Beyond the Queer Alphabet by Malinda
 Smith
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2

Developing Intersectional Solidarities: A Plea for Queer Intersectionality

Sirma Bilge, Université de Montréal

Contemporary progressive politics of  protest frequently face a problem of  legitimacy, authority and representation.  Since  at  least  the  late  1970s  and  throughout  the  1980s,  antiracist,  anticolonial feminists and queer activists have taken issue with the politics of  representation and the problem of speaking for/about others. Scholars like Gayatri Chakraborty Spivak21 and Linda Alcoff22 have urged us to acknowledge that systemic disparities in social location between those who speak and those who are spoken for have significant effects on the content of  what is said.

Today, the elisions and exclusions that most contemporary progressive movements prompt in their claims-making receive almost immediate critique. Innovative new information and communications technological  platforms  enable  both  the  viral  explosion  of   these  movements  as  well  as  their (internal) critiques from those who are marginalized, excluded, misrepresented, tokenized or erased in political struggles.

Consider  the  following  examples  of  the  SlutWalk,23  the  It  Gets  Better  Project,24  and  Occupy  Wall Street.25  Although  there  is  growing  sympathy  for  these  movements,  in  all  three  cases  voices  have been raised to deplore how well-intentioned movements inadvertently (re)produce oppression along one  or  several  axes  of  power  –  even  while  attempting  to  combat  it  along  other  axes.  In  their attempts  to  contest  domination  and  redress  injustice,  all  three  of  these  movements  have  been criticized for their failure to take into account the multiple and co-constitutive makeup of  power/ privilege complex, with its interlocking structural and ideological underpinnings.

Put simply, these social movements – SlutWalk, the It Gets Better Project and Occupy Wall Street – were criticized for their lack of  intersectional political awareness, and very rightly so. In one of  the worst-case scenarios, this lack of  awareness was illustrated this past October first by white marchers at  the  SlutWalk  NYC.  They  were  brandishing  a  placard  that  said,  “Woman  is  the  n*gger  of  the world26.”  Although  the  slogan  was  a  reference  to  the  1972  Lennon/Ono  song,27  it  soon  became apparent  that  social  movements  still  could  provide  a  platform  for  making  much  decried  parallels between gender and race that black feminists deftly deconstructed some decades ago. Hazel Carby,28 for example, offered a perceptive critique of  such analogies over two decades ago:

The experience of  black women does not enter the parameters of  parallelism. The fact that black women are subject to simultaneous oppression of  patriarchy, class and ‘race’ is the prime reason for not employing parallels that render their position and experience not only marginal but also invisible.

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Three  decades  later,  there  is  still  a  lack  of   intersectional  analysis  evident  among  some  white protesters: There were N-word signs carried by at least two white protesters at the SlutWalk NYC rally. The signs seem to make claims in the name of  a (universal) woman, by mobilizing the N-word in the fight against sexism and violence against women. Such developments disturbingly remind us that the “white solipsism” decried by Adrienne Rich29  in her 1979 piece, “Disloyal to Civilization: Feminism,  Racism,  Gynephobia,”  persists  in  contemporary  feminisms.  It  still  leads  to  single  issue politics and as Kimberly Crenshaw30 has argued in her 1993 article, “Beyond Racism and Misogyny: Black  Feminism  and  2  Live  Crew,”  “political  strategies  that  challenge  only  certain  subordinating practices while maintaining existing hierarchies [which] not only marginalize those who are subject to  multiple  systems  of  subordination  but  also  often  result  in  oppositionalizing  race  and  gender discourses.”

The unspoken racial habitus of  SlutWalk, white privilege, has been powerfully unravelled from black feminist  and  black  queer/lesbian  perspectives,  which  explain,  once  again,  why  women  of  colour cannot re-appropriate the term ‘slut’ the way white women in the movement seem able to do. The interlocking social challenges faced by Black women are not reducible to a question of  dress.

In an “Open Letter from Black Women to the SlutWalk,”31  issued by the Blackwomen’s Blueprint on the 23 September 2011, the organization noted:

The way in which we are perceived and what happens to us before, during and after sexual assault crosses the boundaries of  our mode of  dress. Much of  this is tied to our particular history.  In  the  United  States,  where  slavery  constructed  Black  female  sexualities,  Jim  Crow kidnappings,  rape  and  lynchings,  gender  misrepresentations,  and  more  recently,  where  the Black   female   immigrant   struggle   combine,   ‘slut’   has   different   associations   for   Black women. We do not recognize ourselves nor do we see our lived experiences reflected within SlutWalk, and especially not in its brand and its label.

As Black women we do not have the privilege or the space to call ourselves ‘slut’ without validating the already historically entrenched ideology and recurring messages about what and who the Black woman  is.    We  don’t  have  the  privilege  to  play  on  destructive  representations  burned  in  our collective minds, on our bodies and souls for generations.

In another critique, “SlutWalk a Stroll Through White Supremacy,”32  Aura Blogando points out that, “We do not come from communities in which it feels at all harmless to call ourselves ‘sluts.’ Aside from that, our skin color, not our style of  dress, often signifies slut-hood to the white gaze.”

