Meeting Cait

Last night I finally got to watch episode 1 of I Am Cait, the Caitlyn Jenner reality show. I figure I should probably say a few things.

First up, Jenner’s trans identity seems very genuine. All of the talk about having struggled with it for years, and family hoping that she could be “cured”, is very familiar to many other trans people. It also seems to me that Jenner is very genuine in her desire to help other trans people, using her celebrity to do so. How effective she can be is another matter.

On the one hand, Jenner is very famous. She has a platform that no other (out) trans person can match. Because of that she can reach segments of the population that would otherwise ignore trans issues. She may even gain their sympathy when others would not.

On the other hand, it was clear watching the show that it is being made at the worst possible time for the message it wants to convey. Obviously both Jenner and the network want to cash in on the story while it is still hot. But transition is a difficult time of life, both for trans people and for their families.

Jenner has done what she can physically by getting a lot of treatment in advance of the announcement. This is important because trans people do grow into themselves over the years. While it shouldn’t be necessary for trans people to look gender-normative, for a show like this it helps a lot that Jenner has been able to put a lot of effort into her appearance. For most people it takes time for the hormones to work their magic.

What you can’t do in advance is get your family used to the change. It is often the case that those who know you best, and who are most closely emotionally connected to you, find it hardest to adapt to your transition. It is particularly difficult for Jenner’s family because they know that they are in the public spotlight, and will be judged on how they behave on camera. In all probability they will get used to Caitlyn, will get the pronouns right, and will come to accept her for who she is. But it will take time, and they haven’t been given that time. Consequently the public are going to see some very uncomfortable family moments, and assume that transition is much worse for a family than it often is.

The other major problem with the series is that, no matter how committed Jenner is to doing it right, she probably can’t control how the shows are edited, and she certainly can’t control how they are reported. In episode two Jenner is seen meeting a number of high profile trans rights activists. One of them is Angelica Ross. Yesterday Ross tweeted this:

The media commentary that Ross is referring to is an LA Times review of the show. It is entirely true that Ross has done sex work to survive. She’s since built a career for herself and is now CEO of a non-profit organization, Trans Tech Social, which exists to help other trans people find work in IT. Calling Ross a “sex worker” is no more accurate than calling Roz Kaveney a “sex worker”. Roz, of course, is generally described as an author, a poet, a critic, and a political activist. She’s all of those things too. But Roz is white and has a degree from Oxford, while Angelica Ross is black. The media stereotype of black trans women is very hard to shake.

On balance I think Jenner will do good for the trans community. However, that doesn’t mean that she’ll be good for all of us, or be good all of the time. What she’s doing may not even be good for her. Working with the media is always a case of holding a snake by the tail. You never know when it is going to turn around and sink its poison fangs into you.

Today On Ujima – Books, Social Media & Auschwitz

My first guest on today’s show was Amy Morse. Like me Amy is part of the organizing committee for this year’s Bristol Festival of Literature. She was on the show to talk about the crowdfunding effort that we have launched to help raise the money necessary for venue hire, printing publicity materials and other incidental costs of putting on the Festival. You can find that campaign (and a video of Amy) at the Fundsurfer website.

Along the way I talked about the SF&F events that we’ll be having. The BristolCon Fringe event will feature new novels from Jo Hall and Jonathan L Howard. And I’ll be chairing a comics event featuring Mike Carey, Paul Cornell and Cavan Scott.

Amy stayed with me for the second half hour to talk about social media and blogging. Amy is running some courses in Bristol next month, and I figured this was a good opportunity to talk about life online. A great deals of nonsense gets talked in the mainstream media about what goes on online, and while what happens to people like Briannu Wu is indeed terrible, the wailing and gnashing of teeth that follows any (usually thoroughly justified) denunciation of white feminism’s media darlings is quite ridiculous. People need to know how to stay safe online, and much of it revolved around “don’t be an idiot”.

Anyway, you can listen to the first hour of the show here.

Interesting though my conversation with Amy was, I hope she will forgive me for saying that the second hour was spectacular. My guest on the studio was Christina Zaba, a local journalist of Polish extraction. Christina has been heavily involved in Bristol’s Holocaust Memorial Day. As a result of this she has visited Auschwitz. This has led her to discover some family history, and also the stories of two remarkable men. Kazimierz Piechowski was a young man during the war. He escaped from Auschwitz disguised as an SS officer and is still alive (he’s 95). Witold Pilecki was an officer in the Polish resistance who volunteered to get himself arrested so that he could help organize the prisoners and perhaps stage a revolt. He too later escaped from the camp, but was executed by the Russians after the war.

