Go Ask Alice – But Not About Transsexuals’
Lives and History: A Defense of the Right of Members of an
Oppressed Class to Speak for Themselves
Katrina C. RoseA
This book would look very different if it could have included first-hand
accounts telling us how people labeled “hermaphrodites” in the
nineteenth century saw and represented their own bodies and lives.1
- Alice Domurat Dreger, Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex
This paper would look quite different if J. Michael Bailey – and Alice Dreger –
afforded to transsexual women the degree of respect with which Dreger begins the
epilogue of her 1995 book, Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex. In fact,
the paper probably would not exist. Instead, my energy would have been devoted to
challenging historical revisionism on other trans-related fronts.2
A
Attorney at law (Texas and Minnesota) and Ph.D. candidate (History, University of
Iowa.) In addition to authoring a column on trans political issues in the Texas Triangle
(1998-2003), I have published numerous scholarly works on transgender law, including
“The Proof is in the History: The Louisiana Constitution Recognizes Transsexual
Marriages and Louisiana Sex Discrimination Law Covers Transsexuals – So Why Isn’t
Everybody Celebrating?”, Deakin Law Review 9:399 (2004); and “Cause of Action For
Legal Change of Gender,” Causes of Action (2nd) 24:135 (2004) (co-authored with
Alyson Meiselman and Phyllis Frye).
1
Alice Domurat Dreger, Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1995), p. 167.
2
Even aside from what occurred during the ENDA debacle of October 2007, just as I was
completing this article for the 2008 NWSA Conference a gay publication’s Pride editorial
declared of Stonewall, “There were no drag queens there at all.” Joseph DaBrow, “Lets
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© Katrina C. Rose (v. 4.0, June 2008)
However, no such respect can be found in Bailey’s 2003 The Man Who Would be
Queen.3 Respect likewise is absent in, “The Controversy Surrounding The Man Who
Would Be Queen: A Case History of the Politics of Science, Identity, and Sex in the
Internet Age,” Dreger’s defense of Queen’s author. I intend this paper as a vindication of
the right of transsexuals to speak for themselves – and not as any form of threat, coercion
or any manner of negativity aimed at anyone who might happen not to be transsexual but
who also might happen to write about the subject or any person or persons who are
encompassed by that category. It is, however, a warning to all that transsexuals will
never again stand silent as our very existence is attacked.
Having begun by taking a somewhat confrontational posture, I feel obligated to
point out two things. First, prior to Dreger’s “Controversy” emerging in the summer of
2007 I had no personal connection to the controversy over The Man Who Would be
Queen beyond the fact that I am a transsexual woman4 even though, as I will
demonstrate, that in and of itself gives me a vested – and valid - interest in combating
maliciousness that masquerades either as ‘science’ or as a defense of a pseudo-scientific
masquerade. I had minimal contact with only two of the principals. This consisted of a
small number of e-mail conversations with Andrea James over the last few years (though
Go to the Movies!” Metroline, Late May 2008, http://www.metroline-online.com/
column1.html (emphasis added) (accessed June 11, 2008).
3
J. Michael Bailey, The Man Who Would Be Queen: The Science of Gender-Bending and
Transsexualism (Joseph Henry Press, 2003).
4
In the earlier drafts of this paper which I have posted on the Internet, I failed to include
here a connection which should be obvious by the end of the paper, if not by the end of
this paragraph: I was not totally silent at the time of the publication of Queen, as I did
author an analysis of the Bailey book for Transgender Tapestry, from which I quote from
herein.
2
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I believe that none of this communication involved Queen) and one phone conversation
with Anjelica Kieltyka (which, I believe, occurred during the summer of 2004, and was a
call from her about my review of Queen that had appeared in Transgender Tapestry.)5
As for Anne Lawrence, in 2000 I was a one of many trans rights activists (along some
whose interests were/are averse to trans rights) who participated in a conference call, and
Lawrence was part of the call, though I do not recall if I spoke to her directly at any point
during the call. Additionally, prior to 2007, I had never had any contact with Lynn
Conway or Deirdre McCloskey.6
Secondly, I have used Alice Dreger’s Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention
of Sex in the undergraduate-level course I teach on transgender history at the University
of Iowa and, in what might come as a surprise to some, I have continued to do so in spite
5
With respect to Andrea James, I have offered a few thoughts on trans law for use on TS
Roadmap (http://www.tsroadmap.com) and she does link to my trans legal history web
page (which has fallen into disrepair during my time at the University of Iowa, a situation
I hope to rectify soon.) Moreover, I do not want to be read as endorsing everything on TS
Roadmap as I have not ever perused every page on the site. Nevertheless, I also cannot
say that I agree with the characterization of TS Roadmap as promoting a “‘Stepford Wife’
stereotype” for transsexual women. Marti Abernathey, “For Matters of Disclosure, I
Open Myself To You,” TransAdvocate, Aug. 16, 2007, http://transadvocate.com/
blog/2007/08/16/for-matters-of-disclosure-i-open-myself-to-you/ (last visited Aug. 18,
2007).
