Beyond the Queer Alphabet by Malinda
 Smith
 and 
Fatima 
Jaffer
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PART II

rESISTING cLOSETS:

hATE, pERSECUTION aND vIOLENCE

10

Coming Out: Re-engaging the Radical

Elise Chenier, Simon Fraser University

October 11th  each year is National Coming Out Day.99 First celebrated in 1988 to mark the one-year anniversary of  the March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights, National Coming Out Day has grown into a major human rights campaign for lesbian, gay, and lately, transgender equality. The nation originally referred to was the United States of  America, but like so much of  Canadian culture and  politics,  National  Coming  Out  Day  has  been  taken  up  by  LGBTIQ(lesbian,  gay,  bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer and 2-Spirited) activists in Canada as well.

Do we really need a National Coming Out Day? Isn’t gay ‘so over,’ as a young adult character in Toronto queer playwright Brad Fraser’s 2011 True Love Lies100  declares? For many of  us who came out ten or more years ago, the present seems like a pretty friendly place to live, particularly here in Canada where citizens and residents are legally protected from discrimination on the basis of  sexual orientation by the Canadian Charter of  Rights and Freedoms,101  and where similar enshrinement of rights based on gender identity102  may be brought into law in the imaginable future. Gay may be ‘so over,’ but the radical anti-shame vision advanced by early gay liberationists still has much to offer us, especially in these political times.

Many lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) people living in the 1950s and 1960s knew that to live ‘shamelessly’ (read: openly) as a queer was a matter of  pride and an act of  profound courage. Those who refused to be cowed into staying home or hiding ‘in the closet,’ and who risked arrest, public exposure as a ‘pervert,’ and economic ruin, lay the groundwork for three subsequent decades of  activism.

The call to come out of  the closet was twice deployed to great effect by lesbian and gay activists. Inspired by the militancy of  the Black Power movement and Vietnam War protests, as well as the June 1969 uprising against police brutality at the Stonewall Inn in New York City, gay liberationists declared “Gay is Good” and encouraged others to join them. Some were so utterly terrified of  the consequences of  coming out yet so determined to do so that they wore paper bags over their heads during marches, illustrating both how powerful and dangerous coming out was. This one simple act proved to be one of  the gay liberation movement’s most powerful and important tactics precisely because the oppression of  homosexuals was enabled by the sexual shame attached to same-sex sex.

99  Human Rights Campaign. (2012). National Coming Out Day. Retrieved from http://www.hrc.org/resources/entry/ national-coming-out-day

100  Fraser, B. (2009). True Love Lies. Ontario: PlayWrights Guild of  Canada.

101  Hurley, M.C. (2005). Sexual Orientation and Legal Rights: A Chronological Overview. Retrieved  from http:// www.parl.gc.ca/Content/LOP/ResearchPublications/prb0413-e.htm

102  Open Parliament. (2012). Vote #165 on February 9th, 2011. Retrieved from http://openparliament.ca/bills/votes/ 40-3/165/

In the mid-1980s, ACT UP [AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power] redeployed this strategy with equal success. Founding members of  this organized grass-roots response to the AIDS crisis coined the slogan Silence=Death103  to indicate the consequences of  choosing to remain closeted. The slogan was intended to encourage those still too timid to come out to do so, but also to shame closeted gays, especially those in positions of  power, to come out and use their power and influence to help change homophobic public attitudes and policies which were manifest in the thousands of  bodies of the   dead   and   dying.   Artist   Keith   Haring’s   bold   and   colourful   images   forever   seared the Silence=Death104  and National Coming Out Day campaigns105  onto the American and Canadian cultural imagination.

Today  we  like  to  think  that,  as  compared  to  the  United  States  at  least,  Canada  is  a  refuge  for LGBTIQ2 people. As previous contributors to this blog have eloquently shown however, gay is not yet   ‘over.’   There   exists   a   profound   gap   between   the   anti-homophobic   message   sent   by the Charter and the reality of  day-to-day life for LGBTIQpeople. That school is a dangerous place for queer youth is now well known. Less known is that elderly lesbian and gay people are not seeking out the care they need for fear of  being forced back into the closet106  by homophobic health care workers.  New  research  out  of  Concordia  University  in  Montreal  reveals  that  refugee  boards  are using  dated  gender  stereotypes  to  assess  the  authenticity  of  claims  based  on  sexual  orientation. Charter protection may send a positive social signal, but its impact does not always penetrate the places where we are born, grow up, go to school, live, work, play, and die.

Canadian  scholars  play  an  important  role  by  generating  research  that  can  lead  to  increased  social awareness  and  meaningful  policy  and  legal  change.  Compared  to  our  colleagues  to  the  south,  we enjoy a much better relationship with research granting agencies.107  Still, LGBTIQ2 research does not proceed unfettered. Departments often regard this type of  research as too narrow, too political, or simply  unscholarly,  thus  making  permanent  positions108   that  much  more  difficult  to  secure,  yet institutional encouragement and support plays a critical role in facilitating research advancement. We in the academy still have much work to do when it comes to enabling young and emerging as well as established  scholars  whose  research  interests  and  social  location  situate  them  outside  of   what anthropologist Gayle Rubin calls the “charmed circle.”

