Taking an idea from a friend's recently composed blog (Thank you, Patti), and a serious attempt to get back to writing the second chapter of my dissertation, naturally I decided to write a blog that captures my 2012. It was a year of ups and downs, but it was a year worth having a record of. Without further adieu: stuff that happened in 2012 that is worth mentioning:
January: After a grueling month of comprehensive exams in December, I took the month of January off. It was an amazing break. Molls and I also celebrated our one year anniversary with friends on News Years Eve. My advisor asked me to TA/co-teach a Feminism and Intersectionalty senior capstone course. This experience was amazing, especially the narrative performances at the end of the quarter. It helped me remember why performance is such a compelling thing.
February: I continued to take a break, but also began writing my dissertation proposal. It was something I began during my comprehensive exams, but required much more work. I was scheduled to perform in the Vagina Monologues, but an unfortunate incident prevented it. It was in this month, Feb. 10, when I was attending a burlesque show at Eden, that I received a call telling me that Molls had broken her neck. A dumb man, at a concert, crowd-surfed on her head and fractured a vertebrae in her cervical spine. I took off about a month and half to help with her recovery. In this time we returned to the hospital three times, went through countless doctor appts., and began her rehabilitation. I also learned that I passed my exams with distinction. I recieved a reward for Top Paper in Performance at the Western States Communication Association Conference, but was unable to procure it myself, and instead my friend, Cassidy retrieved it for me.
March: Molls's recovery was top priority. I worked on an ongoing project with my friend, Cassidy, for her dissertation. We worked with high-school-aged youth at at-risk high schools to teach them about privilege and oppression (there was so much irony in this.) The best part was that the students taught me more about my privilege by sharing their experiences, and we had a lot of good, open conversations with them about very hard things. At the end of the month, another friend of mine, Krishna, and I presented a workshop on femme identity at the Queer Youth Summit. It was well-attended, and a great experience. I also began teaching my favorite class at DU: Popular Culture and Communication. This class changed my orientation to teaching forever, and made me realize that it was indeed my "calling."
April was an excellent and busy month: I trained to become a Colorado Anti-Violence Program trainer. It was an intense and revelatory experience. I turned in my dissertation proposal, and then I passed my defense, making me ABD (All But Dissertation.) This didn't change a whole lot, except that it meant I was qualified to begin work on my dissertation. I also received the Rocky Mountain Communication GTA of the Year Award (a split victory with another GTA from CU Boulder.) I also received the Master of (Gr)Advocacy Graduate Teaching award from the DU Center of Multicultural Excellence's GLBT Gala.
May: I presented at the University of Denver Diversity Summit. I spoke about queer identities and the power of performance in educational settings. I also celebrated my niece's graduation from preschool into kindergarten. Lastly, I met the family I would nanny for the entire summer and into the school year. I also received word that I earned a Fourth-year Doctoral Fellowship to write my dissertation and that I would be teaching at Regis University in the fall.
June: Molls went back to work full time. It was a joy that she could go back to work, when for so long we didn't know what was going to happen. I celebrated my best friend, Dan's, graduation from PhD school. It was PRIDE weekend at some point, and that was fun. I began nannying for the best family ever. I found out the mother of the mother, of the family I nanny for, is a gay. This made the rest of my summer immensely easier, as I felt like I could work with children and not have to hide my partner. I also began research for a professor's book project on Blasphemy in the Muslim World. This was more hell than joy -- A means to a financial end.
July: July brought about Brandi Carlile at Redrocks (someplace I hadn't been since high school.) And I began to say goodbye to my best friend, Dan, who was leaving for a job in New Jersey. CAVP had their annual pancake breakfast where I was a volunteer. I also learned that I might have a job adjuncting at Metro for the fall.
