November 22nd, 2009
 

365 Gay: Living

Why can’t you just butch up?

, AfterElton.com

In February, Skate Canada, the governing board of Canadian figure skating, announced that it was embarking on a campaign to change the image of men’s skating – from sometimes frilly and flamboyant to more of an emphasis on power, speed, and endurance.

The announcement was greeted negatively by some GLBT groups who saw the move as little more than thinly veiled homophobia and a slap in the face of the sport’s existing fans.

Two-time Olympic silver medalist Elvis Stojko seemed aware of the controversy when he told the Toronto Sun, “It has nothing to do with your sexual preference. It’s all about what men’s skating is – power and strength. Whether he’s gay or straight, it doesn’t matter. It’s what you’re showcasing on the ice. If you’re very lyrical and you’re really feminine and soft, well, that’s not men’s skating. That is not men’s skating, okay?” [Note: The emphasis was Stojko's.]

Elvis Stojko (right) attempts to distinguish himself
from other male Canadian figure skaters

Was Stojko right? After all, a gay man can be just as masculine and athletic as a straight one. Stojko might have been tactless, but he wasn’t being homophobic – was he?

Nigel Lythgoe, a judge on the Fox reality show So You Think You Can Dance, waded into a similar controversy a couple of weeks ago when he berated a couple of same-sex dancers – not for being gay (or so he claimed), but because he “likes to see guys be guys and girls be girls on stage,” a stance Lythgoe has frequently taken when it comes to effeminate dancers. Off camera, he told the dancers, who weren’t particularly effeminate, they were hurting the “image” of dancing in general.

And in the latest issue of Rolling Stone, in which Adam Lambert officially comes out, he tells a story about an American Idol chauffeur who told Adam he had no problem with his being gay, “because at least you’re not girly.”

Clearly, a lot of people have a problem with guys who don’t act traditionally masculine – in other words, with guys who are effeminate.

And it’s not just straight people. Two weeks ago, 18-year-old Sergio Garcia of Los Angeles made national headlines by getting himself elected Prom Queen at his high school.

Sergio Garcia, high school Prom Queen

“I feel invincible,” he said, wearing both a tuxedo and a tiara, prompting one gay blogger to write, “Methinks the lady doth be a douchebag too much.”

What is effeminacy anyway? Where does it come from? And why in the world does it seem to get everyone so very upset?

Next Page! The biological “cause” of effeminacy?

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5

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  • michaelnDallas Said: June 15th, 2009 at 10:46 pm
    • I have often wondered if some gay men feel compelled to “Act Gay” as they come out. When I first came out, I thought acting effeminate was what was expected. As I came out, I realized that was not me. I started to act like myself. I’ve been told I pass as str8, it’s not some thing I aspire to, it’s me. When we have seen gay role models on TV, they have been effeminate and nelly men. Paul Lynde, Jack, Dr. Smith. We all try and fit in and do what we often feel is right. Society defines how we are suppose act. We either do that or find our own voice, no pun intended.
      I decided when I first thought of this and realized society like to exploit the more characterist members of out soiety, I needed to accept all of our community bear, leather, drag queens or lipstick lesbians or bull dike, they make out community diverse and beautiful! Some neanderthals only get a stiffy for a blond, or red-head. I’m attracted to the men I am attracted to. I’m me and they are them. Character issues are more important to me then str8 acting or nelly! My choice.

  • Matt Said: June 15th, 2009 at 10:21 pm
    • In response to Trace, I see the Bear/Muscle as the other side of the scale- hypermacho and hypermasculine. I tend to think of myself as more in the middle. As I like to jokingly tell my friends, I’m not gay, I’m just a straight guy who likes other guys..

  • Lesbian atheist Said: June 15th, 2009 at 10:10 pm
    • Thank you Richard!! That’s what I try to explain to my straight allies and uninformed gay friends. You think it is hard for the “sissy” try being a woman that get the message from society that femininity is inferior and the worst possible thing. If we don’t get rid of sexist views we as a community will never be truly free.

  • John Said: June 15th, 2009 at 9:44 pm
    • You know, it walks like a duck, it has feathers like a duck, it sounds like a duck, has feet like a duck – heeellloooo, it is a duck! Paint it, disguise it, hide it, cover it, garage it … whatever you do, it is still a duck!

      Here is some food for thought: instead of “butching it up” why not take the opportunity to teach tolerance, respect,individuality, and embrace people’s nature without judging each other? Butch it up … B.S. !!!!

  • Richard Anderson Said: June 15th, 2009 at 9:23 pm
    • Good article, but you missed a HUGE point: sexism is the root of homophobia. This whole thing was rhetorical, but there IS an answer. Queer people are persecuted for their (assumed) gender non-conformity. If a man acts like a woman, he’s degrading himself. And a woman isn’t in her place if she acts like a man. Sexism hurts queer people just as much as straights.

      This is sexism and transphobia/cissexism flat out.

      You can be masculine or feminine, since gender identity is independent of sexual orientation. But let’s not pursue a heteronormative archetype of “masculinity” solely to fit in.

