I got some exciting news this week: The Publishing Triangle announced that my book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive is a finalist for this year's Judy Grahn Award for Lesbian Nonfiction! (for the record, it is a bisexual woman and trans woman-inclusive award.)
Some of my readers may be interested to know that Jennifer Finney Boylan's new book about being a trans parent is also a finalist, so it's an honor to be in such prestigious company.
The winner will be announced at their awards ceremony on April 24th, which I will likely sadly miss given that it's on the other side of the country. But it's nice to know my book is up for consideration!
That's all for now... -j.
writer, performer and activist Julia Serano's blog! most posts will focus on gender & sexuality; trans, queer & feminist politics; music & performance; and other stuff that interests or concerns me. find out more about my various creative endeavors at juliaserano.com
Friday, March 14, 2014
Monday, March 10, 2014
Julia update March 2014 - Excluded new, upcoming college events, and music!
So last week I sent out my latest email update. It has some new links to book readings of, interviews about, and excerpts from, my still somewhat new book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive. The update also lists my Spring 2014 college speaking events, and offers breaking news about my music, new & old!
You can check out the update here.
If you want future julia updates emailed directly to you, you can sign up for my email list via this link.
enjoy! -j.
You can check out the update here.
If you want future julia updates emailed directly to you, you can sign up for my email list via this link.
enjoy! -j.
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Why is "douche" an acceptable slur?
This last night, I was on the Twitters. And as I scrolled down my feed, about two-thirds of the tweets sported the hashtag #palpabledouchery.
Almost all of the tweets were directed at either Woody Allen (because of his denials of Dylan Farrow's claims of sexual abuse) or Stephen King (from their content, it seems as though he tweeted something in support or defense of Allen, although I am not 100% sure, as I did not seek out King's original tweets/comments).
Anyway, this post is not in anyway meant to critique the critiques of Allen or King. What Allen is accused of is sickening. And people who reflexively defend him play into a longstanding dynamic where survivors of sexual abuse are shamed and put on trial while their perpetrators remain above the fray.
No, this post is not about the Allen/Farrow/King news story or controversy. This post is about the hashtag: #palpabledouchery.
Almost all of the tweets were directed at either Woody Allen (because of his denials of Dylan Farrow's claims of sexual abuse) or Stephen King (from their content, it seems as though he tweeted something in support or defense of Allen, although I am not 100% sure, as I did not seek out King's original tweets/comments).
Anyway, this post is not in anyway meant to critique the critiques of Allen or King. What Allen is accused of is sickening. And people who reflexively defend him play into a longstanding dynamic where survivors of sexual abuse are shamed and put on trial while their perpetrators remain above the fray.
No, this post is not about the Allen/Farrow/King news story or controversy. This post is about the hashtag: #palpabledouchery.
Monday, February 3, 2014
What is subversivism?
This is one in a series of blog posts in which I discuss some of the concepts and terminology that I forward in my
writings, including my new book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive.
So the word “subversivism” pops up a couple of times in Excluded, but I first began using the
term in my first book Whipping Girl,
specifically Chapter 20, “The Future of Queer/Trans Activism.” While the word
had previously existed (Merriam-Webster
defines it as “the quality or state of being subversive”),
I began using it to describe a form of sexism that is quite prevalent within
feminist and queer subcultures, albeit absent from straight mainstream society.
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Julia update December, 2013 - Excluded excerpts, reviews, Portland & Seattle book readings, more!
So this morning I sent out my monthly(ish) email update, it has info about my Portland & Seattle book readings this week, links to interviews, reviews, excerpts from my new book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive, a World AIDS Day reading I am in, and more!
You can check out the update here:
http://us7.campaign-archive1.com/?u=0e307e411e4a79a0f76d48dd6&id=aeee86439c
If you want future julia updates emailed directly to you, you can sign up for my email list here:
http://eepurl.com/CxWWf
You can check out the update here:
http://us7.campaign-archive1.com/?u=0e307e411e4a79a0f76d48dd6&id=aeee86439c
If you want future julia updates emailed directly to you, you can sign up for my email list here:
http://eepurl.com/CxWWf
enjoy! -j.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Why Myriad Double Standards?
