By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, May 30, 2014
The world is abuzz with news that actor Laverne Cox has
become the first transgender person to appear on the cover of Time magazine. If
I understand the current state of the ever-shifting ethic and rhetoric of
transgenderism, that is not quite true: Bradley Manning, whom we are expected
now to call Chelsea, beat Cox to the punch by some time. Manning’s announcement
of his intention to begin living his life as a woman and to undergo so-called
sex-reassignment surgery came after Time’s story, but, given that we are expected
to defer to all subjective experience in the matter of gender identity, it
could not possibly be the case that Manning is a transgendered person today but
was not at the time of the Time cover simply because Time was unaware of the
fact, unless the issuance of a press release is now a critical step in the
evolutionary process.
As I wrote at the time of the Manning announcement,
Bradley Manning is not a woman. Neither is Laverne Cox.
Cox, a fine actor, has become a spokesman — no doubt he
would object to the term — for trans people, whose characteristics may include
a wide variety of self-conceptions and physical traits. Katie Couric famously
asked him about whether he had undergone surgical alteration, and he rejected
the question as invasive, though what counts as invasive when you are being
interviewed by Katie Couric about features of your sexual identity is open to
interpretation. Couric was roundly denounced for the question and for using
“transgenders” as a noun, and God help her if she had misdeployed a pronoun,
which is now considered practically a hate crime.
The phenomenon of the transgendered person is a
thoroughly modern one, not in the sense that such conditions did not exist in
the past — Cassius Dio relates a horrifying tale of an attempted sex-change
operation — but because we in the 21st century have regressed to a very
primitive understanding of reality, namely the sympathetic magic described by
James George Frazer in The Golden Bough. The obsession with policing language
on the theory that language mystically shapes reality is itself ancient — see
the Old Testament — and sympathetic magic proceeds along similar lines, using
imitation and related techniques as a means of controlling reality. The most
famous example of this is the voodoo doll. If an effigy can be made
sufficiently like the reality it is intended to represent, then it becomes, for
the mystical purposes at hand, a reality in its own right. The infinite
malleability of the postmodern idea of “gender,” as opposed to the stubborn
concreteness of sex, is precisely the reason the concept was invented. For all
of the high-academic theory attached to the question, it is simply a mystical
exercise in rearranging words to rearrange reality. Facebook now has a few
score options for describing one’s gender or sex, and no doubt they will soon
match the number of names for the Almighty in one of the old mystery cults.
Regardless of the question of whether he has had his
genitals amputated, Cox is not a woman, but an effigy of a woman. Sex is a
biological reality, and it is not subordinate to subjective impressions, no
matter how intense those impressions are, how sincerely they are held, or how
painful they make facing the biological facts of life. No hormone injection or
surgical mutilation is sufficient to change that.
Genital amputation and mutilation is the extreme
expression of the phenomenon, but it is hardly outside the mainstream of
contemporary medical practice. The trans self-conception, if the
autobiographical literature is any guide, is partly a feeling that one should
be living one’s life as a member of the opposite sex and partly a delusion that
one is in fact a member of the opposite sex at some level of reality that
transcends the biological facts in question. There are many possible
therapeutic responses to that condition, but the offer to amputate healthy
organs in the service of a delusional tendency is the moral equivalent of
meeting a man who believes he is Jesus and inquiring as to whether his
insurance plan covers crucifixion.
This seems to me a very different sort of phenomenon from
simple homosexuality (though, for the record, I believe that our neat little
categories of sexual orientation are yet another substitution of the conceptual
for the actual, human sexual behavior being more complex and varied than the
rhetoric of sexual orientation can accommodate). The question of the status of
gay people interacts with politics to the extent that it in some cases
challenges existing family law, but homosexual acts as such seem to me a matter
that is obviously, and almost by definition, private. The mass delusion that we
are inculcating on the question of transgendered people is a different sort of
matter, to the extent that it would impose on society at large an obligation —
possibly a legal obligation under civil-rights law, one that already is
emerging — to treat delusion as fact, or at the very least to agree to make
subjective impressions superordinate to biological fact in matters both public
and private.
As a matter of government, I have little or no desire to
police how Cox or any other man or woman conducts his or her personal life. But
having a culture organized around the elevation of unreality over reality in
the service of Eros, who is a sometimes savage god, is not only irrational but
antirational. Cox’s situation gave him an intensely unhappy childhood and led
to an eventual suicide attempt, and his story demands our sympathy; times being
what they are, we might even offer our indulgence. But neither of those should
be allowed to overwhelm the facts, which are not subject to our feelings,
however sincere or well intended.
No comments:
Post a Comment