September 1, 2014

"I am something that does not exist!" (On queer schwulwomen, girlfags and guydykes)

In this guest blog post Ili tells about her life as schwul (girlfag). How do you explain something when the language you speak lacks the words for it, she asks, and when the culture you live in doesn't see it as possible? 
American comedian Margaret Cho modelling
the girlfag T-shirt over at Beyond the Binary

Guest post by Ili 
Note: I will use the German word schwul for “gay male” in this article because English has no single word for the concept, and because schwul has a subtly different meaning from "gay male".

A great many English-speakers are offended by the English term "girlfag," given that both"girl" and "fag" are at least potentially pejorative - a linguistic battle to which nobody has yet figured out a workable solution. Perhaps the German schwule mädchen will eventually be adopted into English.
I am something that many people will tell you does not exist. Schwulwomen (“girlfags”) and lesbian men (“guydykes”) cannot, by current gender-bound linguistic standards, be real.

While the advent of trans identities in the last few decades has brought significant changes in the meanings of “man” and “woman," the words “
schwul and “lesbian” still have rigid definitions, even within the LGBTQ communities: only men can be schwul, only women can be lesbians. Anything else isn’t possible, per definition.

And yet I, as well as an uncountable but significant number of men and women like me, feel strongly that we are these impossible identities, the schwul female, the male lesbian. To say that these identities are problematic is to understate the case dramatically.

Thinking the impossible

To begin with, it often takes years, perhaps even decades, for a nascent girlfag or guydyke to realize her or his tendencies. A woman may identify with schwul culture since puberty – but until she accepts the "impossible," she may think she’s crazy, or the only one of her kind. She may try for years to reconcile herself to normative heterosexuality - after all, she likes guys, she must be straight, right?


Then one day she sees a TV show with a gay male character, or reads a bit of slash fiction, or simply looks around her circle of friends. She realizes that she’s schwul – and suddenly so many things become clear... at least for herself. 

Those around her, though, will probably not understand. She can’t explain how it’s possible that a woman can be schwul. How do you explain something when the language you speak lacks the words for it, when the culture you live in doesn’t see it as possible? (She may notice that she's in a similar position to a trans person a century ago, unable to explain how someone who looks unambiguously male could in fact be female, because the word and the concept of transgender have not yet been created.) 

Unless she is superhumanly self-confident, she will almost certainly falter, overwhelmed by the task of explaining an identity for which the words do not yet exist in common parlance. Doubts will arise: Can a woman really be schwul? A man lesbian? Or am I crazy?

Are girfags and guydykes trans people in training?

In the modern world the general public has at least some awareness, however fallacious, about transgender identities -- so girlfags and guydykes who are also gender-dysphoric may have an easier time explaining themselves. If you’re not just doubting your sexual orientation, but also your gender, the concept suddenly is easier to understand for many people. Of course, transsexuality isn’t accepted in all parts of society – but it’s possible, it’s thinkable!
Madonna has called herself "a gay man
trapped in a woman's body".So have Nigella Lawson,
Posh Spice, Courtney Love, Lady Gaga and Mila Kunis.
Are they expressing a schwul sexuality and/or identity?

Saying "I'm a woman who feels male and I am attracted to men as a man" or one of the famous sentences "I’m a gay man in a woman’s body“ or "I want to be a lesbian woman" is at least conceivable, even if many people are uncomfortable with the idea. The connection between gender and sexual orientation is still very firm, both within and outside in the LGBTQ community. 

However, a schwul woman who is comfortable in her female identity seems to have no chance of acceptance: if she insists on her female gender, she’ll be – in the worst cases – seen as a desperate heterosexual "fag hag," or pathologized as someone with severe gender confusion.

Guydykes have it even worse, encountering open hostility in lesbian culture, where they are seen as perverts. Some gender-dysphoric guydykes are treated more gently, as pre-op pre-hormone trans women, but even this is far from certain.