Both Piechowski and Pilecki were also members of the Polish Boy Scouts. The Nazis regarded the Scouts as a paramilitary organization and singled them out for special persecution, which of course led them to becoming a key part of the Resistance. Christina also talked about the Girl Guides who helped smuggle messages, food and tools into the camps.

Christina is writing a book about the Polish Resistance and the part they played in the history of Auschwitz. I’ve already told her that I want her back on the show when it comes out. Gut-wrenching though it can be at times, we do need to keep talking about this history. Auschwitz was both a slave camp run by Nazi businessmen and a giant factory dedicated to murder on an industrial scale. This sort of thing should not be allowed to happen again.

You can listen to the second half of the show here.

Being on air also allowed me to give a mention to various Jamaica-related stories. Tomorrow (August 6th) is Jamaican Independence Day. The past week has seen Jamaica’s first ever Pride. And of course Marlon James’ A Brief History of Seven Killings, a novel based on an attempted assassination of Bob Marley, has found its way onto this year’s Booker Prize long list.

Today’s playlist was as follows:

  • I Want Your Love – Chic
  • Thriller – Michael Jackson
  • Computer Blue – Prince
  • Are Friends Electric – Tubeway Army
  • The War Song – Culture Club
  • Redemption Song – Bob Marley
  • No Borders – Jama

Book Review – Railhead by Philip Reeve

Railhead - Philip ReeveI don’t normally like reviewing books that you can’t buy yet, but this one came to me way before publication date and it looked a lot of fun so I read it. Hence a really early review.

Railhead is the new novel from Philip Reeve. It is, as you’d expect from Philip, a book aimed at children, but it is far from simplistic. Besides, it is space opera with trains instead of spaceships. That has to be worth checking out, right?

I certainly enjoyed it, and would have happily read a much longer version of the book. You can find my review here.

Announcing Ã…con 8

Those of you who had a great time in Mariehamn this year, or who wished you could have been there, may be interested in next year’s Ã…con. As regular readers will know, Ã…con is a very different event from Archipelacon. It is very small — capped at 100 members — and it only has one guest, and one stream of programming. This gives it a very intimate appeal. Of course there is still the whole thing of needing to get a ferry to Ã…land, so it is not the cheapest convention either. But if you like a small, friendly, bookish convention then it may well be for you. If you like the Guest of Honor that may be an additional attraction, because this is not a con where the guests get whisked away between panels.

This year’s Guest of Honor is Zen Cho. She’s already been a Campbell finalist (in 2013) and won the Crawford Award, all for her short fiction. Her debut novel, Sorcerer to the Crown, is due out in September and has already been getting rave reviews. She sounds like she’ll be a very interesting guest.

If you are interested, membership details are available here.

I’d love to go, but I’ve already promised Kisu & Karo that I’ll be at Finncon in Tampere next year. I’m not sure that I can afford two Finnish conventions and the Barcelona Eurocon.

Days of Future Past : The Rogue Cut

I’m kind of conflicted about “director’s cut” versions of movies. On the one hand, directorial fiddling such as we’ve had with Blade Runner gets on my nerves; on the other, restoring cut scenes to make the story flow better is generally a good thing.

I’m no great expert on how movies are made, but listening to commentary tracks it seems fairly clear that directors often have a big fight to get what they want. They are subject to the whims of marketing people, focus groups, and most importantly studio executives. None of these people know much about story telling. What they all seem to have in common is a desire to make the film as short as possible; preferably under two hours. Age of Ultron is a classic example of the sort of damage that can cause. I had to watch the film twice just to get a handle on what was going on. Apparently, when it comes out on disc, a much longer version will be available.

Before that, however, there has been a new release of X-Men: Days of Future Past. For the benefit of those of you who don’t obsessively follow superhero movies (don’t all shout at once), it is called The Rogue Cut, because it restores Rogue to the story. Some of the changes are simply adding missing scenes. The resulting movie is 16 minutes longer. But The Rogue Cut is much more than that. In some ways it is a very different film.

I’m going to have to get a little spoilery here because otherwise I can’t really explain how it is different, but I expect those most of you who have read this far will have already seen the film. The major change is that Kitty is so damaged by her struggle to keep control of Logan’s time traveling following the events in Paris that she is in danger of dying on the job. Charles and Eric go in search of Rogue, who has been captured by the Sentintels, because she can take Kitty’s powers and take over the job of keeping Logan in the past.

That change, however, has multiple consequences. Several character arcs change significantly as a result; most notably those of Raven, Hank and Bobby. It is pretty clear listening to Bryan Singer’s commentary that this is not only his preferred version of the film, it is a necessary one. That is, things that will happen in the next film are foreshadowed in this version of Days of Future Past, but not in the theatrical release.