I also had some minimal contact with Calpernia Addams, all via e-mail and all several
years ago, relating to a law review article I wrote in which I referenced some material
written about the murder of Barry Winchell. See Katrina C. Rose, “When is an
Attempted Rape Not An Attempted Rape? When the Victim is a Transsexual - Schwenk
v. Hartford: The Intersection of Prison Rape, Title VII and Society's Willingness to
Dehumanize Transsexuals,” American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the
Law 9(3):505 (2001), 538 n. 201.
6
I am currently working on a doctorate in History at the University of Iowa, where
McCloskey taught (in the History Department) and transitioned in the 1990s. However, I
began my graduate work at Iowa after McCloskey left to go to the University of Illinois
at Chicago. Needless to say, however, I do work with many of her former colleagues and
have TA’d alongside some of her former TAs.
3
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© Katrina C. Rose (v. 4.0, June 2008)
of the manner in which the controversy over her defense of Bailey has developed. I have
a few qualms with Hermaphrodites (I am aware that others have more), but none have
caused me to find another main text. I supplement it with other material on the subject.
Consequently, Dreger’s is not the only voice heard.
And hopefully Dreger’s will not be the only voice heard now that her “The
Controversy Surrounding The Man Who Would Be Queen: A Case History of the Politics
of Science, Identity, and Sex in the Internet Age” has been published in a special issue of
Archives of Sexual Behavior devoted to what resulted from the publication of Queen.7
Unfortunately, despite Archives deigning to include some scholarly commentary critical
of Dreger, there was, and still is a bad smell in the air – the smell of a fix being in.8 For
example, in 2007 the ostensibly progressive Huffington Post almost instantaneously
posted praise for Dreger’s defense of Bailey, replete with typically conservative canards
about alleged political correctness in the academy.9 More ominously, Kenneth Zucker is
poised to be a major player in the Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders Work Group as it
Alice D. Dreger, “The Controversy Surrounding The Man Who Would Be Queen: A
Case History of the Politics of Science, Identity, and Sex in the Internet Age,” Archives of
Sexual Behavior 37:366 (2008). In this article, however, my references are to the version
of Dreger’s article that circulated on the internet in 2007.
7
8
According to Zucker, sixty people expressed a desire to comment and twenty-four such
commentaries were received. Kenneth J. Zucker, “Introduction to Dreger (2008) and
Peer Commentaries,” Archives of Sexual Behavior 37:365 (2008). Of course, the only
response Zucker afforded my inquiry was an automated e-mail reply.
Seth Roberts, “Can Professors Say the Truth?” Huffington Post, Aug. 16, 2007,
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/seth-roberts/can-professors-say-the-tr_b_60781.html (last
visited Aug. 18, 2007).
9
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assembles the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders.10
That is simply a feeling on my part, and I have no trouble acknowledging that I
could be wrong.
But, trans people – particularly trans women – have long since earned the right
not to have to waste precious time and energy defending ourselves against yet another
Transsexual Empire,11 Meyer-Reter ‘study,’12 Horsexe,13 “Cunning Linguists,”14 or
Kantaras v. Kantaras: How a Victory for one Transsexual May Hinder the Sexual
Minority Movement.15 In fact, I am left to wonder if the late-2007 battle for transinclusion in the proposed federal Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) would
have gone better for trans people had all of the energy used to combat Bailey –via-Dreger
had been available as a raw resource to combat the multiple misrepresentations put forth
by gay opponents of trans-inclusion to discredit the notion of an inclusive ENDA.
As always, it seems, when the next round of illegitimacy stands poised for
legitimization, we have to defend ourselves, because history has shown that if we do not,
Lou Chibbaro, Jr., “Activists Alarmed Over APA – Head of Psychiatry Panel Favors
‘Change’ Therapy for Some Trans Teens,” Washington Blade, May 30, 2008,
http://www.washingtonblade.com/2008/5-30/news/national/12682.cfm (accessed June 9,
2008).
10
11
Janice G. Raymond, The Transsexual Empire: The Making of the She-Male (Boston:
Beacon Press, 1979).
Jon Meyer & Donna Reter: “Sex Reassignment: Follow-Up,” Archives of General
Psychiatry 36:1010 (1979).
12
13
Catherine Millot, Horsexe (1990).
14
Norah Vincent, “Cunning Linguists,” The Advocate, June 20, 2000.
Elizabeth C. Barcena, “Kantaras v. Kantaras: How a Victory for one Transsexual May
Hinder the Sexual Minority Movement,” Buffalo Women’s Law Journal 12:101 (2003 /
2004).
15
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we cannot expect a defense from any other corner. Remember that – for, I believe, that is
what all of this can be boiled down to. For that is what happened in 2003 and it is what
has continued.
I doubt that I need to recount here the general thesis of Queen or the reaction that
the trans community had to the book in 2003. I am assuming that anyone reading this is
sufficiently familiar with that context to understand my analysis. Consequently, I will
simply proceed to my dismay at the following statement by Dreger about that context and
what came later. “In researching this history,” Dreger wrote, “I was dismayed to discover
how many people — including professional scholars — were ready to give me detailed
opinions about the book while admitting they hadn’t bothered to read it.”16 Now, I am
not particularly dismayed by its bare accuracy; I have no doubt that the statement is
quantitatively accurate. Indeed, it describes my feeling as to how Queen ended up with
its Lambda Literary nomination, for I have never seen any indication that anyone who
was responsible for the nomination had actually read the book.