This is one in a series of blog posts in which I discuss some of the concepts and terminology that I forward in my
writings, including my new book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive.
So in an earlier post, I discussed the concept of myriad double standards that I forward in Excluded. The idea
is quite simple: Generally within feminism and queer activism, we have a fixed
idea of the system that we are challenging—e.g., the patriarchy,
heteronormativity, the gender binary, kyriarchy, and so on. Being fixed models,
each of these acknowledges certain forms of sexism and marginalization while
overlooking or dismissing others. The forms of sexism and marginalization that
are ignored tend to become points of exclusion—for instance, if your concept of
“patriarchy” does not include transphobia/cissexism, then your movement will
exclude trans people; if your concept of “the gender binary” does not include biphobia/monosexism, then your movement will exclude bisexuals. And so on.
Monday, November 4, 2013
What is gender artifactualism?
This is the one in a series of blog posts in which I discuss some of the concepts and terminology that I forward in my writings,
including my new book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive.
So in Excluded, I
introduce the term “gender artifactualism” to describe, “the tendency to conceptualize and depict
gender as being primarily or entirely a cultural artifact.”[p.117] Gender
artifactualist viewpoints are pervasive within feminist and queer activism, and
within the academic fields of Women’s/Gender Studies, Queer Theory, Sociology, certain
subfields of Psychology, and in the Humanities more generally.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Why new words?
Over the next several months, I will be writing a series of
blog posts that explain some of the less familiar terms that I either coined
and/or otherwise forwarded in my writings, especially in Whipping Girl and my new book Excluded: Making Feministand Queer Movements More Inclusive.
I am doing this for several reasons:
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
julia update - Excluded BOOK TOUR starts now, plus excerpts, reviews & interviews
note: this is my monthly email update for October, 2013 - to get these updates emailed directly to you, you can sign up for my email list here.
julia update october 2013
in this update:
1) Julia's Excluded book reading tour is afoot!
2) Excluded-related reviews and interviews
3) recent essays
julia update october 2013
in this update:
1) Julia's Excluded book reading tour is afoot!
2) Excluded-related reviews and interviews
3) recent essays
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
In Defense of Partners
[note added January, 2017: This essay now appears as a chapter in my third book Outspoken: A Decade of Transgender Activism and Trans Feminism]
This last weekend, I finally got around to reading Janet Mock’s recent essay How Society Shames Men DatingTrans Women & How This Affects Our Lives (note: there is also an excellent interview that includes her and Laverne Cox on HuffPost Live discussing the same issue). Mock wrote the piece in response to the media coverage and public backlash against DJ Mister Cee (a cisgender male hip-hop artist and radio personality) for his attempt to solicit sex from someone who he thought was a trans woman. Mock’s piece rightfully points out how the public’s shaming of men who are attracted to trans women—e.g., by insulting their manhood, or presuming that they are closeted gay men—undermines our identities too, as the underlying assumption is that we must be “fake women” or “really men.”
This last weekend, I finally got around to reading Janet Mock’s recent essay How Society Shames Men DatingTrans Women & How This Affects Our Lives (note: there is also an excellent interview that includes her and Laverne Cox on HuffPost Live discussing the same issue). Mock wrote the piece in response to the media coverage and public backlash against DJ Mister Cee (a cisgender male hip-hop artist and radio personality) for his attempt to solicit sex from someone who he thought was a trans woman. Mock’s piece rightfully points out how the public’s shaming of men who are attracted to trans women—e.g., by insulting their manhood, or presuming that they are closeted gay men—undermines our identities too, as the underlying assumption is that we must be “fake women” or “really men.”
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Considering Trans and Queer Appropriation
Within the activist circles I run in, I routinely hear people accuse others of appropriation, or claim that certain behaviors or endeavors are appropriative. I myself have written about how certain people (e.g., cisgender academics and media producers) sometimes appropriate transgender identities and experiences (discussed more below). So I am certainly sympathetic to the concept.