From my point of view, what I’m seeing here is a structural edit. It is like seeing two versions of a novel: a first draft, and one in which the author has added some new chapters, and totally re-written others. I’m an editor. I love seeing this sort of thing because of the insight it gives into the story-making process, and the way that the creators see the characters.

I should probably be annoyed at the studio executives who forced Singer to make such radical changes to the theatrical release in order to shave 16 minutes off the run time. Actually, however, I’m grateful to have been able to get this little piece of insight into the film-making process. It makes the whole thing much more interesting for me.

Stop Worrying and Ditch the Binaries

Hopefully I don’t need to give you folks (another) lecture on why the gender binary is silly. Sadly, however, human beings appear to be addicted to binary thinking, and it causes them to get into all sorts of panics. One such has been playing out this past week because of this article by Lisa Diamond in New Scientist which argues against the “born this way” narrative of same-sex attraction. There’s not one, but two binaries involved here. The first is that people are either homosexual or heterosexual; the second is that sexuality is either biologically determined or not. Both of these binaries are, in my view, false.

The first one ought to be obvious, because people do identify as bisexual. Sadly this just gets people think that there are three types of sexuality — L, G and B — all of which are quantitatively different. As a trans person, I find the whole question rather silly. Many of us have sexual relations both before and after transition. Sometimes these are “heterosexual” in both genders; sometimes “homosexual” in both genders, and sometimes with the same gender either side of transition. Some of us are bisexual both before and after transition. What does this mean for our sexuality? Who knows, but I have this horrible feeling that it means we are the “wrong sort” of bisexuals, because queer politics is all about policing how people get to be queer.

The second binary is hugely political. The “born this way” narrative was adopted by L&G campaigners as a defense against the claim that being homosexual is socially deviant and needs to be “cured”. If sexuality is somehow innate then “cures” are impossible and L, G & B people are deserving of the same rights in society as straight people. Articles such as the one by Diamond inevitably attract criticism as legitimizing “cures”. But Diamond is openly lesbian. What exactly is going on here?

Color me suspicious, but part of me is not surprised to see articles dumping the “born this way” narrative now that LGB appear to be socially acceptable. I keep expecting to see something at the end of these articles that says, “so being queer is totally socially constructed, but biological sex isn’t, which that proves that the tr*nn*es are fucking perverts who ought to be forced to undergo cures.” Thankfully I haven’t actually seen one of those yet, but I’m sure I will.

Another, less paranoid, reason why we could be seeing these articles now is that magazines are looking for the next controversy in sexuality, and because the fight for same-sex marriage has been won (in the places where those magazines are published) people feel more comfortable challenging the political orthodoxy of the queer community.

Because I look at the history of queer people, I see this whole thing very differently. Whether sexuality and gender identity are ingrained or not, one thing is obvious and that is that how we understand sexuality and gender is socially constructed. Different societies understand and accept sexuality in different ways, and the same is true for gender. What it means to be a homosexual person, or a trans person, varies with social context.

In practice, more people are bisexual than are strictly homosexual (Lisa Diamond has data), and in times/places when same-sex attraction is more acceptable the number of people prepared to admit that, or to act on such desires, will go up. My guess is that more people will identify as genderqueer than will need full gender transition, and again the ability of people to engage in ambiguous gender performance is socially dependent. I also suspect that some people can and will change both sexuality and gender identity as they grow older.

So where does this leave the whole “cures” argument. Well, if we view sexuality and gender identity as each being on a spectrum rather than having gay/straight and cis/trans binaries it all makes sense. Lots of people are fluid in one or both of those areas. Put those people in a situation where their gay or trans feelings are deemed socially unacceptable and they will shrug and say, “OK, I can live with that”. However, the people on the far ends of those spectra can’t live with it (for whatever reason). If they could change, they would, because the social disadvantages of not changing are horrendous. But for them the cost of changing is worse. Those are exactly the people who are likely to end up being sent for “cures”, and that’s why the cures don’t work.

Whether this means that there is some biological component to sexuality or gender identity is irrelevant. All that matters is that people have different degrees of flexibility in these areas. Forcing the people who are least flexible to undergo conversion therapies is pointless and cruel.

Can we please stop obsessing over their artificially constructed binaries and just accept that people are diverse, and that’s OK?

Bristol Festival of Literature Fundraiser

This year’s Bristol Festival of Literature will take place in October. BristolCon is not part of it this year due to having our date gazumped by FantasyCon and having to move to September. However, there will be a Fringe event during the Festival and that will be rather special as it will feature new books from Joanne Hall and Jonathan L. Howard. There will also be something featuring me, but don’t panic because it will also have Mike Carey, Paul Cornell and Cavan Scott and be about comics.