I am, however, even more dismayed by the irony of Dreger’s statement. She
elaborates:
When I talked with him about the backlash against the book, Paul Vasey
recalled being with Joan Roughgarden, a prominent transgender scientist,
in February 2003 when she saw for the first time the book’s cover,
reproduced on a flier. Vasey remembers that, upon seeing the flier,
Roughgarden immediately denounced the book and declared it a threat to
the LBGT community. Roughgarden could not have actually known what
the book said, because it wasn’t yet published.17
16
Dreger, “Controversy,” 13.
17
Ibid.
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Somewhat surprisingly, Dreger eventually acknowledged that Roughgarden actually
could have seen it.18
Still, I have a deeper concern about the concern over the reactions by
Roughgarden and others to that cover: Why is knowing the contents of the interior of the
book a prerequisite to expressing very valid concerns about a disgusting illustration (one
clearly designed to play to the worst anti-transsexual and anti-gay male prejudices) and,
by extension, the book it is designed to sell, and, again by (valid) extension, the potential
for the book to be “a threat to the LBGT community” , primarily or even solely because
of that cover? The dubiously manufactured lack of consensus that became the scientific
status quo post-Meyer-Reter eventually led to total legitimacy-inversion for transitionrelated healthcare for transsexual Medicaid patients in Iowa.19 Must transsexuals wait
until Queen (or its Blanchard forebear) is cited right alongside Paul McHugh’s
religionism-based ‘scholarship’ in a court opinion that obliterates existing pro-transsexual
law and forcibly re-transitions us all?20
I assert that, while it is indeed best to have read all of what one is criticizing,
some ‘nuggets’ are sufficient for people of reasonable intelligence – and relevant
experience – to, for lack of a better phrase, judge a book by its cover. Although that
would seem to be the antithesis of academic discourse, how inappropriate is it really in
Alice D. Dreger, “Response to the Commentaries on Dreger (2008),” Archives of
Sexual Behavior, 37:503 (2008), 506.
18
19
Compare Pinneke v. Preisser, 623 F.2d 546 (8th Cir. 1980) (pro-transsexual outcome),
with Smith v. Rasmussen, 249 F.3d 755 (8th Cir. 2001) (anti-transsexual outcome).
For an analysis of McHugh’s work being used against transsexual existence, see Lynn
Conway, “IRS disallows a woman's tax deduction for SRS - citing teachings in a Catholic
religious journal as a basis for its decision,” Jan. 25, 2006, http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/
people/conway/TS/Legal%20Issues/Taxes/IRS%20SRS%20Rulings.html.
20
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light of Bailey apparently wanting people to judge the cover of Queen? In 2003 he
indicated that, despite using the word “transsexualism” on the cover, he wanted people to
get the impression that Queen was about something else.
Even transsexual women who support my arguments in some cases
regretted the choice of the title and the book cover art. I do not regret
either. Only one-third of the book is about transsexualism, per se, and
only one chapter out of eleven is about nonhomosexual transsexuals, who
are the most aggrieved. Both the title and the cover art refer to male
femininity, in a humorous fashion. Male femininity is what the book is
about.21
So yes, I will admit it. I judged The Man Who Would Be Queen by its cover. But, I did
so by judging the cover on its own merits (or lack thereof.) I was not, and I still am not,
willing to accept the deceptive messages that Bailey claims he was attempting to convey
with it: that (1) it was science (at least as most people of any level of intelligence would
understand the term) and (2) it was about people who actually are transsexual.
Why couldn’t Bailey have titled the book The Man Who Would Be Queen:
Anecdotes on Male Femininity Gleaned From Recent Visits to Chicago-Area Bars?22
Might it be because even he did not really believe what he wrote a few paragraphs after
the above-quoted one?
[N]ot only do I believe that there is nothing inherently harmful in the ideas
I have discussed, I actually believe that the airing of these ideas will help
transsexuals.23
J. Michael Bailey, “My Book,” http://www.psych.northwestern.edu/psych/people/
faculty/bailey/controversy.htm (last visited July 31, 2003). The same quote is still
available at the same URL, but the title of the page is now “Book Controversy Question
& Answer.” (last visited June 12, 2008).
21
22
Although I do not have citations to such, I believe that I am not the only (and probably
not the first) person to have made this observational suggestion.
23
Ibid. (emphasis added).
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The first I heard of Queen was the glowing write-up of it by John Derbyshire in the rightwing National Review – not a publication that, in 2003 (or now), would praise anything
that could even conceivably “help” transsexuals.24
[C]onservatives remember what much of the rest of society has forgotten:
that even the most private of acts can have dire public consequences, as
witness the epidemic of bastardy that has ravaged the United States over
the past 40 years, and also of course the AIDS plague, spread in this
country mainly by promiscuous homosexual buggery. Religion, to which
most non-Randian conservatives are at least well disposed, adds another
complicating factor, since the sacred texts of all three major Western
monotheistic faiths proscribe homosexuality in unambiguous terms.