      Queer it up! Redefine masculinity! That’s what queer people do! We provide a new, often controversial, look at the world. Our existence makes people think. We shake things up because we’ve been ignored for so long.

  • DR Said: June 15th, 2009 at 9:01 pm
    • Re: Nigel Lythgoe: if there is one more reality show made with yet another snotty-assed homophobe brit judge who clearly thinks with his penis, I’m going to kill my TV! Nigel represents everything I hate about people judging people base on gender roles (and why I can’t stomach his show). I am a guy who speaks effeminately, so I have been told, and people have made comments about it since before I hit puberty. I don’t know why I do, I don’t on purpose, but it’s just how I talk. When we say people have a problem with this, aren’t they mostly men? I think with straight men it’s because they grow up and even as adults insult each other by calling each other “girly’, “old lady” or just a woman. That is totally pathetic because they must imagine there is something wrong with women in order to feel insulted by that.

  • Fed Up Said: June 15th, 2009 at 8:40 pm
    • @ Trace,

      Hear, Hear (WELL said!)

  • Trace Said: June 15th, 2009 at 8:20 pm
    • Amen Ozzy, I think that it’s the responsibility of gay men and women that are not caricatures to be out and visible. There are so many folk out there that are forced into closets by our own brothers and sisters. If I can help prevent other gays (that don’t fit into the “flamboyant” role) from feeling isolated and bad about themselves, I think I’ve done some good.

  • ozzy Said: June 15th, 2009 at 7:44 pm
    • As I met more gay people in my life I realized that all that thing of “straight acting” or “fem acting” was 100% bullcrap. Sadly in my experience, gay people are more intolerant towards gays non conforming to whatever they consider “gay acting”. Some gays live in a reality-tv universe of exaggerated stereotypes where gays are all thin, creative and histerical. Luckily for me the gay community is big and that’s probably why I find my self hanging out more in bear community. They are the most accepting and cool. I’m not hairy and I’m not fat, yet they don’t judge anyone, fem or not fem. I realize that the older I get the less important is to please the ignoramus part of the population and their stupid expectations. So I can listen to Metallica and Madonna, I can play Call of duty 4 and then watch Mamma mia. I really don’t care. I’m a 90’s kinda guy, come as you are. Fem or not fem.

  • Trace Said: June 15th, 2009 at 7:43 pm
    • Finally, a little recognition.

      I remained closeted for so long because all of the examples of gay men that I was presented with were effeminate and “swishy.”

      Thank Gawd for the Bear and MuscleBear movement that allowed men to actually act like and be masculine.

  • Jason F Said: June 15th, 2009 at 7:33 pm
    • Oddly enough, I started in the gay community at age 15 surrounded by more effeminate gay friends, and emulated them to fit in. In college, my behavior became less effeminate as I settled into my more natural behaviors. In that respect, effeminacy was a norm I had to grow out of to be myself.

      But the perspective the experience gave me remains integral to my thinking on the gender display issue. Most importantly, people should be who they are. I feel sorry for straight men and women, who must censor their identities and inclinations whenever such behavior would fall outside social norms.

      I think this article is very insightful, particularly for showing us how cookie-cutter gender behaviors do real damage when we use them to cut across our brothers and sisters who don’t fit their shape.

      Also love the “just cuz you don’t want to have sex with him doesn’t give you license to be a dick” idea. Well put!

  • kerry Said: June 15th, 2009 at 7:06 pm
    • I enjoy being effeminate its my gender expression.I look feminine and like girly things,so why can’t I be myself.To each as own.

  • R & R Said: June 15th, 2009 at 6:03 pm
    • My brother and I were raised by a very butch mother and she made no attempt at hiding the fact. Once for a social requirement she put on a dress. She looked ridiculous and took the damn thing off. Most of our childhood was surrounded by gay women and had no problem with it. We just accepted that as normal. We were always very proud of our dyke mother and made no attempt to hide what she was. We were raise with the terms “butch” and “fem.” And we considered ourselves the richer for it.

      Butch women, effeminate men? What’s the big deal? They are just as human as the rest of the crowd, maybe more so.

  • Jayson Said: June 15th, 2009 at 6:01 pm
    • i thing we would all be better off if some of the straight men were a little more effeminate. You know, like caring about other people including other men, listening to what their girlfriends were really saying, being able to show their emotions a little more in public.

  • Brittney Said: June 15th, 2009 at 5:48 pm
    • A better way to get at this topic is to question those who march to the beat of the gender mainstream. Those are the people who never question gender roles, and, consequently, abuse others for walking outside the lines. Feminine men and masculine women, regardless of their sexuality, are discriminated against for the same reason: No matter how queer you are, everyone’s more comfortable if you don’t look and act like it.

      We still live in a world where queer kids and teens are killing themselves because of the harassment they encounter. It’s more important to protect and encourage those who offer dissents from normality–the sissies, studs, and queens–than to ask, even rhetorically, that they answer for themselves.

 
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