The  It  Gets  Better  Project  (IGB)  has  generated  similar  critiques  about  the  racial  and  class  habitus shaping  the  movement  and  its  single-issue  politics  against  homophobia.  The  project  seems  to  be predicated on the assumption that there is a universal experience of  being bullied because of  one’s non-heteronormative sexuality.

In an incisive commentary, “In the wake of  It Gets Better,33” Jasbir Puar notes that projects like IGB  “risk  producing  such  narrow  versions  of  what  it  means  to  be  gay,  and  what  it  means  to  be bullied,  that  for  those  who  cannot  identify  with  it  but  are  nevertheless  still  targeted  for  ‘being different,’ It Gets Better might actually contribute to Making Things Worse.”

21  Spivak, G. Chakravorty (2007). Can the Subaltern Speak?. Wien: Turia & Kant.

22  Roof, J. & Wiegman, R. (Eds). (1995). Who Can Speak? Authority and Critical Identity. Illinois: University of  Illinois Press.

23  Slutwalk. (2011, December 26). Retrieved January 12, 2012 from Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SlutWalk

24  Itgetsbetterproject. (2004, September 16). It Gets Better Project. It Gets Better Project channel. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/user/itgetsbetterproject

25  Occupy Wall Street. (2012, January 12). Retrieved January 12, 2012 from Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Occupy_Wall_Street

26  Quintero, S. (2011, October 13). They’re Going to Laugh at You: White Women, Betrayal, and the N-Word. [Blog Entry]. Retrieved from http://www.racialicious.com/2011/10/13/theyre-going-to-laugh-at-you-white-women-betrayal- and-the-n-word/

27  Peterson, L.  (2011, October 6). Slutwalk, Slurs, and Why Feminism still has Race Issues. [Blog Entry]. Retrieved from http://www.racialicious.com/2011/10/06/slutwalk-slurs-and-why-feminism-still-has-race-issues/

28  Carby, H. V. (1982). White Woman Listen! Black Feminism and the Boundaries of  Sisterhood. In Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (Ed.), The Empire Strikes Back: Race and Racism in 70s Racism (211-234). Birmingham: Routledge.

29  Rich, A. (1995). On Lies, Secrets and Silence. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.

30  Matsuda, M.J., Lawrence III, C.R, Delgado, R., & Williams Crenshaw, K. (1993). Word That Wound: Critical Race Theory, Assaultive Speech and the First Amendment. Colorado: Westview Press.

31  An Open Letter from Black Women to SlutWalk September 23, 2011. (2011, September 26). [Blog Entry]. Retrieved from http://www.womanist-musings.com/2011/09/open-letter-from-black-women-to.html

32  SlutWalk: A Stroll Through White Supremacy. (2011, May 13). [Blog Entry]. Retrieved from http:// tothecurb.wordpress.com/

33  Puar, J. (2010, November 16). In the Wake of  It Gets Better. The Guardian. Retrieved from http:// www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2010/nov/16/wake-it-gets-better-campaign? showallcomments=true#comment-fold

The IGB project is chided for its lack of  attention to difference and even for irresponsibility because it has ignored the effects of  racism on how bullying and homophobia takes shape in the lives of those who are bullied. The need for an intersectional analysis has been powerfully argued by Latoya Peterson,34  the Editor of  Racialicious, in “Where is the Proof  that It Gets Better?: Queer POC and the Solidarity Gap.” As well, IGB’s shortcomings in intersectional political analyses have led to the emergence of  alternative projects, such as the video campaign launched by Canadian qpocs (queer people of  color) and explicitly named the Embracing Intersectional Diversity Project.35

Similarly,   as   inspiring   as   it   may   seem   for   many,   the   Occupy   Wall   Street   movement   has engendered   well-founded   critiques36    from   an   anti-colonialist   and   Indigenous   perspective.   In particular,  the  movement  has  been  called  to  account  for  its  propensity  to  further  the  cause  of “ending  capitalism”  by  inadvertently  trampling  on  the  rights  of  others,  including  corroding  the rights of  Indigenous peoples. As Jessica Yee observes in her article “Occupy Wall Street: The game of  colonialism and further nationalism to be decolonized from the ‘Left’,”37  the ‘occupy’ metaphor resonates differently for those activists, such as Indigenous peoples, whose land is already occupied. This difference is especially pronounced when the fact of  occupation is conveniently forgotten or even denied within progressive movements claiming trans-solidarities.

The  paucity  of   intersectional  political  consciousness  is  evident  in  the  still  influential  single- oppression    framework,    despite    loud    declarations    of     commitment    to    diversity    and solidarity.   Stephanie Gilmore38  in, “Am I Troy Davis? A Slut?; or, What’s Troubling Me about the Absence  of  Reflexivity  in  Movements  that  Proclaim  Solidarity,”  contends  that  the  tendency  to subordinate multiply-minoritized groups and the various forms of  marginalization and silencing they face  –  through  denial,  displacement,  misidentification,  cooptation  or  tokenism  within  progressive political  struggles  can  be  addressed  by  a  radical  engagement  in  critical  dialogues  between  queer theory and intersectionality.

