen so far today by friends of mine.

I’d also like to point you at this post about the LGBT issue of Crossed Genres, which I will have an article in once I get around to writing it.

And finally, mention of John Coulthart reminds me that the city of Manchester celebrated its Pride Weekend a few days ago. As part of the celebrations the local LGBT community put together a little video based, with kind permission, on Lily Allen’s magnificent anti-bigotry rant, “F**k You”. Listen and enjoy.

Update: added Nicola whose post doesn’t seem to have come through the OA email system.

Dangerous Chemicals

Testosterone has been much in the news of late. Word has leaked out that Caster Semenya’s “gender test” showed her to have abnormally high levels of testosterone in her body. No one is accusing her of taking supplements. The assumption is that she was born with some sort of abnormality that caused this. I note that if she had been born abnormally tall, abnormally strong, abnormally graceful or with any of the other abnormalities that it takes to be a really world-class athlete, no one would have batted an eye. But because she was allegedly born with abnormally high testosterone she gets branded a cheat.

Testosterone was also featured in the financial press as a result of a study that suggests women who do well in banking are successful because they too have abnormally high levels testosterone. The Independent runs out all the usual dismissive stereotypes, but The Economist is a little more thoughtful. The fact that testosterone encourages risk taking is well known and has been a matter of concern recently given where risk taking by bankers has got us in recent months. Here’s a good overview of the issue.

Estrogen is also well known to have physical effects (for example encouraging breast growth) and is also believed to affect mood.

Why am I interested in this? Well, apart from the fact that testosterone can be pretty dangerous at times, I’m thinking about gendered behavior. Hard line feminists insist that gender is purely a learned behavior. And yet here we have pretty clear evidence that certain chemicals affect not only the physical appearance and abilities of humans, but also their behavior as well.

Who Needs Males Anyway?

Not us, says Mycocepurus smithii. These bold little ants manage perfectly well without any males of the species, according to researchers from The University of Texas at Austin and Brazil. And being ants they certainly don’t have any problem reproducing. Goodness knows how they do it, the article doesn’t explain, but as long as they are happy that’s OK by me.