These matters are therefore at the very crux of conservative thinking as it
has developed in this country across the past half-century. In order to
tackle them, it is helpful to have as much actual understanding of them as
we can acquire. Michael Bailey's new book is a very useful addition to
that understanding.
…
[H]is book offers a wealth of fascinating information, carefully gathered
by (it seems to me) a conscientious and trustworthy scientific observer.
…
[T]here is circumstantial evidence that complete acceptance and equality
for all sexual orientations may have antisocial consequences, so that the
obloquy aimed at sexual variance by every society prior to our own may
have had some stronger foundation than mere blind prejudice. Male
homosexuality, in particular, seems to possess some quality of being
intrinsically subversive when let loose in long-established institutions,
especially male-dominated ones. The courts of at least two English kings
offer support to this thesis, as does the postwar British Secret Service, and
At least, as any commonly-accepted definition of “help” would be deployed – in
contrast to the sort of “help” that those opposed to transition-related hormone therapy and
surgery want transsexuals to receive. For example, Paul McHugh, of Johns Hopkins
University, has declared about transsexuals that psychiatrists “would do better to
concentrate on trying to fix their minds and not their genitalia.” Paul McHugh, “Surgical
Sex,” First Things: A Journal of Religion, Culture and Public Life, Nov. 2004,
http://www.firstthings.com/article.php3?id_article=398 (last visited Aug. 26, 2007). See
also, Teresa A. Zakaria, “By Any Other Name: Defining Male and Female in Marriage
Statutes,” Ave Maria Law Review 3(1):349 (2005), 360.
24
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more recently the Roman Catholic priesthood. I should like to see some
adventurous sociologist research these outward aspects with as much
diligence and humanity as Michael Bailey has applied to his study of the
inward ones.25
Why is it unreasonable for transsexual women to have a ferociously negative
reaction to something embraced in this manner by one of the punditry organs of
radical neo-conservatism?
Even without us having seen it?
The answer is simple: It is not.
Embracing the enemy of one’s enemy in the hopes that the former will
actually turn out to be a friend has rarely proven to be more than embarrassing
national masochism, not only not solving the initial problem but often causing
more problems of exponentially higher severity; in fact, one of America’s current
follies of this nature seems to be turning into excruciatingly painful national
suicide (or, at least, the murder of most of our cherished freedoms.) Recognizing
the friend of one’s enemy as also being one’s enemy – or at least being willing to
recognize the possibility of that linkage – is not folly in the slightest. It is an
initial step toward self-preservation.
That was the mindset with which many transsexual women greeted The
Man Who Would be Queen in 2003.
And justifiably so.
As John Gagnon wrote in his Archives comment, according to Dreger’s
recounting of events:
25
John Derbyshire, “Lost in the Male,” National Review, June 30, 2003.
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matters deteriorated rapidly after the publication of TMWWBQ as the
blowback against Bailey and his book was mobilized. In her judgment,
these attacks went beyond the limits of civilized debate in academic
circles. That this blowback has come to include her was apparently one of
the stimuli that motivated her to write her version of the events involved.
That her ‘objectivity’ might have been influenced by becoming collateral
damage in the conflict over Bailey and TMWWBQ is not addressed in any
detailed way.26
To be absolutely fair, Dreger does concisely acknowledge the accuracy of the
ultimate core criticism of Queen (something many of Bailey’s defenders do not27),
namely that the book in question, presented to the public as being science, was
anything but science. Yet, in how she does so, she manages to spin it not against
Bailey, but against transsexuals.
[T]he way in which Bailey refers offhandedly and irregularly to his
methodology could lead some to believe that all of the information he
relays therein is the result of scientific study. 28
Dreger’s utilization of “could” here shows an unwillingness to acknowledge the
legitimacy of our experiences – and our concern. After all, Raymond’s
Transsexual Empire still – a quarter century after the crime – possesses an
undeserved patina of scholarly legitimacy.
The total lack of citation and documentation makes it very difficult to
determine to what extent Bailey’s claims are based on peer-reviewed
scientific evidence. It is true that TMWWBQ’s jacket boasts that it is
“based on his original research” and “grounded firmly in the scientific
method.” And indeed, in some places, Bailey does refer to some of his
own actual scientific research.
…
John H. Gagnon, “Is This a Work of Science?”, Archives of Sexual Behavior 37:444
(2008), 444.
26
The National Review’s Derbyshire and the Huffington Post’s Roberts certainly were
unwilling to do so.
27
28
Dreger, “Controversy,” 40-41 (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
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[O]ne would be hard-pressed to call what Bailey did to obtain and present
the stories of Kieltyka, Juanita, and the other individuals about whom he
wrote “science”—or even “research” in any scholarly sense. Indeed, both
Conway and McCloskey have complained about just that—that what he
was doing with these women’s stories wasn’t science—and I think they
are absolutely right.