Why am I telling you all this now? Because we need money. Not a lot, but some of the venues have hire costs and we want to pay for some decent publicity materials so we can get the word out effectively. So there is a fundraiser running on Bristol’s own crowdfunding platform, Fundsurfer. Basically this is an opportunity to buy tickets in advance, and to give us a little love. Please note that both the Fringe and comics events will be free, but there’s lot of other really good stuff happening too. And if you can’t get to Bristol, a quid or two to help us spread the good word would be much appreciated. Thank you.

Sentence Jukka to Transportation

Yes folks, this is your chance to have Jukka Halme sent to Australia. And probably New Zealand as well. I can’t promise that he won’t come back, but you never know.

The reason for this is that Jukka is standing for GUFF, the fan fund that sends fans from Europe to the other end of the world. To find out how to vote for him to go, check out this fine web page put together by this year’s Administrator, Mihaela Marija Perkovic.

It appears that Jukka is the only candidate this year, but you do still need to vote if you want him to go. The other option is for the funds from this year’s race to be held over to a later date. Some people may think that the Aussies and Kiwis are better than everyone else at enough sports already, without Jukka teaching them to play ice hockey. And the Aussie authorities might be concerned about their people becoming addicted to Strange Finnish Food as a result of his visit. Who can tell?

Anyway, good luck, Jukka, mate. I expect you to come back able to play cricket.

Photo Shoot – We Have Results

Photo 172


So yeah, I figured that a serious professional photographer like Lou would manage to produce something I’d be OK with. It is her job to work miracles. I didn’t expect to be really pleased with some of the results.

Here’s a very different one that makes me look a bit more serious and professional.

Photo 132


There are others I like too.

If you need a professional photo shoot done, get Lou to do it, she’s great.

Trans Pride – What’s Next?

I see from Twitter that this evening Sarah Savage will be on a panel about the future of Pride. Obviously that will be Brighton-specific, but many of the issues apply the world over.

As far as I see it, a public LGBT event can have three purposes.

Firstly it can be part of a political campaign, demonstrating a clear public desire for changes in the law. Most big Prides stopped being that some time ago. Trans Pride still has something of that feel to it, but if it carries on growing at the current rate then it will stop being political. In order to stay political, the event has to cater solely to people who are angry about the political issue in question.

Second the event can be part of a “hearts and minds” campaign. That’s basically what modern Prides are. They are big parties put on by the LGBT community for the entire community. That means they tend to get swamped by straight cis people, but because we put on a great party they come away loving us. That doesn’t garner support for a specific political campaign, but it is very useful for obtaining support when you do ask for more rights. I don’t think that the marriage equality campaign would have been anywhere near as successful had we not spent years convincing the general public that us queers are harmless, fun people who throw great parties.

Finally the event can be educational. The LGBT History Festival is an event of this type. While it is nice to give our fellow queers a good sense of our own history, the primary intent is to inform the public about how we have always been around, how badly we have been treated in the recent past, and how other cultures have often been more accepting of queerness.

Both the second and third purposes require that the event be swamped by straight cis people, because to a large extent they are the target audience.

Where Brighton’s Trans Pride chooses to go in the future will be up to Sarah and her colleagues because they are the people putting in the work. (Yes, I reject the “angry SJW” attitude that other people have a duty to do volunteer work in the way that I demand they do so, even though all I ever do is insult them in social media.) However, I do have some thoughts on where the trans community should be going politically.

One of the short interviews I did at Trans Pride was with one of the people on the Stonewall stall. Obviously there was very little she could say at this point. There is still a lot of work to be done to integrate the trans community into Stonewall. However, at some point they will need to choose an issue to campaign on. That will be a difficult choice.

The marriage equality campaign was hugely successful, but it has also come in for much criticism as being something that benefits mainly the well-off, socially conservative parts of the gay and lesbian communities, while doing little or nothing for everyone else. I think it has been valuable because of the huge amount of public sympathy it has won for our cause, but I also acknowledge the issues.

The question for the trans community, and our allies in Stonewall, is how to construct a campaign that has a good chance of widespread public support, but at the same time does not throw large portions of the trans community under the bus.

It is not an idle question either. When Press for Change campaigned for the Gender Recognition Act they chose to leave behind non-binary people, and conceded defeat on issues such as the Spousal Veto. They also created the Gender Recognition Certificate, which has been somewhat problematic in practice. Tactically they were probably correct to do all of these things, because the social climate of the time would not have accepted anything else, but that still leaves us with an Act that needs fixing.