This is where the girlfag and guydyke concept becomes controversial even within our own small community. Are girlfags and guydykes simply "gay trans people in training"? If so, why aren't they all working toward transitioning, instead of fighting for recognition of a still rare and poorly understood identity? *)

Between cis and trans, between hetero and gay

In reality, I think, girlfags and guydykes are somewhere in between, occupying a huge grey area between cis and trans, between homosexuality and heterosexuality.

Girlfags, as an example, can be plotted on an axis, with heterosexual fag hags on the one side, gay transmen on the other, and girlfags somewhere in between. (The side toward which they lean is different from individual to individual.) 

Thus, some girlfags prefer male pronouns for themselves, some female pronouns. Some identify as female and prefer traditionally feminine clothing and makeup, whereas others say that "they always wanted to be a boy" and appear more like butch lesbians. What they have in common is that they are sufficiently between categories to feel uncomfortable calling themselves either "heterosexual females" or "gay trans men."

For some gay trans men and lesbian trans women, the identity as girlfag or guydyke was a kind of interstage along the path to transition. But it would be wrong to assume that all girlfags or guydykes will eventually become transsexuals.

The existence of a small but fast-growing community of girlfags and guydykes challenges the queer community. As we learned, a few decades ago, to accept the existence of gay trans people -- that sexual desire and gender identity were independent factors -- girlfags and guydykes further uncouple sexual identity from both desire and gender.

About me, Ili

I was born in 1984 into a very traditional family. Although my grandmother, as the principal earner of the family, could have been seen as an early feminist, queer topics were never even mentioned in our home. Nonetheless, I was interested in “gays and homosexuality” since puberty - in a diary entry from my seventeenth year, I call myself a “female schwulhetero.” 

After several unsuccessful thought experiments (Am I lesbian? Transsexual? Crazy?), by 2007 it was clear to me that I had to accept what I always thought was impossible: I was schwul!

In spring 2008, I found Uli Meyer’s article about girlfags and transfags *) – and it was like an awakening. After my experiences in an online trans community – where I was shown a lot of understanding but also (because of my female identity) a lot of rejection – I founded the first German homepage and the first German discussion board for girlfags (which now also includes guydykes and several other queer identities).

Feminine girlfags

It was interesting for me to learn that some girlfags and guydykes have reservations toward girlfags who express themselves in a very feminine way. It seemed to be difficult for them to imagine that there are women who identify as schwul but who never remembered having “always wanted to be a boy.”

I realized again what I had realized in other queer groups before: If a ciswoman looks too feminine – meets the heteronormative expectations for her gender – many people can’t fully believe that she’s queer.

Marc St.James
Traditional femininity has a troublesome reputation in some queer communities – it’s often seen as sign of weakness, submission and assimilation to heteronormative expectations.

The more I read about queer femininity, the more I realize that others – trans women, femme lesbians, etc. – have had similar experiences.

This was a strange discovery for me, as I identified – in the real meaning of the word – as a “female fag”. The more I dressed up, the “gayer” I felt, and the more I felt schwul, the more flamboyantly I dressed. If I had to name my male alter-ego, I would name effeminate, style-conscious men like Emmett Honeycutt (from Queer As Folk) or Marc St.James (from Ugly Betty).

The diversity of queer

But I have to admit that I was naïve, too. I thought that every girlfag had as strong a female identity as mine, and shared my love of fashion and other feminine/effeminate pursuits. 

As I met more girlfags and other non-normative queers, I realized how multifaceted the concept is, and saw that you can’t do it justice by putting it into the “trans corner” (or any other corner).

Now I know that girlfags and guydykes are as versatile as the queercommunity they feel attracted to: There are (more or less) female-identified drag queens and fags, bear lovers and leatherfolk, crossdressers and androgynes, lesbian girlfags, butches, femmes and many others. Our small part of the queer world is as multifaceted and colorful as the queers we love.