Clearly, what Bailey did in terms of learning and relaying the
stories of Kieltyka, Juanita, and other transsexual women was neither
systematic nor generalizable. Never did Bailey organize a series of
specific questions to ask these women, questions that might have been
used, for example, to scientifically test Blanchard’s taxonomy. Never did
he seek a statistically representative sample of transsexual women in
deciding whose stories to tell; again, his critics have complained about just
this (see, e.g., Sauer, 2003). He simply picked people who came with good
stories — people such as Kieltyka and Juanita — to put human faces on
Blanchard’s theory. He had no interest in scientifically investigating
Blanchard’s theory; at this point, he already believed it to be true because
of what he had learned from the scientific literature, from colleagues, and
from his prior experiences. Using stories in this way is not science—it
doesn’t even rise to the level of bad science, because it doesn’t even
pretend to test or develop a theory—and I think it is clear it does not rise
to the level of IRB-qualified research by the U.S. federal definition.29
And here the legitimacy of our concerns that Dreger actually is willing to
acknowledge becomes fodder for her crusade to manufacture a living martyrdom
for Bailey – while at the same time rationalizing away the deceptive trade of his
(non-)scientific practice.
Although TMWWBQ occasionally seems to brag about its
scientific rigor—especially on its jacket—in the text Bailey frequently acts
more like a science journalist than a scientist. He mixes up references to
scientific studies he led and stories of individuals he met along the way—
stories, remember, not just of transsexual women and crossdressing men,
but also of the men on the annual “gay guys” panel of his human sexuality
class, of “Princess Danny,” and of Edwin, the effeminate man at the
cosmetics counter of Bailey’s local department store. Bailey didn’t get
IRB approval to gather or write about any of these stories, because they
were all anecdotes and not scientific studies. Given that he consistently
obtained IRB approval for work he did that was IRB-qualified, there can
be no doubt Bailey knew perfectly well the difference between the
29
Ibid. (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
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anecdotes he used to liven up his book and real systematic and
generalizable science. If his readers do not know it, that has certainly
been to his and his argument’s advantage, but it does not mean he violated
federal policy.30
So? As Gagnon remarked, “To argue that TMWWBQ was not meant to be a book of
science appears to be more a result of the conflict about the book than a description of the
author’s intentions.” 31 I leave it to the reader to discern whether those who eagerly
embraced Queen – and just as eagerly denounced those who dissected it – knew or cared
about Queen’s non-science being “neither systematic nor generalizable.”
The possibility that Bailey did not violate federal policy would mean that certain
specific allegations against Bailey emanating from Queen might possibly be inaccurate.32
But, the inclusion of the word “science” in the title – specifically the sub-title – of the
book makes the authorship, publication and marketing of it not simply into a work of
bad-, pseudo- or non-science but into an act of fraud perpetrated directly against anyone
who purchased the book expecting to see some form of presentation of some aspect of
30
Ibid. (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
John H. Gagnon, “Is This a Work of Science?” Archives of Sexual Behavior 37:444
(2008), 446.
31
32
I continue to take no position about the sexual relationship aspect of the controversy,
though I have noticed that Charles Moser made a similar observation in the conclusion of
his Archives comment. Charles Moser, “A Different Perspective,” Archives of Sexual
Behavior 37:472 (2008), 475. Moreover, I do recommend reading the response to Dreger
by Andrea James on TS Roadmap. Andrea James, “Alice Dreger: Timeline of Her
Personal Feud With Me,” TS Roadmap, Aug. 14, 2007, http://www.tsroadmap. com/info/
alice-dreger/hermaphrodite-monger.html (last visited Aug. 18, 2007). If, as James
appears to show, Dreger quoted e-mails from James (to Anne Lawrence) out of context,
then it would seem that, in attempting to defend Bailey from charges of misconduct,
Dreger has opened herself up to, at the very least, the sort of charges that have long been
made against Janice Raymond. See generally Kay Brown, “Janice Raymond, Ph.D.,”
Transhistory.net, http://www.transhistory.net/history/ TH_Janice_Raymond.html (last
visited Aug. 18, 2007).
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science33 (and perpetrated indirectly against all transsexual women), and it actually begs
the question of why the perpetrator of such a fraud deserves any defense from any corner
of the scholarly world.
Of course, I do want to acknowledge that Dreger does, on some level, seem to
imply that even she feels as though at least some of the immediate, visceral reaction was
justified. Yet, the entire discussion of these reactions brings me back to this: Why should
reading the entire thing be a prerequisite to judging the whole? Some ‘parts’ of ‘things’
are so rancid – so poisonous – as to render the whole unsalvageable. And when some
‘parts’ are so defective as to render the whole deadly from the start, it is in no way
improper to initiate demolition procedures before the edifice is ever opened to the public.
The interior of The Man Who Would be Queen contains a section that cannot be
read in any other fashion as having been designed to embarrass, denigrate and, in ways
scarcely imaginable to non-transsexuals (such as Dreger and Bailey), complicate the lives
“To act with the ‘intent to defraud’ means to act wilfully, and with the specific intent to
deceive or cheat, for the purpose of causing financial loss to another, or to bring some
financial gain to oneself. It is not necessary to establish that any person was actually
defrauded or deceived.” 720 ILL COMP. STAT. ANN. 5/17-1 (A) (iii) (2007).