I don’t think we stand much chance campaigning for better treatment by the NHS. The last thing the public wants right now is more people asking for a share of government funds. They have been thoroughly bamboozled by the austerity mantra and will see any demand for money for us to be taking money away from them. Besides, the NHS is actually doing a pretty good job of reforming their treatment of us right now. We should let them get on with it and just keen an eye on proceedings to make sure they are going in the direction we want.

Nor do I think that we can campaign effectively on the flaws in marriage law. The trouble with the Spousal Veto is that it only affects trans people married to cis people. They reason we have it in the first place is that Home Office staff got themselves in a terrible tizzy worrying about how they would feel if their own marriage partner came out as trans. We’d have the same problem with the public. Besides, it would benefit a relatively small, and fast decreasing number of people, so I don’t think it is the sort of thing to pour lots of money and effort into.

What I do think would make a good campaign is Self Determination; that is, the right for people to determine their own gender (including non-binary), rather than have to get a doctor or psychiatrist to sign off on their identity.

Several countries have already enacted such legislation. Malta was the first, with Denmark following soon after. Ireland recently adopted something similar. Italy may have a law of this type too, though some of the coverage I have seen suggests that some sort of medical treatment is still required in their case. The UK is now most definitely lagging behind the curve when it comes to trans rights.

An important part of such a campaign is that it would directly benefit those who don’t identify within the gender binary, and who have until now mostly been left behind by trans rights campaigns. Again many countries in the world currently allow a third gender identification, including India, Pakistan and Australia.

Finally this is a campaign that does not harm anyone (except people who design forms that ask for your gender, and those awful companies who insist on gendering all of their products). In much the same way as two lesbians getting married does not destroy the marriage of an heterosexual couple, so the fact that someone chooses to identify as non-binary does not cause anyone else’s gender to change. The villains in this story are the doctors and psychiatrists, and the hated Gender Recognition Panel. I suspect that a lot of people would happily support a campaign that aimed to stop these people having God-like power over trans people’s lives.

So, that’s the campaign that I think Stonewall should help us to run. But we don’t have to wait for them. There is already a petition before Parliament asking for self-determination. It has more than twice the number of signatures needed to require a formal response from the government. If we can quadruple the current number of signatures then the question must be brought before Parliament. Go and sign it, please.

Hugos – Don’t Give Up

I cast my Hugo ballot today. I figured I should get in before the last minute rush, because it is always a strain on the host Worldcon’s servers and this year is going to be much worse. I suggest that you get your ballot in well before the deadline too.

Also today I saw this article by Sarah Lotz on the Guardian Books Blog. It will, I suspect, make Little Teddy very happy indeed, because it is basically saying that he has already won.

Look, there will be some weird stuff in the results this year. There may well be a few No Awards given out, and possibly some really bad works winning awards. It is not as if that hasn’t happened before, though perhaps not in the same quantities. On the other hand, people are talking about the Hugos much more this year than they ever have before, and in many more high profile places. In addition vastly more people have bought supporting memberships, and we are looking at a record number of people participating in the final ballot. All of those people will be eligible to nominate next year. This isn’t the way I would have liked to get that result, but it is a result all the same.

Anyone who tells you that the Hugos are irrevocably damaged doesn’t have the awards’ best interests at heart. They, like Little Teddy, want the Hugos to go away, and presumably be replaced by awards that they, and people like them, can control. If you want awards controlled by, and voted on by, fans, then you need to support those awards, and believe that the vast majority of fans are not going to support narrow political campaigns.

Sure, I could be wrong. We could be seeing the start of years of slate voting. But we haven’t seen it yet. What is clear is that if we listen to people like Ms. Lotz and take the view that we have already lost that battle, then we most certainly have lost.

Don’t give up. Vote.

Athletics Discovers Intersex

Gender and sport have been uneasy bedfellows for a long time. Many of you will remember the story of Caster Semenya, and you may have seen me write about Santhi Soundarajan. The International Association of Athletics Federations have stumbled from one ridiculous rule to another trying to decide who is female and who isn’t. Thankfully they no longer require female athletes to strip and be examined. They have also given up on “gender testing”, by which they mean looking at chromosomes because, unlike Germaine Greer, they believe in the existence of intersex people — specifically in Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome, which means that the person in question has been born with a Y chromosome but is unable to process testosterone and so develops naturally as female. Interestingly, while the incidence of AIS amongst the general population is around 1 in 20,000, the incidence amongst elite female athletes is around 1 in 420, despite those women not having any help from testosterone.

