Beyond the Queer Alphabet by Malinda
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5

‘T’ Trouble: Structural and ‘Administrative En-gendering’ as the Academic-Corporate Complex

Bobby Noble, York University

As I sit down to draft this entry, Dean Spade’s important book Normal Life: Administrative Violence, Critical Trans Practice and the Limits of  Law58  literally lands at my door. I’ve been thinking for a while now about the relationship between what Spade calls “administrative violence” and the structures of binary  genders  as  they  emerge  as  a  modality  of   the  identification  practices  of   the  academic- corporate  complex.  I  quickly  skim  Spade’s  book  for  entry  points  into  a  description  of   two monumental ‘personal’ problematics that preoccupy both my own institutional life and the way that such an institutional practice might possibly emerge both in and as a modality of  a counterpublic – or more to the point, fail to productively materialize as such.

The first modality I reference is an impending trans human rights complaint I seek to launch against the federal government for their use of  exclusively binarized sex categories on Canadian passport documents. The second is what I can only identify as a related and seemingly structural virus that seems to have afflicted the vast and decentralized computer network of  my home university over the last five years, which prevent such systems from successfully processing my transgender legal name change (now at least six years old). The latter has been an ongoing struggle for myself  and for many skilled administrative personnel across the campus: To correct instances where my no-longer-legal- birth name pops up randomly.

The affliction is not mine alone; universities across Canada seem ill-equipped to cope with the trans- ing of  much of  its student, and in some cases, faculty cohort. But this particular truth-effect is yet another jarring structural impasse between the perceived new kid on the block – trans-scholarship as a  seemingly  new  cousin  of   sexuality  and  gender  studies  –  in  conflict  with  our  institutional deployment  of  rigid  en-gendering  practices  (strict  use  of  binary  sex  categories  and  legal  birth names)  for  our  students.  In  actuality  these  binary  sex  categories  compromise  the  integrity  of learning  environments  for  the  same  students  in  whose  imaginary  interest  ‘equity’  policies  are reiterated in the first place. The result is a violently performative refrain: ‘it isn’t our fault; we can’t change it.’

Both modalities – the legal grammars of  a passport document and university admissions/registrant markers  and  their  dependence  upon  the  imagined  transparency  of   sex  categories  –  obviously reference each other. But such practices seem to be reaching critical mass at my institution right now. As  I  often  pedagogically  want  to  rush  to  explicate  the  complexities  of  trans-engendering,  I  find myself  in this case coming face to face with a new and remarkable generation of  trans-ing students for whom such complexity is, in the short term, a luxury too hastily accorded. As I prepare to do work  across  classrooms  with  this  cohort,  I  realize  that  the  context  in  which  we  do  this  work  of ‘knowledge production’ instead renders such trans- embodiment quite distinct from and other to, the  kinds of  queering practices that, as Currah Paisley, Jamison Green and Susan Stryker note in “The State of  Transgender Rights in the United States of  America,” we might imagine we have become accustomed to inhabiting:

“[N]either ‘gender’ nor any of  the other suffixes of  ‘trans-’ can be understood in isolation … transing … is a practice that takes place within, as well as across or between, gendered spaces … transing can function as a disciplinary tool when the stigma associated with the lack or loss of  gender  status  threatens  social  unintelligibility,  coercive  normalization  …  a  fundamental question we would like to pose is: What kinds of  intellectual labour can we begin to perform through the critical deployment of  ‘trans-’ operations and movements? Those of  us schooled in the humanities and social sciences have become familiar, over the past twenty years or so, with queering things: how might we likewise begin to critically trans- our world?” 59

With such rethinkings of  trans-, unmoored from the identitarian work of  its suffixes but not from its potentials to articulate normativities of  its own, I track the movement of  trans-ing bodies as they transit across the rigidities of  the academic-corporate complex. What emerges is an urgent need, in the   imperative   tense,   to   catalogue   the   disproportionate   impact   of   normative   en-genderings, thresholds     we     often     imagine     ourselves     to     be     beyond:     the     assumptions     that accommodating  LGBQ  student  lives  is  the  same  as  accommodating  those  identified  with  the complex modalities and mobilities of  the ‘T.’ This is not the right case.

As one course of  such documentary action, then, I reproduce below the letter that I addressed to my  colleagues  in  a  non-specific  graduate  program  attempting  to  out  the  less  than-obvious administrative en-gendering practices that do structural and daily violence across trans bodies at my own institution. The letter is as follows:

“I write to draw your attention to, and enlist your advocacy, on an issue that continues to not just  damage  access  to  educational  infrastructures  and  safety  for  some  of   our  incoming graduate  students  but  which,  as  a  structural  issue  inside  the  academic-corporate  complex, continues to do violence to our numerous and committed feminisms at student, administrative and faculty levels. First, as we continue to accept trans and genderqueer graduate students into our numerous program, many of  whom ask us to use chosen names (over legal birth names) and  who  use  pronouns  other  than  ‘she/her,’  our  institutional,  disciplinary  and  department/ program structures make no room for such variance and gender self-determination.

Even as we attempt to correct for an overdetermination of  ‘she’ in some programs, we still are nowhere near best practices working against administrative en-gendering where we can control these;  and  we  remain  under-utilized  as  knowledge  producers  advising  this  institution/ administration on where we cannot. For instance, I recently completed a non-OHIP [Ontario Health  Insurance  Program]  health  form  at  a  Toronto  based  and  trans-literate  community- based health facility that progressively, and in response to need, listed 6 different choices of pronouns;  at  least  3  different  options  to  the  question  what  is/was  your  sex?;  an  additional question of  ‘what is your chosen gender?’  AND ‘what name would you prefer we use?’. The institutional,  epistemological  and  methodological  ‘best’  practices  of  the  academic-corporate complex lag damagingly far behind.