33
Roberts complains:
I read Bailey's draft a few months after reading Crossing (1999), a memoir by
Deidre McCloskey, a professor of economics at the University of Illinois at
Chicago. Crossing tells the story of McCloskey's change from man to woman. It
is an emotionally powerful book, full of longing. According to Crossing and
Bailey's draft, McCloskey had at least three features in common with Type 2
transsexuals (worked in male-dominated profession (economist), married,
changed sex after age 40). Crossing also describes being sexually aroused by
cross-dressing. This appeared consistent with Blanchard's typology -- which
Crossing didn't mention. Why not? I felt deceived.
Roberts, “Can Professors.” Well, genuinely without any intent to be snarky, I believe
Roberts answered that himself: Crossing is “a memoir.”
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of transsexual women – and it is this section alone that I assign for reading in the
undergraduate-level transgender history class I teach at the University of Iowa.
That section of Queen comprises slightly over two pages.34
Yes, pages.
Yet, those pages (192-194) are all that were – and, in my view, all that still are –
needed to completely discredit The Man Who Would be Queen. And, though I am sure
that the precise wording of applicable professional ethics rules would allow Bailey to
escape unscathed on this point as well, I feel that general notions of societal decorum are
sullied by what he does therein. These pages comprise a ‘test’ – or so he asserts.
The ‘test’?
“Autogynephilic and Homosexual Transsexuals: How to Tell Them Apart.”
It was this ‘test’ – one Bailey intended for use by both the professional and the
“novice” – that I focused on when I critiqued the book in Transgender Tapestry in 2004.
“Have you ever been in the military or worked as a policeman or truck
driver, or been a computer programmer, businessman, lawyer, scientist,
engineer, or physician?” A seemingly innocuous question to gauge simply
whether the askee has a reasonable, stable work history? After all, some
gender transition programs and gender therapists ask such questions of
new patients—and one might think a yes answer would be a good thing.
Instead, this is one of a short list of questions which Bailey says “should
work even for the novice” (even though he admits he’s never tested this!)
at how to tell the difference between autogynephilic transsexuals
(according to Bailey’s false dichotomy, “men erotically obsessed with the
image of themselves as women;” in other words, nothing but a full-time
fetishist) and homosexual transsexuals (“extremely feminine gay men”).
The list consists of several questions, six each with a point value of +1 and
-1 and, with the exception of a bonus round question based on the asker’s
opinion as to the passability of the subject, all of the +1 questions come
first—significant for the testing parameters: “Ask each question, and if the
answer is ‘Yes,’ add the number (+1 or -1) next to the question. If the sum
34
Bailey, 192-94.
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gets to +3, stop; the trans- sexual you’re talking to is autogynephilic. If the
sum gets to -3, she is homosexual.”
Upon my initial read of the list of professions, any one of which
constitutes one-third of an intractable declaration that one is
autogynephilic (remember: if you get to +3, then stop; the -1 questions
never come into play), I tried thinking of things that aren’t encompassed
by it, and I had trouble coming up with much beyond convenience store
clerk, prostitution, and writing books that further dehumanize the last
minority that against which it is truly still politically correct to
discriminate.
Yes, the transphobia is more than obvious, but there is far more afoot.
Philadelphia transgender activist Kathy Padilla has observed, “Besides the
horrible transphobia—the misogyny is appalling! Let’s remember this is a
guy who states he doesn’t understand female sexuality at all. Not
transwoman or non-transwoman—he certainly seems to feel a need to
define and control it though, doesn’t he?”
Think about it. What is Bailey really saying with that list? That those
listed are inherently male professions and no real woman would be in such
a profession, so a new woman with such a history can’t possibly be
legitimate—either as a woman or a transsexual (and when compared to the
occupational list at the other end of the scale, it’s clear that Bailey views
these professions as being not simply for men, but for real men). And it
only gets worse:
“As a child, did people think you were about as masculine as other boys?”
“Have you ever been married to a woman?”
“Were you over the age of 40 when you began to live full-time as a
woman?”
“Are you nearly as attracted to women as to men? Or more attracted to
women? Or equally attracted to women?”35
It is that italicized parenthetical in the second quoted paragraph that makes Dreger’s
concern about those who are intended to be judged by this ‘test’ (and the book as a
whole) judging The Man Who Would Be Queen based on having seen at least a portion of
Katrina C. Rose, “The Man Who Would Be Janice Raymond,” Transgender Tapestry,
Winter 2004, http://www.ifge.org/Article237.phtml (last visited Aug. 18, 2007).
35
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it more than a little ironic. A key element of her position is that transsexual pre-judged
Bailey, yet his book contains a ‘test’ that he pre-judged as being fit for lay persons and
professionals to go forth into the transsexual-populated world and ‘prove’ his theory.
I teach this two-plus page section in the following manner: I assign the pages, but
with the few words by which Bailey admits that he’s never utilized this specific ‘test’
himself blacked out. We discuss the negativity of the stereotypes that the ‘test’ embraces
and how it the ‘test’ frontloaded in favor of reaching a conclusion that the transsexual at
issue is ‘autogynephilic.’
And bear in mind, that thus far is article I have only addressed half of the ‘test.’
Continuing with my 2004 review:
Try some of his -1 questions—the ones where enough answers to get you
to -3 permits the quizzer to declare the quizzee to be a homosexual
transsexual:
“Is your ideal partner a straight man?”