August: For me, the commitment-phobe of life: Molls and I were officially Domestically Partnered in August. It was mainly so I could get health insurance, since I was leaving my employment at DU. But our friends, Rachel and Greta threw us the best impromptu celebration, complete with ice cream, glitter, and the Holy L Word. It was performance street art. Even though it may not have been radical, it was definitly subversive. Then I went to the Femme Conference in Baltimore, MD with Greta. We had a great time together, and the conference was an educational experience. I left feeling warmth, confusion, and generally good about continuing my dissertation project. After Baltimore, I flew straight to Dayton, OH to spend time with Molls's family. We spent time jetski-ing on the lake and going to the fair. I went to my first tractor-pull: it was so so loud! I was not expecting that! Molly was finally fully cleared to return to work and her case with worker's compensation concluded.
September: In September, it was hunker-down dissertation time. I began my interviews, 15 total. I thought I would have trouble getting 10, but eventually I got to a place where I had to turn people away. Interviewing took up most of my time.
October: October brought the Presidential Debate to DU. First of all, I was a runner for MSNBC because I really wanted to meet Rachel Maddow, but she didn't come to Denver: BOO! I did meet Cecile Richards from Planned Parenthood, and a couple of senators. It was a neat experience and I think if the whole PhD thing doesn't work out, I have a job opportunity running for television. More importantly, I was given the opportunity to be an usher at the actual Debate event, which meant I got to be on the floor for the Debate. It was a crazy experience. I was up from 4-midnight; I even had to board my dog. Seeing the Obamas in person was a magical experience. I wish the Prez would have been more on his A-game that evening, but it was a really neat experience, shared with great people. October also brought the leaving of Greta for Nebraska. We threw her one hell of a going away party, but admittedly, I was devastated to see her go. We cried and sung Glee songs on the way to drive her to her new car--something I will never forget.
November: Election time! I went door to door asking people to vote to re-elect Obama. Apparently it worked because he got a second term in office. Then I went to NCA in Orlando, which wasmy best experience at an NCA, yet. I had my first mini-job interview and I think for my first one it went pretty well. The best part: hanging out with my boys! Rich and Dan for most of the time, and Aaron, B, and Michael, too. I went to some great panels, and did a good research presentation of my own. I also got to speak about my advisor/mentor at a division business meeting, where she was elected as president for 2014. I was proud of what I did in Orlando and that I was able to relax and have a good time.
December: I turned in the introduction and first chapter of my dissertation. It was a really great feeling to just make movement on this gigantic project. With the help of my advisor I have been making steady progress. My birthday was earlier this month, and I was spoiled rotten. I received many gifts and I got to celebrate with friends, with family, and then with Molls at Root Down. Christmas has just passed and it feels so different than in years past, but still nice and relaxing for the most part. I am happy to spend time in the mountains with my family, and get in some much needed writing time.
I continue to apply for jobs and seek full-time/adjunct employment. The family I nanny for just had to give me up because the mother switched her schedule. While I am sad to leave the family, I am glad for the dissertating time. I will continue to write with my writing partner, Rob, with hopes we will be graduating in the Spring. I am thankful for my friends, family, and my partner. I am also thankful for my voice and ability to speak out and write for what is right and just, and continue to care deeply for people, for issues, for non-violence, and anti-violence, all while making time for yoga, running, and self-care (which includes A LOT of television watching!) I am thankful for my ability and continue sustaining this massive undertaking. My dissertation defense is April 26, so with that, I gotta get back to writing it! Happy New Year!
