Back when I was in Forget Me Not, my role was as one of the two dressing room dancers. Myself and the male dressing room dancer were partially dressed, like we were midway though getting ready for an evening out. We were in the theater's dressing room and we'd wait for patrons to come in, put albums on the old 1970s-style turntable and dance with them, whispering stories in their ears. It was awkward and intimate, and we each danced with patrons of all genders, and only a very, very few were rude and/or groped us. But it was a very draining show (since, you know, later we had to put audience members in coffins and wheel them out of the theater), and we worried about it a lot. I'm flabberghasted that people are being so boorish about this art show.
In brief:
- Writing slash or not has no bearing on whether you are homophobic or not.
- Liking slash or not has no bearing on whether you are homophobic or not.
- Equating slash with Real Queer People or Real Queer Narratives is dodgy at best. Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
- Writing and/or liking slash may or may not mean you've strayed into the fetishization of queer people, something that has a negative impact on queer people. These issues are not clear cut. At all. And asking them to be, from any side of the discussion, is problematic.
- While fiction of all sorts can be used to examine social issues and can be a form of activism, it is not an automatic free pass to being a Big Gay Hero or a Big Hero for Gays.
- People don't decide to be trans.
- Equating someone's gender identity with (inappropriate and uncool) pressure you may be feeling in fandom to be a slasher is uncool.
- "I'm not homophobic, but..." is never a way to win whatever argument you think you're about to be having.
How many times are we going to have to have this conversation, oh Internets?
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Date: 2010-04-19 12:45 pm (UTC)And this is why I increasingly flinch away from fanfiction circles and slash circles (which, shocking though it may seem, are much much BETTER than what I've seen in published m/m circles.)
Oh and didums, she's upset because she can't watch TV and NOT see the slash subtext, how terribly terribly tragic. I'm upset because I can't see ME at all unless it's an overdone stereotype or someone destined to inevitably die for the crime of being gay and being happy *grumpy face*