“Does this describe you? ‘I find the idea of having sex with men very
sexually exciting, but the idea of having sex with women is not at all
appealing.’”
“Were you under the age of 25 when you began to live full-time as a
woman?”
“Do you like to look at pictures of really muscular men with their shirts
off?”
Still not enough in the way of stereotypes? Try this one: “Have you ever
worked as a hairstylist, beautician, female impersonator, lingerie model, or
prostitute?” Okay, yes, Bailey came up with a few more occupations for
this end of the scale than I did upon analysis of the question at the other
end, but are you at all surprised that he included prostitution here?
Transsexuals aren’t.36
36
Ibid.
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After looking at all of the questions and how the ‘test’ is designed, I then reveal to my
students the fact that Bailey unleashed this thing without ever having tried it out.
My students instantly – and without any further prompting – see the problem.
Rest assured, for the most part, these students are not sexual libertines, gender libertines
or libertines of any variety. I would describe few as even being rabidly pro-transsexual.
Most, in fact, are Iowa farm kids who are experiencing this subject in a non-Jerry
Springer setting for the first time.
But they can read.
And they can smell.
I realize that more at issue than Alice Dreger’s review/defense of The Man Who
Would be Queen. There is the outgrowth controversy over allegations of sexual
relationships involving Bailey and his Queen ‘data.’ I repeat that is an aspect of the
Bailey brouhaha I do not weigh in on here, except in a general nature as follows:
(1) I doubt seriously if either side is 100% right; and, even if one side or the other
does possess not only the purity of the truth, sufficient proof thereof would appear to be
lacking. Moreover, mistakes and inaccuracies happen in the best of circumstances. Bear
in mind though, that The Man Who Would be Queen is not the ‘best’ of anything. In fact,
its absolute lack of legitimacy has earned all of its – and its author’s – critics a favorable
presumption in any dispute directly or indirectly related to the book’s non-sciencemarketed-as-science.
(2) Even if the personal problems with Queen and its production are all resolved
in Bailey’s favor, such resolution does nothing to obviate the fact that every ounce of
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criticism directed at the book and its author because of the non-science-marketed-asscience was justified (remember, Dreger herself tacitly acknowledges the illegitimacy of
Bailey’s packaging.) Collectively, transsexuals have every right to defend ourselves
against those who seek to – and I realize that the following is an inflammatory word, but
the word exists for a reason – exterminate us or our right to exist as who we are.
(3) Silencing, intimidating and muzzling of dissent is a real issue – in academia,
politics and in any aspect of life in which there is more than one opinion afloat. I must
point out that transgendered people in general (not just transsexuals, though we do seem
to suffer the most) have more first-hand experience with being silenced, intimidated and
muzzled by dominant discourse (even apart from the medical establishment; dominant
gay rights discourse has long squashed all real dissent to the entrenched agenda of
opposition to expending resources on the securing of transgender rights until after gay
rights – including same-sex marriage – are secured) than society at large is able, or
willing, to comprehend. Still, I know transsexuals who hate the pseudo-science propping
up ‘autogynephilia’ as much as I do, yet, on principle, are very uncomfortable about
efforts to shut up the theory’s proponents. To this, I reply with the musing of a former
co-worker. He said it always upset him to hear anyone say that there are always two sides
to the story because that’s not always the case; sometimes there are three or four or more.
Likewise, sometimes, there is only one reasonably legitimate point of view.
Sadly, in the end, I feel as though the entire controversy-about-the-controversy
boils down to yet another effort to rob transgendered people – particularly transsexual
women – not only of all agency but even our mere static legitimacy.
To illustrate better, I’ll offer an example from current pop culture (of sorts.)
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Running on television in the Midwest at the time I began this paper was a series
of commercials for a certain cell phone service provider. The commercials utilize a Best
Buy-esque ‘geek squad’ motif: all of the major cell phone service providers are
represented by a different techno-geek in the commercial. One – that representing the
advertiser – is a ‘good guy geek.’ All of the others – representing the competitors – are
‘bad guy geeks.’
One of the commercials features the ‘bad guy geeks’ taking the ‘good guy geek’
to the former’s secret lair – in which the ‘bad guy geeks’ have a small animal in a cage.37
One of the ‘bad guy geeks’ boasts that not only do they have the animal totally under
their control (as an analogy to how their respective cell phone providers have their
customers totally under their control for purposes of changing cell phone plans), but that
the animal loves being under their control in this manner.
The ‘good guy geek’ questions the second part of that – just as the ‘bad guy geek’
opens the animal’s cage.
As for what happens next?
The animal may or may not have ever been under their control – but it clearly was
not loving being under their control.
I do not consider myself to be a lab rat. Neither do most transsexuals (a
presumption I feel comfortable making.) Clearly, however, one side of this controversy
does view transsexuals as little more than such. And, that side’s feelings were hurt by
our having the temerity to stand up, to refuse to be locked in J. Michael Bailey’s
I apologize for not recalling the exact species; I haven’t encountered the commercial
since I began revision work on this article. However, the animal was of the ‘lab rat’
variety – either actually a rat, or a gerbil or guinea pig or the like.