The Lesbian Phallacy
A graduate student with more passion than smarts' warped take on culture/s and life.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Call for Papers Queer Perspectives in Anzaldúa: Post/Borderlands
Call for Papers Queer Perspectives in Anzaldúa: Post/Borderlands:The writings and life of Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa (1942-2004) havehad an immense impact in a variety of disciplines. Her oft-cited textBorderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1987) is included in many university courses’ reading lists for its contributions to discoursesof hybridity, linguistics, intersectionality and women of colorfeminism, among others. Unfortunately, most scholars content themselves with the intricacies of Borderlands to the neglect of her corpus of work, which includes essays, books, edited volumes, children’s literature and fiction/autohistorias. This anthology wishes to expand our understandings of Anzaldúa’s work by engaging with her pre and post-Borderlands/La Frontera writings in an attempt to highlight the unrecognized contributions Anzaldúa offers. We invite submissions with the following, by all means notexhaustive, possible points of departure in Anzaldúa’s work:-Social construction of gender, sex, sexuality-Performativity-Power relations-Heteronormativity, Compulsory heterosexuality-Changing identities, resisting change-Spirituality, interconnectivity-Going beyond dualistic thinking-Trans-identities as nepantlera existence-Disidentification-Disability, illness-Openness-Queer epistemology. One page abstracts are due July 1, 2012 with submissions between 20-25pages (including all citations-Chicago style) requested by October 15,2012. Please send all correspondence to Elisa.Facio@colorado.edu AND betsydahms@gmail.com.
Monday, January 30, 2012
Overly Emotional
Lately I have been feeling overly emotional; almost crying at every twist or turn.
Today, I told my student, just start writing. Write your story, whatever it might be.
She told me, "I have no story worth telling."
I told her, "Everyone has a story."
I asked her how she would respond to Patricia Hill Collins's text, Black Feminist Thought, the reading for that day, just off the top of her head.
She confided in me, "I want to be an ally, but it is really hard." She is a white student, a repeater of mine, and we have always had a good connection. She is smart, she knows what is going on in terms of her privilege, she reminds me of me.
I validated her; affirmed that it is hard to be an ally. I also explained that it is her responsibility to confront the reasons why it is hard for her, to write about that. Mostly, I just told her to write. And I think I told her that because I too, need to start writing.
I almost started crying while my professor was lecturing today. This was for a few reasons, mainly, that it brought me back to my re-education. I remember being an undergraduate learning feminist theory; luckily, I went to a school where the feminist theory I learned was mostly women of color feminism/material feminism, feminist theory that matters, at least to me. And it changed me. I remember reading Alice Walker's, In Search of our Mother's Gardens, which I recently reread for my comprehensive exams, and all I could think about was how deeply impacted I was and continue to be by those women's words. I think that it is through these words that I learned more about myself, and my privilege, than I ever could have from white people writing about privilege (although, I think this is important as well.) I think it was so important because what I learned, was that their feminism was not meant for me, but at the same time, it was exactly meant for me.
Professor Kildegaard taught me about standpoint theory, which has been problematized as essentialist, exclusionary, and a slew of other things. While I can see these critiques, I will say that learning this lesson, that those from the margins see the dominant much better than those in the center see the margins, changed my life. I realized that much off the time I am on the inside, although my queerness, femmeness, lower-classness, complicates this. But although these multiple identities complicate my privilege, they do not erase the fact that I navigate the world as a white person, and that as a white person, I perpetuate many of the injustices I critique, although, I hope to work in solidarity with those around me. But my allyness does not dismiss the pain I have caused. This I know.
I have been working with high school kids, teaching them a "Disrupting Privilege" curriculum. You know what is hard? Teaching a bunch of students, who are students of color, immigrants, refugees, single mothers, lower-class that they still have privileges. And these students have been countlessly hurt by people who occupy similar positionalities as me. They have no reason to trust me. None. Except listen to their stories of being privileged and marginalized, of being pulled over by the police for being perceived as a bad kid, but which could definitely be attributed to the fact that this perception is due to her racial identity, as a black woman. I heard from a Latino boy that his family used to not be able to cook their traditional food without going to a special grocery store, but now Walmart and Target sell it. They read this as progress. They force me to confront my identities all of the time, to reign them in, attempt to facilitate conversations with and not at them.