--------------------

*) Meyer points out that although the word "girlfag" is new, the identity is not - Magnus Hirschfeld profiled a gay-male-identified woman in the early 20th century (p. 73), http://www.liminalis.de/artikel/Liminalis2007_meyer.pdf

The original German version of this article was published in Queerulant_in, vol. 6 (Dec. 2013/Jan. 2014): http://www.queerulantin.deDownload a free PDF of German languange Querulant_in girfag/guydyke issue here!

16 comments:

  1. I bet my wife fits into this somehow though in a deeply repressed fashion. I don't think she will ever be capable of realizing it or sharing openly what she does understand about herself.

    I think people are far more diverse than any language allows and in fact any sort of type that can be defined probably does exist in some numbers no matter how seemingly contradictory to normative views or biologically improbably. For such variety to exist is an expectation of evolutionary biology.

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  2. @koloa

    Given that you have presented your own crossdreaming, elsewhere, I dare to ask: Do you think that, on some unconscious level, this is what brought you together?

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  3. I have certainly considered that thought. I don't believe it can be true for any appearance/presentation, but might be true on a personal relationship level. But not in a healthy way I am afraid. More like asshole husband and battered wife.

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  4. Previously, I would have considered myself a girlfag, but I'm coming to terms being an androgyne female. I wish I was more masculine in the face from time to time, but I'm already not girly looking even naked which is perfect for me. I feel most myself in pants and topless--I have (B)eautiful breasts--like a boy would lounge around his house.
    Also why I wouldn't classify myself as gilfag is I'm not attracted to gay men for being gay. I am an androphile who adores males from most femme to most manly...as long as they have a cute face, are attracted to ME (a female), and are kind people, I WILL be sexually attracted to them.

    That being said, my FTM crossdreams are still worth telling in that I get aroused by having a penis, BUT I'm in the passive position. I am a boy but not one who takes full control. I have a penis but, it is not solely meant for domination--it is a TOOL for my partner's insatiable pleasure.

    My partner in these fantasies
    is usually a much more feminine acting crossdressing male who ALSO has a penis. S/he may proudly display it under a flowing skirt, short-shorts, or in lace panties. I'm also a much smaller man and love being dominated by my lover's taller size. Although s/he initiates sex, his/her penis in these fantasies is more of a clitoris--mainly there to show his/her arousal, for me to touch and play with but not to penetrate.


    So I'm the hot-blooded boy toy (masculine but passive) of a feminine male who isn't afraid to demand from me what s/he wants (feminine but dominate). I just wanted to share since it's different from what I've read here and wanted to get feedback on it. And the site is great. I just wish people were more upfront about it then maybe I won't be weary of dating! Because of my androgynous vibe I easily attract the males I describe (cute, sexually demure, but wants to be touched), but we're so reluctant because isn't he supposed to lead or am I? Damn Society.

    Listening to a lot of 80s synthpop helps since a lot of those bands were full of feminine but sexually aggressive males. My favorite(and go-to fantasy partner) is Martin Gore of Depeche Mode in and out of his dress. God I Love that band...they mirror my gender identity almost PERFECTLY like they're singing directly to woman-men like myself.

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  5. same anon commenter from before---

    Another 80s god/dess: If Pete Burns was into women (he did have a girlfriend for a while at one point), I'd be soooooooo into him/her/whatever he wants to be. He can ride my fantasy male parts any time. I love that mix of feminine beauty and virility.

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  6. These are either very disturbed people, or people who will say anything in order to be the center of attention. Either way, they are pathetic.

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  7. @unpublished anonymous

    Verbal abuse is not accepted. Make a polite and meaningful argument or stay away.

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  8. Thank you for this article,as a feminine girl fag, I had the same confusion for a long time. To be honest what opened my eyes was twink porn, at first I felt guilty about enjoying it, as most twink models look awfully young to do porn, I felt like a pervy old men,lol...

    That was strange because I'm very feminine and I never wanted to look like men or have a penis but I really liked fem boys maybe because they looked girly since teenage years I'm also attracted to women as well but I never enjoyed so-called lesbian porn whereas my reaction to twink porn was immediate arousal. That was hard to explain even to myself, indeed I became obsessed with a girly looking twink model (Jesse Starr) for a while and then I discovered yaoi and ended up here.