More recently the IAAF has adopted a test for that they call “hyperandrogenism”, which basically measures the level of testosterone in the body and checks to see if it is within the typical male range or within the typical female range. Unfortunately those ranges do overlap, especially where athletes are concerned. What is more, athletes who had been assigned female at birth, who were raised as women, and who identified as women, were being banned from competition because according to the hyperandrogenism test they were “really men”, unless they agreed to undergo medical modification similar to that used on trans women to change their biology.

Once such woman was Indian sprinter Dutee Chand. She decided not be allow herself to be bullied by the old men in blazers and took the IAAF to court. On Monday the Court for Arbitration of Sport ruled in her favor. The IAAF has been given two years to provide better scientific evidence to back up their rule, but it seems unlikely that they will be able to do so given that the Court’s ruling was based on science that blew holes in it.

As the excellent Indian feminist paper, The Ladies Finger, notes, this is not just a matter of science. It is very much a case of how women’s identities are policed. They rightly connect it to the fuss about Serena Williams who is constantly accused of being “really a man” even though there is no scientific basis for this claim.

Their article also points to the case of trans women athletes. As I noted above, the treatment that trans women undergo specifically blocks the effect of testosterone on the body and, if surgery is used, can prevent it being made. This is exactly what the IAAF wanted done to Dutee Chand to remove the supposed advantage of her elevated testosterone levels. Nevertheless, women like Fallon Fox are constantly accused of having an advantage in sport because they once had much more masculine bodies. To their credit, most sporting bodies now understand the science and allow trans women to compete, but this doesn’t stop the media and general public complaining.

Goodness only knows where Janae Marie Kroc fits into all this. She’s got one heck of a body as a result of her time as a world champion weightlifter, and it isn’t clear how much medical intervention she is planning on having. From what she says about herself she identifies as non-binary, and that is likely to explode the brains of most sports administrators.

It is a brave new world that we are creating, and sport is stuck on the bleeding edge whether it likes it or not.

A Bristol Bioethics Story

Bristol seems to have a knack of being in the forefront of controversial developments in medical science. Michael Dillon, the first trans man to undergo full medical transition, began his journey while living in Bristol during WWII. Years later, Bristol was the location of the world’s first Test Tube Baby birth. Louise Brown was born on July 25, 1978. She has just written her autobiography. My guess is that her life has been nothing like what Heinlein imagined in Friday, but she is nevertheless a hugely important figure in the history of the way that humans meddle with their own biology. If nothing else, what she and her family went through in the years following her birth is a valuable case study in how modern society treats the results of such meddling. If you are interested in Louise’s story, you can pre-order the book from my friends at Tangent.

Photo Shoot

I spent the morning in Bath pretending to be a fashion model.

Of course I’m not one. What was actually going on is that I have discovered that I need a professionally done head shot for publicity purposes. This is what happens when you do radio, public speaking and so on. Doing this is beyond scary, because cameras hate me. I have a couple of pictures that I can just about tolerate, but mostly seeing photos of me makes me want to curl up and die. (Please remember this, especially if you are about to post photos of me to Facebook.)

Thankfully I happen to know a very good photographer who lives nearby. Joe Abercrombie’s wife, Lou, has done publicity shots for many of my author friends, including Paul Cornell, Gareth Powell, Emma Newman and Sarah Pinborough; not to mention Joe himself, of course. I really like her work, so I arranged to go and get snapped.

I found the process of being photographed both fun and educational. As long as I could forget the fact that there will be actual photographs at the end of the process I could just enjoy the process and learn how to pose for a camera. It isn’t easy to do well, and I have a great deal of respect for professional models who manage to look happy and sexy to order for hours on end. Striking a pose is also a skill that I probably don’t have, but enjoyed trying to learn.

Eventually I will have to choose a picture or two to use, and I’ll put them up here for you to laugh at. Please don’t judge Lou’s work by this. Check out her website instead. She’s really great at putting her subjects at ease too.

Trans Pride – Day 3

I didn’t actually see much of the Sunday events. I needed to grab an interview with my friend Kathy Caton who has been shortlisted for the National Diversity Awards (in the LGBT role model category) this year. Kathy was busy at Radio Reverb producing a show, so I headed on up to their studio and did radio stuff for a while before heading home. Some of that may end up on Shout Out eventually, and of course I’ll put all of the audio up on my gender podcast at some point. In the meantime, I have found a couple of vlogs on YouTube that will give you a taste of the atmosphere.

The second one has a brief glimpse of me in the background, but it is very brief so it should be OK for you to watch it without risking going blind.