I remember, as an undergrad, Dr. Conrad told me to never stop using my voice; that my voice was important. That was one of the first times I had ever felt that way. I remember reading Malcolm X and running back to my room. In tears, I wrote. I wrote that my privilege was ultimately connected to someone else's oppression, to violence, and to pain. I wrote that our histories were connected, and that they were connected because my whiteness is acceptable, whereas blackness and brownness, have not been, in normative society. I wrote, by hand, I scrawled. When went to work for an Environmental Organization that summer, they asked me, "What is the biggest issue facing our society." After listening to people drone on about capitalism, and alienation (which, are significant and very real problems) I said, "Racism." I was made to feel silly, slight head nods, and a "Yes, racism is one issue for sure," from the leader. I was in Boulder, so of course, I was made to feel silly. But my feeling was then, and is now, that racism, as complicated by other intersectional identities, is the biggest problem facing our society. I would change that now, maybe to say that white privilege is the biggest issue facing our society, as it really isn't about hate, but about normalization of whiteness, and perpetuation of whiteness as an ideology. Yes, I would change it to that.
My professor told me that she would be offended if I didn't ask her to be my advisor. I asked her immediately. She told me that she was invested in my work. I still sometimes question why? She had a student, an undergrad recently, who she said, reminded her of me, in a good way. She asked me to TA with her on a feminism and intersectionality class. She is a Chicana, queer, feminist. I do not know why she is invested in me, why she would want me to teach with her, work on a piece together. It is an honor. She is one of the only professors of color I have ever had. But I remember writing in my first class with her, reading performance work (the first day of class), reminded me of the work feminists of color have already been doing forever. I do not know women of color feminism better, or embodied in the same way as women of color, but my respect for it resonates in my body, in ways white feminism never has. I think that impressed her. One time, after confronting a weird situation in class, and leaving in tears, she followed me out, hugged me, and told me that what I said was important. That class was terrible, but it did confirm the notion that there is potential and possibility in the relationally we experience with those who are different than us. This does not erase our complicated pasts, and identities. We cannot ignore or deny those things. But we can work through them. We do work through them, when we are invested in making the world a little better.
I told my student to write her story about the challenges of being an ally; about what prevents her from committing to being an ally. This isn't to recenter whiteness, but to push her to a place where she has to reflexively engage with herself. I told her to start writing. Just start writing, see what comes out.
So, I came home, and this is what I needed to write because sometimes what we tell others, is really what we need ourselves.
Monday, January 2, 2012
I still believe that I am a writer, after this somewhat miserable break, after somewhat miserable comprehensive/qualifying exams.
The worst part: after you are done, you kind of forget what it looks like to live life among the normal. It's like that move about the war in either Afghanistan or Iraq (I didn't watch the film, except the end-so I don't really remember the details)and at the end after all of the horrible things have happened that this man, this soldier caused, he cannot even pick out cereal. He just walks to the cereal isle and stands there because he cannot do anything. It's as though all the things that normal people just do, without even thinking, escape him. And he just stands there, not even really looking, just lost, just waiting.
I still feel like I am not finished because really, in the end, I am not finished (This whole dissertation thing is just beginning); but, my body still isn't sure about whether or not I will be starting another question in a couple of days. Although we have discussed it, chatted about trying to reintegrate back into my life, my body has a hard time respecting that. Taking one books back to the library helped a little, playing copies amounts of virtual Scrabble, and real-life virtual video games, An entire eight season Office marathon, sexy time, dates with ma' boo and with friend, movies, all of it...my body is still unsure of what to do.
Yesterday, I broke down because I was so tired and I just needed to lay in bed, not doing anything, not even watching T.V. I just had to be done. I wanted to go to yoga today and I could not force myself to get out of my chair. I will go, but not today. I want to do a cleanse, but not yet, not until I get some semblance of normalcy bad in my life. I know it is graduate school, I know this is what is supposed to happen. I know taking these exams doesn't make me a smarter/better person, but it does make me think in theory, and thinking in theory does not always equate to the thinking about the body. And that is the most challenging thing, what does the body do after you have trained it to sit and type for hours on end. How do you train your mind to stop thinking "that" way, that pretentious academic way. What now? The performance anxiety should be calmed, but it isn't, because my body isn't sure what to do now, so there is anxiety about that? I am not sure how to reinvigorate the relationships that are invariably changed because of my six-month hiatus from their lives. And how do I think about myself, as a femme, a queer scholar, an intersectional feminist, and anti-racist? Does completing this project change how I think of myself? How could it not?
