![]() |
![]() |
#11 |
Member
How Do You Identify?:
Momma, Ma'am Preferred Pronoun?:
She/Her Relationship Status:
I am in love. Truly Madly Deeply Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: California
Posts: 997
Thanks: 502
Thanked 2,127 Times in 559 Posts
Rep Power: 2369288 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]()
... the whole discussion brings up issues and fears for me cause I have already been through this once in the 70's during the feminist era when I was called a "pawn of the patriarchy" and "copying heterosexual relationships".
The pressure then was no labels. The ugliness of either be andro or you are not welcome in our community and I mean we were ostracized, was sometimes violent. Ever have an angry feminist lesbian pull your hair (too long and girly), push you down and take your heels and throw them, or take your lipstick and write all over your face? I heard in 1970's "butch/femme is dead and old." All these things happened. Those of us who lived through it know that to see it come around again seems dismissive and hurtful all over again. To write us off as too boxed in is unfair and truly offensive. Gender queer works for some, but to say it is more label free or more andro, and imply that it is better and younger and m ore hip, dismisses my history, dismisses me as a vital person in the universe. There is not, for me, a better form of self description. Being ridiculed for being femme or butch and appreciating those descriptors was the norm in the 70's. I published and article about 10 years back about this part of the b/f past, one butch said "Everyone wanted to fuck me but they wouldn't walk down the street with me the next morning. No one would talk to me at meetings. I would walk in and there would be a dead silence." As I said in my first post, I find it very interesting that the discussion is about the alternative terms for butch and none for femme. I agree with Unndunn, about femme invisibility. I, also believe that butch/femme is part of the queer paradigm. For me, a person who is not queer/gay/lesbian/dyke/transensual is not femme, she can be feminine but not femme. Besides, I don't want to change my descriptor. *sits back and waits for it* Then too, I heard b/f is dead or dying. Still here. Still alive. Still kickin!
__________________
![]() "I have a respect for manners as such, they are a way of dealing with people you don't agree with or like." Margaret Mead ![]() ![]() Read me! www.leatherati.com |
![]() |
![]() |
The Following 20 Users Say Thank You to Isadora For This Useful Post: | Admin, Andrew, Jr., Apocalipstic, Arwen, Bit, Corkey, Duchess, friskyfemme, Gemme, iamkeri1, kittygrrl, LieslKate, Linus, Lynn, NotAnAverageGuy, PapaC, Rene, SuperFemme, T-Rex, tiggs |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|