At the same time, however, I have seen the concept of
appropriation used (or misused) in order to undermine marginalized groups as
well. For instance, cisgender feminists have long accused trans women of “appropriating female dress” or “appropriating women’s identities”—indeed, if you click
the link you will see that this was part of the justification for why Sylvia
Rivera was kicked off the stage at a 1973 Pride rally in New York City. On
Cathy Brennan’s anti-trans-dyke website “Pretendbians” (which I refuse to link
to), the byline at the top of the webpage says: “We don't hate you, we hate
appropriation”—the implication being that trans women cannot ever be actual
lesbians, but rather we can only appropriate lesbian identities and culture.
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Julia Serano update - NEW BOOK release & tour dates!
So in the last few days, I've sent out news/invites to my new book release and tour to my email list and Twitter & Facebook accounts. For those who aren't "socially connected" to me in those ways, all the pertinent info is listed here. (and btw, if you want to join my email list, you can do so here.)
Julia's NEW BOOK release and tour!
So my second book is coming out:
Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive
click the link to read excerpts and reviews about it!
It officially comes out October 1st, but a lot of stores (including online book sellers) have it in stock already!
I will be touring in support of Excluded - the following book readings are confirmed:
Julia's NEW BOOK release and tour!
So my second book is coming out:
Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive
click the link to read excerpts and reviews about it!
It officially comes out October 1st, but a lot of stores (including online book sellers) have it in stock already!
I will be touring in support of Excluded - the following book readings are confirmed:
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Myriad Double Standards
So last week, my new book, Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive, was reviewed in Publisher's Weekly - you can read the review here. It is generally positive and I am pretty happy with it! However, there is one line in the review that I feel misconstrues what I was trying to say in the book. Namely, the reviewer describes my supposed ‘denial of the existence of a “gender system”’ and how it ‘flies in the face of much social research.’
I could imagine that people
who read that review without having read the whole book might presume that I am
denying that gender norms, assumptions, stereotypes, etc., often work together
in a coordinated way to legitimize certain people but not others. Or that I am
denying that gender-based oppression is institutionalized and entrenched in our
culture. I can assure you that I do not deny any of these things.
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Two new articles about trans women in queer women's communities
So in the last two days, two articles have come out about how trans women are often excluded from, or made to feel unwelcome within, lesbian and queer women's communities.
The dyke-oriented magazine/website Velvetpark just published my piece "How to Be an Ally to Trans Women." It is an excerpt from my new book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive, which officially comes out October 1st, but may appear in stores as early as mid-September, so keep an eye out for it!
The other article appears in the Huffington Post, and is called "Are Queer Women Leaving Trans Women Behind?" Several trans women are interviewed in it, including myself.
Some much needed attention for an issue that is often overlooked or ignored... -j.
The dyke-oriented magazine/website Velvetpark just published my piece "How to Be an Ally to Trans Women." It is an excerpt from my new book Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive, which officially comes out October 1st, but may appear in stores as early as mid-September, so keep an eye out for it!
The other article appears in the Huffington Post, and is called "Are Queer Women Leaving Trans Women Behind?" Several trans women are interviewed in it, including myself.
Some much needed attention for an issue that is often overlooked or ignored... -j.
Monday, August 19, 2013
julia update August 2013 - new email list & NEW BOOK!
So lots of new stuff to report:
First, I have a brand new email list! If you sign up for it, you will receive monthly(ish) updates about all my upcoming performances and speaking events, newly released books, articles, music, and other projects. No spam, I promise.
To sign up, just click here!
Second, the big news: My NEW BOOK, Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive, will be coming out this October!
Here is a short blurb for the book:
While feminist and queer/LGBTQIA+ movements are designed to challenge sexism, they often simultaneously police gender and sexuality—sometimes just as fiercely as the straight-male-centric mainstream does. Here, acclaimed feminist and queer activist Julia Serano chronicles this problem of exclusion within these movements. She advocates for a more holistic approach to fighting sexism that avoids these pitfalls, and offers new ways of thinking about gender, sexuality, and sexism that foster inclusivity rather than exclusivity.