I am excited and nervous to proceed, not just with my project, but with my life. But I am gonna keep going, keep pushing towards reclamation of queer femme-ininity, and try to reforge new pathways through old relationships. I only hope they are as forgiving of myself, as I am trying to be.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Frustrating
The sheer amount of clothing stores/companies that appropriate Indigenous culture, customs, and values. While everything is a sort of cultural appropriation of something else, and nothing is really original, I think we can do better. Forever 21 and Urban Outfitters seem to be most guilty of this. This is almost worse (if ranking what is better or worse in this situation was useful) than turning Indigenous folks into mascots or costumes, because this is becoming engrained into the cultural imagination as o.k. Of course mascots and costumes are entwined in the perpetuation of stereotypes as normative and appropriate, but everyday-wares? It is not a tribute or honoring, it is identity/culture tourism and not everyone has the same freedom and mobility to move about these cultural identities and locations, as some more privileged folks do. Everything has embedded ideologies and messages, and we have to be self-reflexive shoppers. What does it mean to buy a knock-off of someone’s religious and spiritual garb and wear it to the bar. Seems disrespectful and tasteless to me; But hey, who am I?
TUMBLR
Make sure to check out my new TUMBLR: http://femmeinfinity.tumblr.com/
It is some of my originals, but a lot of reflags with comments. I will continue to post here, post my qualifying exams/dissertation proposal in a couple of days. Until then, see the very short things I am doing on my TUMBLR.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Policing femininity
I am getting really sick of all the "gate-keepery-ness" surrounding femme and femininity and even queer for that matter. This stems from a couple of things: 1.) The sort of butch-o-phobia that CAN come with claiming a femme identity, and 2.) People saying that femme is sort of ridiculous circa 2011. These are not compartmentalized, but are woven together, to sort of allow me fodder of frustration. This is also a rant. A RANT! An unorganized rant!
As I once wrote (Not that I am a mystical genius, just someone who cares about the interconnection of academic and public activist projects.):
If we are to express a desire for queer politics, should there be gate-keepers, who maintain a boundary of the queer canon, whilst others, should not have access to either identifying or being a part of the larger queer political movement? In doing this, who do we metaphorically put up a, “NO (insert marginalized groups) Allowed” sign for? And more importantly who experiences, the materialized e/affects of not being allowed to participate when bodies are dismissed?
I am just saying, and this came from Tumblr today, that there was all this discussion around being radical, about being queer, and then someone had the audacity to ask, "What's femme about pajamas?"
Fuck that, what isn't femme about pajamas? Just like the haters who say femmes don't need there own conference, because, hey, "What would we talk about?" I'm just saying if you would post that, you probably don't identify as femme (and all of the vast expressions emanating from that space) and should maybe ask it in a way that is indeed, asking a question; not with the underlying assumption that just because you don't know what we would talk about, doesn't mean we don't got some shit to throw down!
