Making Men Interview-
Beau Laurence 7/5/2012 at the Gypsy Coffee House in Capitol Hill
Gypsy Coffee House |
Peeing in the Gender Woods
For Right Be Done, I was interested in hir thoughts about
masculinity. Xi is making a conscious choice to adopt some of masculinity, keep
some of femininity, and move to something new. If men are ever to be liberated,
we must make the same kinds of choices as Beau. Because no conversation
about masculinity can ignore our historical relationship to it, I started by
asking about hir past. Surprisingly, Beau answered by talking about how we
toilet.
Right Be Done (RBD):
What is your earliest memory of what it means to be a man?
Beau Lawrence (BL):
Probably the earliest difference that I remember is about how boys go to the
bathroom. So, I have a brother who is two years older, and I grew up… I was
born into, and until I was 10, we lived in a commune and I was the first female
child. There were three boys. They were older than me. My brother and two other
boys. So, I didn’t have other girls to hang out with when I was a little kid, I
just had the boys.
So, we all played
together. They climbed trees, so I did all of these activities and didn’t
think anything of my body being different, or "I’m not supposed to do that," until
it came to actually urinating and it was like, “Wait. I don’t have that. That
doesn’t work for me.” I specifically remember asking my dad to teach me how to
pee standing up so that I could be like the other boys. Because to me it wasn’t
a boy/girl thing, it was a kid thing. Like, I couldn’t do what the other kids
did. But I was the youngest one, so it’s like, you know in your kid brain, you
don’t necessarily revert to gender as the reason you couldn’t do this. It’s,
“I’m the youngest one and I haven’t learned yet and I want to be like the big
kids and do this.”
RBD: What did your dad
say?
BL: My dad was like,
“Okay.” And I actually did learn. Then, I was at my
grandmothers and I was like, “You wanna see?” And she was like, “you will never do that again.” That’s when I learned
that it was definitely not a girl thing to do and that I was a girl. It was
really her that sort of reinforced what a girl was NOT, more than, “This is
what boys or men are like.”
In a society where “man” is neutral, it is normal for
someone who was raised as a girl to learn only what man is not. Perhaps, the
biggest problem with feminism has been that we have not discussed traditional masculinity
from an objective point of view. However, Beau later told me about one person
in hir life that did create from scratch a conscious definition of what it meant to be a
man. Television isn’t normally a place
to break stereotypes, but xi cited one example of a man who strayed from convention.
The Radical Politics of Mork and Mindy
BL: I hadn’t thought
about T.V. shows until you asked this question. Lone Ranger.
RBD: Supermale. The
Lone Ranger is definitely a super male.
BL: I remember being
really offended. I was always really offended the way that he treated Tonto. I
was really hyper-aware of… Wow this really is kind of awful, but straight white
men were always pigs, and so whatever they did was definitely
like, there are other ways to be because there are other males, and there are
strong females, but these white males are awful.
Fair use for political comment, from Mork and Mindy publicity. |
RBD: But wasn’t he an
alien.
BL: He was an alien,
but…
RBD: So, he wasn’t
really a man.
BL: He was an alien
impersonating what it was like to be a male getting coached by Mindy.
RBD: Strangers in a Strange Land sort of masculinity where he had
this opportunity to point out how ridiculous masculinity was.
BL: And he could do really fun.., really childlike sorts of things and get corrected for doing gender
wrong.
The writer’s of Mork and Mindy gave America a
chance to question basic assumptions of masculinity, the same kind of
assumptions that this blog is attempting to undermine. And here I thought I was being
a radical when in fact Hollywood
did it 40 years ago and in tight pants.
Condescending to be Helpful
Later, I asked about the best and the worst traits of
masculinity.
RBD: So what is the
worst trait that has traditionally been associated with the word masculinity?
BL: Certainly
patriarchy. And condescension. But those really aren’t unique to masculinity.
RBD: What makes
condescension in particular traditionally masculine?
BL: It’s so hard to
separate the traditional concept of masculinity. It's so wrapped up in white
northern European culture that it’s kind of like, “It’s all the same.” It may
be more that whiteness, that religiousness, more than masculinity that
[condescension] comes from. That manifest destiny, we know better, we’re chosen
by god, sort of everything is our minion. Women and children and people of
color are our property. That to me is the worst thing about traditional
masculinity.
RBD: How about the
best thing about traditional masculinity? The best trait?
BL: I struggle with
this because the thing that I, throughout my life, have sort of really maybe
wanted to emulate more than anything else is not necessarily a positive
quality, but the self sacrificing is sort of…
RBD: I call it
loyalty.
BL: But not just
loyalty. Chivalry is a real awful thing that implies condescension and all of
that negative, but the, “I’m going to take the burden on so that somebody else
doesn’t have to,” is something that I’ve always really liked. I know that in a
lot of ways it’s not healthy because it’s a lot of it ego, but I have always
enjoyed being the kind of person that would give my seat to somebody else. Or
carry something that was really heavy so that somebody didn’t have to. And it
wasn’t that they’re not capable of doing it, but that I’m strong and capable,
and I can help in this way. And I think that’s something I value about
masculinity. That sort of willingness to, not help the old lady across the
street, but sort of like, you need somebody to move heavy furniture, I can do
that, and it doesn’t have to be somebody who has a penis that does it. But I
think that there is that attitude of masculinity in that offer.
RBD: In a way it seems
like two sides of the same coin. The thing that you dislike the worst
(condescension) and the thing that you like the best about masculinity
(helpfulness).
Petersburg- Caviar by Walter Smith |
The idea of cafeteria masculinity is close to the image of
liberated men that I hold in my imagination. I originally conceived of writing an
article about hors gendered folks
for that very reason. We men who are seeking liberation are looking for
role models ourselves. We are looking for people to pave the path to freedom.
Those like Beau who have decided to take on the underpinnings of gender are
acting as our Moses, leading us out of the constructs that have kept us in lives of solitude and violence. It is hard to imagine the threat under which
they live as a result. The reaction to non-conforming gender is morbidly violent, and theirs is a unique courage born of a mix of desperation
for acceptance and a rebellious character. Regardless of Beau’s reasons for
trailblazing our liberation, we owe hir and those like hir a debt of gratitude.
Breaking Down Stereotypes
At the end of our interview, we spent a long time just
letting the conversation flow, and at one point I wondered if xi felt
like society was becoming more free because of the breaking down of traditional
gender norms in society at large.
BL: It is, but here’s
the double-edged sword about all that. In the kinds of circles that I’ve
traveled in, the radical political stuff. When there’s a meeting, people go
around and introduce themselves and say what gender pronoun they prefer. It is
sort of a thing for a lot of people to say, “It doesn’t matter.” And that’s
really marginalizing and erasing for those of us who have to choose and are so
aware of the choices that we make and that other people make. So when an
obviously cis-gendered straight man says, “Oh, you can call me ‘she,’ I won’t
be offended.”
Beau Laurence's profile pic from Facebook. |
RBD: That’s true, but
being exposed to non-normative gender associations can break those stereotypes
for cis-people.
BL: It absolutely can,
and just like every other thing, this is sort of the natural way of progress.
You have these very rigid boxes, and they start to get broken up, and then you
have conventionally perceived or attitudinally conventional people who then
start to co-opt the language. And that is something that is a natural
progression, but it’s annoying.
(If you have a complicated relationship with masculinity, and would like to have your life broadcast on this blog, please contact me to set up your own Making Men Interview.)
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