First, I have a brand new email list! If you sign up for it, you will receive monthly(ish) updates about all my upcoming performances and speaking events, newly released books, articles, music, and other projects. No spam, I promise.
To sign up, just click here!
Second, the big news: My NEW BOOK, Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive, will be coming out this October!Here is a short blurb for the book:
While feminist and queer/LGBTQIA+ movements are designed to challenge sexism, they often simultaneously police gender and sexuality—sometimes just as fiercely as the straight-male-centric mainstream does. Here, acclaimed feminist and queer activist Julia Serano chronicles this problem of exclusion within these movements. She advocates for a more holistic approach to fighting sexism that avoids these pitfalls, and offers new ways of thinking about gender, sexuality, and sexism that foster inclusivity rather than exclusivity.
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Gender is different
Note added 12-18-13: The following piece was one that I hastily wrote and blog-published back in July. It was meant to critique a growing tendency among *some* trans people to reduce all experiences of gender and sexism down to a singular cis-versus-trans axis. As with cis feminists who view the world solely through a male-versus-female mindset, or cis gay men and lesbians who reduce everything down to a heterosexual-versus-homosexual mindset, such singular-axis views can (and often do) erase many people's experiences with marginalization. (I discuss this phenomenon at great length in Excluded.)
Friday, June 21, 2013
spread the word: Girl Talk 2013 less than a week away!
Be sure to buy tickets soon for Girl Talk's big 5th anniversary show, which takes place next Thursday, June 27th, in San Francisco!
As some of you know, Girl Talk is a (primarily) spoken word show that fosters dialogue about the many relationships (partners, lovers, friends, & allies) shared by queer trans women, queer cis women, and genderqueer folks (full description below). It is co-curated by myself, Gina de Vries and Elena Rose. This year's cast includes the three of us, plus Dominika Bednarska, DavEnd, Dr. Carol Queen, Jos Truitt, and Tara Hardy!
As some of you know, Girl Talk is a (primarily) spoken word show that fosters dialogue about the many relationships (partners, lovers, friends, & allies) shared by queer trans women, queer cis women, and genderqueer folks (full description below). It is co-curated by myself, Gina de Vries and Elena Rose. This year's cast includes the three of us, plus Dominika Bednarska, DavEnd, Dr. Carol Queen, Jos Truitt, and Tara Hardy!
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
julia update june 2013!
Hello, welcome to June, happy Pride month!
Speaking thereof, I will be participating in two Pride month events:
1) Thursday, June 27th will be Girl Talk's big 5 year anniversary show! For those unfamiliar with the show, it is an annual spoken word show (with some music and other art/performances) designed to foster dialogue about the many relationships (partners, lovers, friends, & allies) shared by queer trans women, queer cis women, and genderqueer folks.
Speaking thereof, I will be participating in two Pride month events:
1) Thursday, June 27th will be Girl Talk's big 5 year anniversary show! For those unfamiliar with the show, it is an annual spoken word show (with some music and other art/performances) designed to foster dialogue about the many relationships (partners, lovers, friends, & allies) shared by queer trans women, queer cis women, and genderqueer folks.
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Know anyone at Times Books, Henry Holt, and/or Macmillan?
OK, so I deleted the original post that used to reside here. It was a desperate attempt on my part to crowdsource contacting a publisher about a permissions request.
For those of you who have never attempted to contact a large publisher about using a brief excerpt of their work, it can be harrowing. Usually they have webforms asking for a ton of information, or an email address for you to submit your request to, but with no other way of contacting them in person (e.g., a phone number). It's a lot like applying for jobs, except that instead of getting employment, you get permission to use a quote.
For those of you who have never attempted to contact a large publisher about using a brief excerpt of their work, it can be harrowing. Usually they have webforms asking for a ton of information, or an email address for you to submit your request to, but with no other way of contacting them in person (e.g., a phone number). It's a lot like applying for jobs, except that instead of getting employment, you get permission to use a quote.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
julia update april 2013
hello, here is a quick update regarding some upcoming presentations and performances that I will be doing:
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