But again, back to pajamas. My hetero friend asked me once, after writing a paper, if she could identify as a hetero-femme. At first, I was like yeah, definitely. Gender is fluid, sexuality is shifting. I took too many gender studies courses and now I am open to anything...o.k. no, but seriously, it didn't bother me. Then I kind of got annoyed, I was like NO! Femme is my thing and a thing that femme lesbians do. It is rooted in a specific historical and history/cultural context, and it's mine. All mine. So then I thought about that, because that is what I do. Think about shit. All day long. And then I type about shit. And I read two books, one that had an outro by Judith Butler that may have changed my life and the other by these two fabulous sassy femmes who talk about femme as, "A sustained gender identity...a contestatory lesbian identity, a radical feminist position, and a subversive queer model"(Harris and Crocker 1-10). Damn. I wish I had written this book. As for the JB, I do not worship the ground she walks on, but I do think she is effing smart, and despite people thinking she's a white supremacist, with no desire to talk about race, or class-I think she is the opposite. And she's a philosopher, all philosophers are dense, complex, and theoretical. But what I like about this outro essay she wrote are the questions she poses, "If sexuality always threatens to dissolve identity, then what is the final status of those categories by which we seek to understand our sexuality? Are the conceptual means by which we guard against the very sexuality that we seek to affirm? When we seek to judge what will be lesbian, and what will not, do we purport to know precisely what we cannot know? The rush to judgment forecloses the anxiety over the unknown. And yet, was it not the unknown, the not yet, and not ever fully known that drew us here, drew us together, and still, auspiciously, holds us apart?"(Butler in Munt 230). So is holding tightly to our identities, holding us apart? Of course we cannot give up our identities, that isn't even what JB would be saying, but she is asking if they hold us apart and if there are ways to be both invested in material identities and work to disrupt the gate-keeperyness around them. This is not a neo-liberal project, this is a very real concern.
So I want to push back on people who say femme IS this, or it ISN'T that because really who knows? So, should my friend be able to identify as hetero-femme, in a post-structuralist utopian society-definitly; in the here and now, I guess if she is reflexive about what that identity means to me and people in my community, I am cool with it? I am looking for allies, in a world that renders me invisible (except for virtually.) To me, it insinuates that she is questioning heterosexual norms and recognizing that gender is performative and performance, and in the end that makes me feel like she is at least trying to negotiate femininity through a heterosexual lens that isn't heterosexist. And there is something to that, to opening up political spaces, for joining together. I don't expect this looks like some happy ending of a fairytale, alliances through and across differences are a lot of friggin work. Work that is very well worth it, work that should not be bound solely in visual identity characteristics; although always aware of the way the material is bound with the ideal/symbolic; but also bound up in the idea of not giving up on each other and being willing to say I am queer, no matter who ya do, in your bedroom, in the street, or for a camera.
So in the end, basically, I am saying wear your damn pajamas and revel in femme. Because femme is not an identity bound up only with the visual, but like any other identity, it is something we process over, write about, dress up as, and do. I will never think that, "Femme is who I am." I will think, "Femme fits most comfortably for me at this moment, at this space in time, but it may change (although I hope it doesn't too drastically, because I love my bad-ass boots and skirts.)" And most of all, I don't think we need gender identity police telling me that pajamas aren't as sexy as what a femme should wear, cause' I do femme, and I am wearing long underwear and leg warmers and I feel pretty sexy.
And to just talk briefly, I am sick of seeing all of the "Down with the butch-femme dichotomy" bullshit. To me that is just a perpetuation of mostly butch and trans phobia, because I feel like often accompanying these types of propaganda, are women, who claim femme identities, and say they aren't into butches. DO NOT GET ME WRONG! I do NOT think gender and sexuality have to be bound up in the same ways for every person; desire is so complex that it cannot be the same for everyone. But why does it have to be said in such a derogatory way? Like, oh, and that woman over there who prefers short little masculine bois, must be living in some archaic notion of heterosexual fantasy, because she is doing a take on butch-femme. Excuse me, let me bow down and kiss the feet of some folks OBVIOUSLY more enlightened. As I said, desire is complicated, but promoting yourself, while marginalizing another group, who obviously faces some serious friggin dangers everyday, is kind of annoying. Femmes face violence too, I am not tying to exhaust all of the options for ways of being and experiencing the world, but lets not put down a group for the sake of another. (I am probably perpetuating what I am saying not to perpetuate right now, but I am tired and it is getting late, and ma lady is almost home after being gone for a week, so excuse the fact that my brain is, uh, elsewheres.) I will support femmes who desire femmes, as long as they don't do that at the expense of butches, transguys, and genderfuckingqueers. Because like identity, our desires shift and grow over time and with experience and exposure, so you never know who you are going to meet, love, and let's face it, sleep with.
Goddess bless.
(P.S. I am annoyed at the autocorrect, and apologize for any of its stupidity.)
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