58  Spade, D. (2011). Normal Life: Administrative Violence, Critical Trans Politics and the Limits of  Law. Cambridge: South End Press.

59  Currah, P., Green, J. & Stryker, S. (2008). The State of  Transgender Rights in the  United Statesof America.Retrieved from 

http://nsrc.sfsu.edu/sites/default/files/Trans%20Rights%20in%20the%20USA_10APR08 -Final_12-19-08-2.pdf

Moreover, some of  our transed and genderqueer graduate students also use names different from those that appear on their legal documents. While this is also a structural issue across universities in concert with other governmentalities, for those graduate students employed as our teaching assistants in classrooms, this creates a very dangerous, pedagogically confusing, inequitable and compromising situation across the board, a situation to which our less-than best practices actively contribute. In these cases, rather than sending trans- graduate students to talk to trans- faculty members (an individualizing solution at best), it seems imperative that those of  us committed to social justice practices work with our students in an institution that makes  no  structural  effort  whatsoever  to  remedy  this  situation,  one  admittedly  mired  in provincial and federal legal structures.

Some of  these legal structures trans- activists are attempting to change. I am about to launch with a legal team a human rights complaint against the federal government for their use of binary  sex  categories  on  passports  as  discriminatory.  As  evidenced  from  the  above  health form, other community based service providers are already far ahead of  us in their practices. As such, it behooves me to ask this but aren’t names also a political issue? Whether it be a feminist  practice  of  choosing  to  keep  maiden  names  and  not  take  a  husband’s  name  upon marriage;  using  gender  neutral  names  for  children;  changing  names  to  reflect  maternal lineages;  insisting  that  names  be  pronounced  and  spelled  correctly  and  with  attention  to linguistic  precision;  the  right  to  be  addressed  as  Ms  and  not  the  archaic  Mr’s  unless  one chooses this – the right to self-name has always been an issue of  extreme political importance.

I  can  assure  you  that  this  is  an  issue  of   structural  violence  as  well  across  stations  and differentially precarious positionings inside the academic-corporate complex. I am a full-time tenured faculty member who has, years ago, both legally and socially chosen a name and sex different from that ascribed to me at birth, and the only place where that birth name and sex continue to appear is at my ‘home’ institution. Yearly, with the exception of  my sabbatical year, I have visited many offices and capacities across our campus to discern the source of  and then attempt to correct this structural and en-gendering virus.

Some  examples  remain  pedagogically  useful  as  illustrations  of   how  this  refusal  to  press systems to name and gender correctly has for me (one of  the ‘privileged’ of  our industry), actually worked: I have had benefits withheld because of  a perceived discrepancy in naming. I fear  thinking  about  what  is  happening  re:  names  and  my  pension.  And  I  have  had  SSHRC [Social Science and Humanities Research Council] funds frozen. The remedies offered to me by some of  these administrative offices have been ridiculous (our benefits provider asked me for proof  of  a marriage license between my previous name and my current name before they would extend me my benefits; for two years, this occurred with each and every claim, even after I notified them in writing that this was not a marriage but a legal sex change). In other cases, when the registrar’s office at my school has listed my birth name as Course Director I was  placed  in  very  difficult  circumstances  that  required  complicated  explanations  before  I even began my teaching work with the students. This did not bode well for our pedagogical process and it created a very confusing situation for most students who were utterly befuddled and nowhere near ready to think through this issue with me as part of  our curriculum. Yet, thankfully, many of  them did.

If  you  have  a  student  working  for  you  as  a  teaching  assistant  who  queries  how  a  different name might be used (for example, on Moodle or other virtual classroom technologies), sending them to trans- faculty members as remedy is not helpful. Asking the student if  something has worked elsewhere and then calling tech and support administrators to see what can be done could facilitate the accommodation of  our trans students within structures and systems that remain intransigent around the complexity of  trans- embodiment – this is far more useful.

I  ask  that  we  do  what  the  best  of  our  social  justice  movements  have  taught  us:  to  not individualize   these   situations   as   anomalies   but   instead   to   deal   with   them   as   current manifestations of  the kinds of  historical and structural problems doing a kind of  violence that so many of  our social movements and theoretical paradigms have seen fit to address. Either we engage in the dismantling of  such practices or – and I go on record – we need to stop exposing our students to such daily violences in the name of  reified systems and structures that supposedly ‘cannot be helped.’

I have now been at my university for six years, which have been arduous around these and other    related    trans    issues    despite    my    best    efforts    and    those    of    a    few    of my  cisgendered60    colleagues  (i.e.  those  colleagues  whose  gender  identity  ‘matches’  their biological  or  assigned  sex).  Year  after  year,  I  find  I  have  the  same  conversations  with  my students  –  only  this  year  they  grow  en  masse  –  individually  to  marshal  them  through administrative  engendering  to  which  they  are  left  without  many  allies  or,  seemingly,  much widespread faculty support and action. The only reason why my legal name appears the way it does is because our astute and committed program assistants have each personally insisted that it appear no less than accurate. I ask each of  us to make the same commitment.

At the very least, I ask each of  us to begin to rethink how we might trans-conceptualize this complex terrain issue of  regulatory and administrative en-gendering which is not remedied by the practices providing accommodation of  LGBTQ bodies. Instead, we return to Trans 101 and think in far more complex ways about the proximities we erroneously deploy when we neatly imagine that we successfully LGBTQIQ our teaching and learning environments in the name of  ‘equity.’ The reality couldn’t be further from the truth.”

60  Cisgender. (2011, December 13). Retrieved December 31, 2011 from Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Cisgender