    After reading your article and some others in this blog, I came to realise that I must be a bisexual girlfag, as I'm attracted to both gay and straight men as well as feminine lesbian women and that probably makes me a weirdo in the eyes of society. But at least now I know who I'm.

    I think the only downside of being a girl fag would be lusting after gay guys while knowing that they would never reciprocate your feelings, my best shot is finding a bisexual fem boy but most fem boys are fully gay and would never be attracted to a woman, at most I can be a fag hag with a secret crush, nothing more. ;-((

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  9. Thank you for this article,as a feminine girl fag, I had the same confusion for a long time. To be honest what opened my eyes was twink porn, at first I felt guilty about enjoying it, as most twink models look awfully young to do porn, I felt like a pervy old men,lol...

    That was strange because I'm very feminine and I never wanted to look like men or have a penis but I really liked fem boys maybe because they looked girly since teenage years I'm also attracted to women as well but I never enjoyed so-called lesbian porn whereas my reaction to twink porn was immediate arousal. That was hard to explain even to myself, indeed I became obsessed with a girly looking twink model (Jesse Starr) for a while and then I discovered yaoi and ended up here.

    After reading your article and some others in this blog, I came to realise that I must be a bisexual girlfag, as I'm attracted to both gay and straight men as well as feminine lesbian women and that probably makes me a weirdo in the eyes of society. But at least now I know who I'm.

    I think the only downside of being a girl fag would be lusting after gay guys while knowing that they would never reciprocate your feelings, my best shot is finding a bisexual fem boy but most fem boys are fully gay and would never be attracted to a woman, at most I can be a fag hag with a secret crush, nothing more. ;-((

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  10. Jack, do you know any active English website/forum for girlfags/guydykes? I haven't been able to find any :/

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  11. Join the girlfag/guydyke group over at Facebook. Even if Facebook doesn't formally allow anonymous accounts, you can fake one, if that is needed.

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  12. The impossibility of my identity struck me hard to. I'm going to transition because I'm thirty now, my biological clock, as it were, is ticking like a time bomb, and every ounce of my being tells me that I have to do this in order to find a meaningful relationship. Of course every ounce of my intellect tells me that that doesn't make any damn sense.

    I tried hard for awhile to actively pursue transmen, but it is really really difficult not coming off as an "admirer", and creepy to them. Like you seem them as a fetishistic object (which I'm not claiming is the case, I'm claiming: try it, and get ready to be perceived often in this way). It was hurtful, difficult, and I gained little success.

    I'm attractive too, and women like me -- but they like me as a man, and tend to peg me as a whole other kind of person than I really am.

    I can't deal with all of this anymore, gotta transition, and find meaningful relationships.

    Ideally I like androgynous to masculine women -- I just need them to like me back, without being afraid of me.

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  13. @Elsa

    It seems to me that the way our societies abhor the in-betweens, while we at the same time has an inborn (?) need for some kind of stable identity, makes it hard to live in "the twilight zone" for a long time.

    It definitely makes it harder, although not impossible, to establish romantic relationships.

    So, yes, I can understand that you do what you do. You will still be you on the inside, whether you present as a man or a woman.

    Julia Serano recently wrote a piece on the men who love trans women. She argues that labelling all men who love trans women "fetishists" or "tranny chasers", not only is stigmatizing for them, but also for trans women. Trans women are often pressured into bottom surgery for this very reason.

    I have seen something similar over at tumblr, where FTM gay transsexual separatist "truscum" is actively harassing girlfags for being fetishists. It seems that they have forgotten that the whole fetish concept was developed to invalidate gay men and transgender people. They are, themselves, both.

    We humans cause ourselves a lot of unnecessary grief, don't we?

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  14. Yes we do... but I contend that if my sexual preferences are fetishistic, than so are all forms of sexual preference, including the majority, gold-standard, officially approved ones.

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  15. Silver and Ivory has written an interesting article on girlfags here: A Love Letter to Girlfags

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