37
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theoretical cage, and to defend ourselves – actions that, in and of themselves, would seem
to weigh in favor of an ‘autogynephilic’ label by Bailey-theory adherents. Bailey
apparently was not expecting it. And the ‘autogynephila academia’ brethren have every
intention of re-establishing the proper order of things.
Irony?
Catch-22?
Yes, indeed. We had the audacity to speak for ourselves, to speak out against an
attack against our very being – or, to use the words of Kathy Padilla from 2004, an
attempt “to define and control” who and what we are and what we will ever be allowed to
be. Anyone who is familiar with the subjugation of trans women within the larger gay
rights establishment – of how we are defined based on our willingness to speak and
controlled out of any opportunity for careers in policy and advocacy – knows just how
verboten it is to be the very caliber of woman that lesbian feminists (and the cryptoseparatists of the Janice Raymond mold) legitimately assert the right to be.
I still have nightmares about the months I spent following my graduation from
law school – a time when I actually had no nightmares, but only because I could not sleep
at all.
Because of worry about what I would ever – and never – be allowed to be.
Because of knowing that even some who were able to pass themselves off as
allies of trans people felt that I should not even attempt to do anything like be a lawyer
and should not even expect to secure any non-minimum-wage employment, that I should
be happy to simply be something that would end up on Bailey’s list of homosexual
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transsexual signifiers: “hairstylist, beautician, female impersonator, lingerie model, or
prostitute.”
I don’t yet have nightmares about it, but now, in the waning days of the American
Junta, I will admit that I do occasionally wonder if, when next I enter the job market – to
seek a position in academia after I finish my Ph.D. – any of those who will consider
whether or not even to offer me an interview, much less a professorship, will have been
influenced by J. Michael Bailey’s ‘science.’ I wonder if, should I get that professorship
and have to move to another state, when I make the dreaded trip to the DMV for a new
driver’s license the person behind the counter will have been influenced by J. Michael
Bailey’s ‘science.’
I wonder about these things.
Because I have to wonder about these things.
Many of those people who have judged Queen based solely on its cover have to
wonder about these things.
Precious few of those defending it have any concept of what any of that is about.
When the Dreger’s “Controversy” surfaced, I conversed again with Padilla, this
time about the article and what it defends.
Bailey’s interest in the plethysmograph extends to his diagnostic practices
in questionably ways – he knows who is a “homosexual transsexual” by
seeing if he finds that person attractive – if so – they must find men
attractive. A bit of unrecognized projection and a rather unique use of his
body as diagnostic tool; we are relegated to diagnostic dustbins based
upon his own finely calibrated “Peter Meter.” Again – his inherent
misogyny affects his judgment, and you can judge a book by its cover –
only as long as that book is about us.38
38
E-mail from Kathy Padilla to author, Aug. 18, 2007.
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Us. Dreger complains of an “‘us versus them’ mentality.”
Jobs.
Government-issued identity documents.
A roof over our heads.
“Us” has to wonder about those things because of the non-science-marketed-asscience that lurks underneath the cover of Queen – that cover that we were not supposed
to judge – and the diseased amalgam that is the decades of pseudo-science and
exterminationist bigotry that preceded it.
All transsexuals have to worry about those things.
J. Michael Bailey does not. Alice Dreger does not. And as Deirdre McCloskey
summarizes this degenerative fiasco:
It was apparent from the outset that Dreger was determined to tell the
story as though Bailey were Galileo (she in fact uses the image, though
jocularly; Blanchard is Copernicus; she, I guess, is Newton) and as though
I were among the papal inquisition confining him to house arrest. The
power positions of the people involved make the Bailey as-victim story
bizarre. Bailey is a tenured professor at a major university, defended
stoutly by its bureaucracy; the two ‘activists’ on which Dreger spends by
far the most time (James and Kieltyka) have only the feeble power of
words.”39
J. Michael Bailey is a human being and deserves the dignity that all human beings
deserve – even in spite of his having produced a work that not only will never enhance
(or encourage acknowledgement of, much less generate respect for) my dignity as a
woman but will always stand poised to be used against me whenever I attempt to validate
my womanhood in any fashion, to anyone, in any forum – public or private. Yes, I’ll
Deirdre McCloskey, “Politics in Scholarly Drag: Dreger’s Assault on the Critics of
Bailey,” Archives of Sexual Behavior 37:466 (2008), 468.
39
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repeat, Bailey is a human being, but The Man Who Would be Queen was – and is – as
indefensible as anything ever typed out by a human being.
But, one thing that Bailey is not is a victim – at least not of anything other than
his own scholarly self-delusions and his willingness to be yet another bully in the lives of
people who have survived more bullying than anyone deserves. He has no standing to
complain of their being held up to scrutiny by his ‘data’. The original working title for
this paper was “Is Alice Dreger to J. Michael Bailey as George W. Bush is to Scooter
Libby?” Dreger, in attempting to be just that – to give Bailey an undeserved ‘Get Out of
Hell Free’ card – has permanently tarnished her reputation – and the entire notion of true
academic freedom.
© 2008
Katrina C. Rose
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