Trans Pride – Day 2

Well, that was amazing. When I got to the Marlborough in the morning it was clear that there were way more people than last year. I found Roz Kaveney, and we stood on the kerb together watching the parade leave. We estimated around a thousand people, and when I found Fox to ask about numbers I learned that the police had suggested a similar number. You got a real feel of it entering St. James Street because that goes up a hill and you could see people all the way up as far as the turning where they headed off to Dorset Gardens. Presumably they stretched all the way there as well, as there was a backup while the marchers got through the gate into the park.

Of course many people didn’t go on the march, and the park was packed all day. I don’t think that they had to start controlling access, but it can’t have been that far off needing to. Hopefully today I’ll find out how many wristbands they gave out.

There were also more stalls this year, most significantly the addition of Stonewall. Their process of incorporating trans people into their organization is going quite slowly, mainly because Ruth Hunt and her team are being very sensible and are trying hard to listen to lots of people before making any moves. But change is happening, and thus far it is looking good.

As far as I know, the day went very well, though there were the inevitable angry activists ready to complain at the slightest infraction of how they think things should have been done. There was certainly a good point to be made about access to the park, but the organizers do have to work with what the City Council will let them have, and are not rolling in money.

Talking of which, there must be a question as to what to do next year, because if the event keeps growing at this rate Dorset Gardens will be too small for it then. And, as we have seen with other Pride events, the bigger you get the more likely you are to be swamped with straight cis folks wanting to benefit from the free entertainment and gawp at the queers. Brighton Pride has apparently responded by getting hugely commercial. I’m very glad that Bristol hasn’t done that, but I understand the pressures that can cause it.

While it was very heartwarming to see so many people being happy and proud of being trans, the fight is far from won. A big crowd is a sign of some social acceptance, but it won’t necessarily result in political action, nor does it mean that everyone is onside. Here are a few examples of why we still have a long way to go.

On arriving at the park I learned of yet another murder of a trans woman in the USA. That’s 11 so far this year.

On my way into town to get dinner I saw, coming the other way, a tall, well-built woman with a shaved head. Once she had passed us the people behind me (apparently tourists) started making comments about “tr*nn*es”. Given the woman’s prodigious curves, that was one heck of a transformation if she was trans, but over 6 foot tall and shaved head said “really a man” to these idiots. It is instructive to hear what people have to say about your kind when they think you are not listening.

I had dinner at the Brighton Giggling Squid, partly because I wanted seafood and partly because Kevin and I had eaten there so doing so would help him feel part of the day. The food was good (there are photos in my Twitter feed), but after I had paid the bill the waiter deliberately addressed me as “sir”. There’s no doubt this was a calculated insult. It is not as if I don’t present as obviously female, it hadn’t been an issue before, but once he had my money (including his tip) he felt free to make his feelings known. I complained on Twitter. The chain has seen my tweets because they took notice of others, but they have not responded to the complaint. That’s one restaurant I won’t be going back to. Thankfully there are many other really good places to eat in Brighton.

So yeah, there’s a long way to go. The questions we have to address are, now that we have Stonewall on board, what campaign do we run, and how do we make sure it doesn’t leave a large part of the community behind the way that the Gender Recognition Bill did?

Trans Pride – Day 1

So, here I am at the seaside. Today the weather has been endless torrential rain. Welcome to the British summer.

Thankfully the forecast for tomorrow is mostly dry, and I have been told that it has been very dry in Brighton of late so the water should mostly sink in and not leave the park we are using a quagmire. Unfortunately the forecast for Sunday is more torrential rain, so the Picnic on the Beach has been relocated to the Marlborough.

This evening’s event was the film festival at the Duke of York Picturehouse. They opened up with a film of Alice Denny reading a poem about last year’s Trans Pride, followed by the first episode of Heartichoke, a comedy series that Fox & Lewis are putting together. Watch the teaser here. The final support piece was a film about a trans activist from India which was much more positive that the “tragic hijra” stuff I’m used to seeing, though still a bit cliched.

The main entertainment for the evening was Kate Bornstein is a Queer and Pleasant Danger, a film about Kate’s life made by Sam Feder. I knew most of the story already, though you could have knocked me down with a feather when I found out that Kate was introduced to Sandy Stone by Janice Raymond, of all people. However, most of the audience were much less familiar with Kate’s life and work. The film ends with Kate still in the middle of her cancer crisis, so they added a little postscript to assure the audience that it all turned out alright in the end. Lots of people got rather emotional.

The thing that resonated most for me was when Kate talked about going on book tours these days and meeting loads of young people living happy trans lives — something that Kate and I could only dream about when we were that age. I know exactly what she means, and I was able to see a movie theatre packed full of exactly that sort of young person.

The Duke of York seats 280. We sold every seat, and could have sold more.

I’m now back at my hotel catching up on the day’s email. Fingers crossed that tomorrow’s weather is indeed fairly good.