103  Good Design. (2010, October 7). 12 Impactful AIDS Awareness Posters from Around the World. Retrieved from http://www.good.is/post/12-impactful-aids-awareness-posters-from-around-the-world/page:2

104  Good Design. (2010, October 7). 12 Impactful AIDS Awareness Posters from Around the World. Retrieved from http://www.good.is/post/12-impactful-aids-awareness-posters-from-around-the-world/page:2

105  National Coming Out Day Logo. (2008, December 14). Retrieved January 12, 2012 from Wikipedia http:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Logo_ncod_lg.png

106  Gen Silent. (n.d.). Gen Silent Synopsis. Retrieved from http://stumaddux.com/gen_silent_about.html

107  Epstein, S. (2006). The New Attack on Sexuality Research: Morality and the Politics of  Knowledge Production.

Sexuality Research and Social Policy, 3(1), 1-12. Doi: 10-1525/srsp.2006.3.1.01

108  Stein, M. (2001). Committee on Lesbian and Gay History Survey on LGBTQ. Retrieved from http:// www.historians.org/perspectives/issues/2001/0105/0105aff1.cfm

In her path-breaking 1984 article “Thinking Sex,”109  Rubin captured the radical liberationist vision when  she  charted  (literally)110  those  in  the  global  west  who,  because  of  their  sexual  activities,  are socially, politically, and economically charmed, and those who are disempowered and marginalized. In showing how sex is one vector of  oppression within a larger system of  oppression that “cuts across other modes of  social inequality (such as race, class, gender and ability),” Rubin exposed how hierarchies of  sexual value have more in common with ideologies of  racism than with true ethics. “A democratic  morality  should  judge  sexual  acts  by  the  way  partners  treat  one  another,  the  level  of mutual consideration, the presence or absence of  coercion, and quantity and quality of  the pleasures they provide,” she continued. “Whether sex acts are gay or straight, coupled, or in groups, naked or in underwear, commercial or free, with or without video, should not be ethical concerns.” 111

Groups like the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) in the United States, the organizer and promoter of  National Coming Out Day, and Equality for Gays and Lesbians Everywhere (EGALE) in Canada have  been  highly  effective  in  advancing  lesbian  and  gay  equality  but  in  so  doing,  they  have discouraged  linking  the  oppression  of   lesbians  and  gays  with  other  vectors  of   oppression. Moreover, activists groups like as EGALE and HRC are winning homosexual equality by stripping gay people of  their sexuality and presenting them (us) as the same as heterosexuals. In short, rather than struggle to unpack the charmed circle, their strategy is to fight to be let in.

As we prepare ourselves to teach, research, and organize in the context of  a steadily advancing tide of   American-style  politics,  politics  that  began  with  attacks  on  the  Charter,  same-sex  marriage equality, and Insite,112  and which are now enjoying expression in an omnibus crime bill, we would do well  to  return  to  the  more  expansive  vision  that  inspired  gay  liberation  politics  and  scholarship. When  we  think  about  enabling  people  to  resist  the  rhetoric  of  shame  and  the  felt  experience  of oppression, we need to include in our field of  vision sex workers and SlutWalkers, drug users and the murdered and missing women of  the downtown east side, the majority of  whom are and were Indigenous. And we need to take on board (by which I mean, transform our theories and methods) our Indigenous colleagues’ argument that, to address the issue of  the murdered and missing women, one cannot divorce it from the broader issue of  legacies of  colonialism from, for example, the male counter-experience of the star-light tour.113

To come out is not just to declare oneself  as the ‘Other’; it is to simultaneously expose the inherent injustice of  modes of  thinking and acting that built the various closets we find ourselves living in. Coming out is for more than just gays, and we need movements and scholarship that recognize and support this critical insight.

109  Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of  the Politics of  Sexuality. (2008, June  9). Retrieved January 12, 2012 from Keywords:  http://keywords.fordhamitac.org/wiki2/index.php? title=Thinking_Sex:_Notes_for_a_Radical_Theory_of_the_Politics_of_Sexuality

110  The Charmed Circle. (2009). Retrieved from http://ayotunde4real.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/ rubin_charmed_circle_841.gif

111  Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of  the Politics of  Sexuality. (2008, June 9). Retrieved January 12, 2012 from Keywords: http://keywords.fordhamitac.org/wiki2/index.php? title=Thinking_Sex:_Notes_for_a_Radical_Theory_of_the_Politics_of_Sexuality

112  Vancouver Costal Health. (n.d.). Insite-Supervised Injection Site. Retrieved from  http://supervisedinjection.vch.ca/

113  Maybechildhood. (2011, August 23). Where We Were Not, Part I: Feeling Reserved, Alexus’ Story. Video retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYtDXpn49SU

If  this seems like asking us to bite off  more than any one person can chew, remember that if  social movement politics has taught us anything, it is that we are never just one person, and that there is strength  and  wisdom  in  numbers.  Widening  our  vision  so  that  we  can  keep  the  many  vectors  of oppression  that  continue  to  generate  shame  –  for  example,  the  shame  of  sexual  difference,  the shame  of  racialization  and  colonialization,  the  shame  of  poverty  –  and  that  continue  to  make coming  out  so  painful  and  so  powerful,  is  one  way  we  can  contribute  to  creating  and  facilitating meaningful change.