Let me elaborate further how intersectionality and queer theory can complement and challenge each other and, further, why it is crucial to uphold and extend a dialogue between them in order to firm up  a  critical  ethos  and  ethics  of  non-oppressive  politics  of  coalition.  Following  Stacey  Douglas, Suhraiya  Jivraj  and  Sarah  Lamble’s  “Liabilities  of   Queer  Antiracist  Critique”  we  may  call  this approach ‘queer intersectionality’ or ‘queer anti-racist critique.’ What is foundational, they insist, is the refusal to separate “questions of  gender, sexuality and queerness, from questions of  raciality and racialisation. This form of  intersectional critique serves as a tool for building spaces and movements that are committed to interrogating gender and sexuality norms, whilst simultaneously identifying, challenging, and countering the overt and embedded forms of  racism that shape them.”39

34  Peterson, L. (2010, October 19). Where is the Proof  that It Gets Better? Queer POC and the Solidarity Gap. [Blog Entry]. Retrieved from http://www.racialicious.com/2010/10/19/where-is-the-proof-that-it-gets-better-queer-poc-and- the-solidarity-gap/

35  Embracing Intersectional Diversity Project. (2011). In Tomee Sojourner. Retrieved from http:// www.tomeesojourner.com/Creative-Projects/creative-projects.html

36  Montano, J. (2011, September 24). An Open Letter to the Occupy Wall Street Activists.  [Blog Entry]. Retrieved from http://mzzainal-straten.blogspot.com/2011/09/open-letter-to-occupy-wall-street.html

37  Yee, J. (2011, September 30). Occupy Wall Street: The Game of  Colonialism and further nationalism to be decolonized from the “Left.” [Blog Entry]. Retrieved from http://www.racialicious.com/2011/09/30/occupy-wall– street-the-game-of-colonialism-and-further-nationalism-to-be-decolonized-from-the-left/

38  Gilmore, S. (n.d.). “Am I Try Davis? A Slut?; or, What’s Troubling Me about the Absence of  Reflexivity in Movements that Proclaim Solidarity”. [Blog Entry]. Retrieved from http://afrolez.tumblr.com/post/11232563013/am-i-troy-davis-a- slut-or-whats-troubling-me

If   intersectionality  can  help  ground  queer  theory  into  lived  experiences  and  struggles  where categories such as sexuality, class or race are contested as well as redress the evacuation of  the social, then  queer  scholarship  has  a  definite  potential  to  counteract  the  dilution  of   intersectionality within neoliberal diversity mainstreaming.40 This is true as long as what is understood as queer is not built  upon  an  exclusive  focus  on,  or  privileging  of,  sexuality  within  identity/diversity  politics. Instead, queer41  must be understood as a political metaphor without a predetermined referent that serves to challenge institutional forces normalizing and commodifying difference.

The  kind  of   queer  intersectionality  I  plea  for  builds     on  the  remarkable  pioneering  work accomplished by queer scholars of  color, such as Roderick Ferguson, David Eng, José Munoz, Jasbir Puar, Jin Haritaworn, Fatima El-Tayeb, and Gayatri Gopinath. It can be seen as the outgrowth of reciprocal    challenges    and    productive    tensions    between    an    intersectionalized    queer42          and a  queered  intersectionality.  Such  a  theoretical  and  political  project  requires  that  we  analyse  what  is “queer  about  queer  studies”43 and  that  “queer  epistemologies  not  only  rethink  the  relationship between  intersectionality  and  normalization  from  multiple  points  of  view,  but  also,  and  equally important,  consider  how  gay  and  lesbian  rights  are  being  reconstituted  as  a  type  of  reactionary (identity) politics of  national and global consequence.”

As  persuasively  argued  by  Douglas,  Jivraj  and  Lamble,  “[s]exuality,  in  the  form  of  gay  rights,  is increasingly  taken  up  by  both  liberal  and  conservative  forces  as  a  dominant  marker  of  ‘western values’, which then serves as a key trope in the global war against terror and a pawn in the demise of even the most assimilationist notions of  state multiculturalism.”44  In the contemporary cultural and political climate, the need for a critical project – for a queer intersectionality and solidarities – is as important as ever.

39  Douglas, S., Jivraj, S. & Lamble, S. (2011). Liabilities of  Queer Anti-Racist Critique. Feminist Legal Studies, 19 (2), 107-118. Doi: 10.1007/s10691-011-9181-6

40  Ward, J. (2008). Respectably Queer: Diversity in LGTB Activist Organizations. Tennessee: Vanderbilt University Press.

41  Ward, J. (2008). Respectably Queer: Diversity in LGTB Activist Organizations. Tennessee: Vanderbilt University Press.

42  Johnson, P.E., and Henderson, M.G. (Eds.). (2005). Black Queer Studies: A Critical Anthology. North Carolina: Duke University Press.

43  Eng, D.L., Halberstam, J. & Munoz, E. (2005). What’s Queer about Queer Studies Now?. North Carolina: Duke University Press.

44  Johnson, P.E., and Henderson, M.G. (Eds.). (2005). Black Queer Studies: A Critical Anthology. North Carolina: Duke University Press.