Happy Birthday, @UjimaRadio

Ujima 7th birthday


Ujima Radio is seven years old this week. They are having a special on-air party today. I can’t be there as I have to head to Brighton for Trans Pride, so I’m sending them birthday wishes instead. If you have been on, or listened to my show, why not tweet them birthday wishes too.

Once Upon A Time – Season 1

Thanks to the Evil Pusher Woman (a.k.a. Tansy Rayner Roberts) I have become addicted to the TV show, Once Upon A Time. I knew that getting a Netflix subscription was going to be trouble one way or another. Thus far I have binge-watched my way through season 1, all 22 episodes of it. There are 3 more seasons on Netflix and a fifth season is apparently planned. Doubtless many of you know far more about the series than I do, but I figured it would amuse you to see my thoughts after just one season. Feel free to laugh, but perhaps not too pointedly in the comments.

I must admit to feeling a bit guilty about liking the show, seeing as to a certain extent it is a giant rip-off of Fables. Then again, Bill can hardly claim copyright on fairy stories, and the show’s writers have done a decent job of making the story quite different. The only major point of commonality is having a heap of fairy tale characters trapped in our world. In any case, Jane Espenson is one of the major creative forces behind the project, so it is gonna be good, right?

The principle interest for me is seeing how the show makes use of the various fairytale characters, and comparing that to Fables. I rather liked the way that Fables made Prince Charming a serial seducer of princesses whom all of the women now despise. Once Upon a Time has a seemingly endless stream of cookie-cutter handsome princes, though only Snow’s Prince Charming gets a major role, and he’s just dumb. Then again, I really liked what the show did with Red Riding Hood, and their use of the Beauty & The Beast story.

With the show being a Disney property, they are required to throw in major Disney characters that are not from fairy tales. I really liked how they used the Mad Hatter. Mulan also seems very interesting, and a much more believable warrior princess than Snow. I am waiting with steadily decreasing patience for Ariel’s first appearance. If it doesn’t happen soon there may be some muttering about bias against redheads.

The first season is all about Snow and Charming’s daughter arriving to break the curse that has all of the fairy tale people trapped in a small town in Maine. I’m not sure that it needed 22 episodes, but then again there’s always the question of what to do next. Thus far what I have seen of season 2 is doing OK, but I worry about things down the road. With time, any long-running series will run out of plot ideas and descend into silliness.

Obviously a major attraction of the series is the female-led cast. Snow White, her Evil Stepmother (Regina), and her daughter (Emma) are all major characters. Red Riding Hood and her Grandma, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty and Belle have all had important roles, as did King Midas’s daughter, whom I think the show invented. In addition to Charming we have Snow’s grandson (Henry) and Rumpelstiltskin as major male characters. When you throw in the supporting characters, especially all seven dwarfs, I’m sure there are more men than women on the show. But it is so rare to see more than one or two token women that the show seems female-dominated.

I haven’t done any proper Bechdel Test analysis, but I’d be prepared to bet that Snow, Regina and Emma spend the majority of their conversations talking about Charming and Henry. Then again, at the start of season two we’ve had Snow, Emma, Mulan and Sleeping Beauty set off on a quest together, which is pretty awesome.

Emma’s last name is Swan. I’m assuming that she’s a swan maiden of some sort, and that Henry’s missing father will turn out to be a prince called Lohengrin (or possibly Logan as the show will assume that a US audience would balk at a complicated German name).

The show makes to usual clumsy Hollywood efforts at diversity. There have been a few non-white characters (including Lancelot), but none of them major and they seem to die or become evil very quickly. Mulan is the only one likely to have staying power, because I don’t think Disney will allow them to kill her off. I can’t remember seeing any QUILTBAG characters.

Fairy stories are, of course, moral tales, and the show is no exception. The main planks of its morality appear to be the value of true love and the importance of personal freedom and self-expression (as long as you are cis and straight?). Duty of parents to children is absolute, but duty of children to parents is mostly frowned upon. Goodness only knows what my grandparents would have made of that, but the world changes, probably for the better.

Anyway, it is an interesting show, and I shall keep watching it to see how it develops. If you haven’t seen it, and can stand a show with lots of women in it, you might want to give it a try.

A Little Feminist Ranting

My latest column for Bristol 24/7 is now online. It is basically a response to a (female) conservative MP implying that trying to get more women on the City Council would mean that they would not be getting elected on merit. As if the current system where almost everything in the country seems to be run by white men is somehow fair and just. Meritocracy my arse. But I’m not allowed to use that as a title in a newspaper.

The article also contains a few thoughts on the statistical probability of the books on Waterstones’ SF promotions tables being fairly chosen.