No Designation

The Politics of Identity on the Edge

It’s not just Brown and White

Note: I originally wrote this piece for a zine I wrote, Reflection: an uncommon identity analysis, spring 2008.

I was the product of transracial donor insemination. I was a child of color raised with white parents, a white brother, a white town, and a white school. As you can imagine, this formula has led to places where race could have been dealt with better in my childhood. I’ve always had a hard time articulating the complexity of how I feel that. Having lesbian parents creates a sense of being put under a microscope, and you’ve got to put your best face forward.

Since I was old enough to communicate, I understood that some people were on the lookout for any evidence that my family was a bad family. At times I felt as if the weight of queer parenting nationwide rested on my shoulders. I didn’t want to talk publicly about anything that would reflect poorly on my family, especially anything related to how our family was formed. Writing this piece has been hard.

I have often heard queer people comment on the lack of intergenerational connection in queer communities, and sometimes voice jealousy over how people of color are raised with family support networks to deal with racism already in place. The opposite has been true for me. I have been learning strategies for dealing with homophobia since I was two or three, but I only started learning how to deal with racism when I was 16. When I spend time in communities of color, where everyone has a lifetime of experience to draw upon, I can’t help but feel like an outsider.

In some cases, it doesn’t make a big difference. We speak a common anti-oppression language. It doesn’t mater if we had very different experiences growing up. However, that’s not always the case.

Just about a year ago I went to a local queers of color group. The next day they called me and asked me not to return. They were in the process of shifting from a public group to a private group of friends who hung out together. However, in the same breath I was also told that some of the members of the group were uncomfortable with the fact that I was raised by white parents, and they worried I would bring white privilege into their safe space.

Now, I’m not naïve enough to deny the role white privilege has had in my life, but I was the only one who’s privilege was being questioned. I inherited privilege from my white parents and I may be light enough to pass as white sometimes, but as a very queer trans woman who never expects to pass as straight I immediately began to wonder how they managed to never question the straight privilege that many of them brought from being raised by straight parents and/or being able to pass as straight.

My experience with privilege is… complicated. There is plenty that I have, and plenty that I don’t have. In my adult life I found the racial consciousness that was hidden from me as a child. But this instance is just one reminder that the way I came to a racial consciousness will always mark me as different.

My white grandfather was estranged from the family as far back as I can remember. A couple years ago he made an attempt to reconnect with the family. His peace offering was a set of beaded bracelets which he gave to each of us. My mom repeated his story, telling me that he got them from an indigenous tribe in Mexico that had very limited contact with the outside world.

He also bragged that other people were taking them to Madison Ave, New York and selling them for $300 a piece. He may have gotten them cheap, but we were expected to value the very expensive gift.

Part of the value was in the exotification of the item. Falling in with the narrative of the “rare” and “wild” artifact made by a lost people, little attention was paid to the attempts of such people to survive in a global capitalist society. And while western capitalism might consider the interaction as a fair trade and smart business, it’s not hard to see an alternative sense of morality that would interpret it as a theft.

That’s part of why I still wear the bracelets. They are a symbol of the complicated relationship that I have with my family, and it is a metaphor for my life. I have nothing but love for my parents, yet taking into consideration the legacy of Native American boarding schools, centuries of coerced assimilation, and cultural genocide, the way I was raised was a theft, too.

In activist spaces I hear discussions about preserving culture and fighting assimilation and I don’t know how to participate because my cultural heritage has already been erased. I’m not sure how to reclaim it, or even what to reclaim. Just like the bracelets, I have been colonized.

September 4, 2008 - Posted by nodesignation | assimilation, exotification, multiracial | , , , | 7 Comments

7 Comments »

  1. That invocation of white privilege reminds me of the invocations of male privilege against trans women and trans feminine people.

    And it’s specifically holding circumstances you had no control over against you. And I think when you mention

    I have been learning strategies for dealing with homophobia since I was two or three, but I only started learning how to deal with racism when I was 16. When I spend time in communities of color, where everyone has a lifetime of experience to draw upon, I can’t help but feel like an outsider.

    that sounds like they’re using the reason you’d need such a support group as the reason to exclude you.

    Comment by Lisa Harney | September 5, 2008 | Reply

  2. Rereading, sorry if the above is stating the obviousy or clueless, I was trying to be sympathetic. :(

    Comment by Lisa Harney | September 6, 2008 | Reply

  3. Oh no, I think it’s insightful. It’s one of the comparisons that I have made pretty early on. I realized that there was a huge connection between my race, gender, and sexual orientation. That connection was primarily that I don’t fit into a binary in any of the three. And that as such, there is always someone who might tell me that I’m not really what I say I am, that I don’t belong with them, and that constant threat of potential community rejection ruled much of how I interacted with my community for most of my first years living as an adult (and to a degree since then).

    It’s an interesting story, but understanding my multiracial experience is what led me to understand my gender experience and come out as trans (well, as genderqueer, trans came later). Contemplating the implications of how one person could see me as a person of color while someone else could see me as white — in the same room at the same time — was the jumping off point for considering how the same thing could happen around gender.

    Comment by nodesignation | September 6, 2008 | Reply

  4. I also think of what things I’ve read written by transracial adoptees, who express many of the same feelings you do above. They could be reasonably said to have been raised in white privilege, but it never seems like something that benefits them because it shields them from learning how to deal with racism – something you mention above.

    Contemplating the implications of how one person could see me as a person of color while someone else could see me as white — in the same room at the same time — was the jumping off point for considering how the same thing could happen around gender.

    And people hate that uncertainty, and are trained only to see the binary. :( You have to be this or that, and anything liminal must be shoved over there, and you’re probably selfish for being liminal in the first place.

    Comment by Lisa Harney | September 6, 2008 | Reply

  5. “In activist spaces I hear discussions about preserving culture and fighting assimilation and I don’t know how to participate because my cultural heritage has already been erased. I’m not sure how to reclaim it, or even what to reclaim. Just like the bracelets, I have been colonized.”

    Wow, that is such a powerful statement. I think that is a reality that many children of immigrants or from a multi-ethnic background refuse to accept. There may come a point when your cultural identity has in fact been lost forever.

    Comment by Deborah | September 9, 2008 | Reply

  6. It’s a complex situation, and my reaction is complex, too. My sons are multiracial, but their Blackfeet blood is not much – a 32nd or so – and their granddad worked hard to eliminate what was left of that culture from his own life. That connection to the past is truncated. How can I help them reclaim it? And what is there to reclaim? For them, I resonate with your own uncertainty.

    At the same time, I grew up steeped in white straight privilege, with the additional benefit of male privilege. Everything except wealth to keep me near the peak of our social hierarchy. In choosing to sacrifice that for trans/queer integrity, do I join with those who have suffered the entire range of our cultural domination system, or am I excluded into a no-man’s land, neither a part of the support group of the oppressed, nor any longer one of the oppressors. Again, a resonance for me.

    Well, the past is over, and I can’t change it. I’m working now to break down that oppression. Perhaps it is enough.

    Comment by Seda | September 17, 2008 | Reply

  7. [...] Trans folks are (frequently) l, g, b, q, i, sgl, gnc, etc etc. It’s not the needs of lgb folks, it’s the needs/actions of the cis LGB community–and in this context, it’s frequently not even that, but the white, temporarily able bodied, cis LGB community whose priorities get taken into account. (in the last example, it’s the white CLGB community vs POC vs trans folks, even though it’s flawed reasoning anyways) [...]

    Pingback by LGB community v. trans community [sic] « Taking Up Too Much Space | September 23, 2008 | Reply


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