That Time Of Year #TDOR

In the run-up to the annual Transgender Day of Remembrance on November 20th many organizations run trans awareness campaigns. OutUWE, the LGBT network of the University of the West of England in Bristol, asked local trans people if they would come and talk. I’d already booked to go to the Alison Bechdel event, and other people volunteered, so I declined. OutUWE asked me if I’d send a statement to be read so I did. You can read it here.

That, of course, was intended for university students in the UK, many of whom would not be trans. The reality of trans people’s lives around the world can be very different. In an entirely separate development I have ended up organizing a Day of Remembrance ceremony in Bristol (thanks for the opportunity, Annabelle). As part of that I have had to go through this year’s list of deaths. A number of things are very obvious:

  • The overwhelming majority of victims are female-identified
  • The overwhelming majority are people of color
  • Most of the victims are very poor (they do sex work because they can’t get jobs)
  • The overwhelming majority come from countries where Catholicism is the dominant religion
  • Several victims appear to have been targeted because they are trans rights activists

The countries with the biggest death counts are Brazil (126) and Mexico (48). The average age of the victims, where known, is 29, with the youngest being just 16. One of the youngest, Jessica (18), was beaten to death in police custody. No reason for her arrest was ever given.

It is an ugly picture, and one which generating greater respect for trans people amongst white, middle class people in the UK won’t do much to solve. Alleviating poverty in Latin America would probably do a lot more good. A decrease in the amount of misogyny in the world would also work wonders.

Ada Lovelace Day (one day late)

I missed getting an Ada Lovelace Day posting up yesterday because of all the rushing around. Here’s a very brief one.

Thanks to guesting on @Bristol52 this week I discovered that the first woman to graduate from medical school in the USA, Elizabeth Blackwell, was born in Bristol. Her Wikipedia bio is quite spectacular. As well as being a pioneer of women’s rights, she campaigned against slavery and against vivisection. She’s not such a great model as a woman scientist: having been brought up a devout Christian she was convinced that illness was a result of moral depravity, not bacteria, but I suspect that sort of view was common back then.

Does He Mean Us?

I spent much of yesterday in Bristol. I had some important shopping to do for BristolCon, and there were two events on in the evening that I wanted to attend.

First up we had a Q&A session at Waterstones with local writers: Gareth L. Powell, Jonathan L. Howard, Emma Newman and Tim Maughan. That went very well, so congratulations to Paul & Claire from BristolCon for organizing it.

After that I headed off to the Arnolfini for an evening of queer entertainment. I was a bit late due to one event starting immediately the other finished, so I missed most of the Oscar Wilde stuff, though I did get to see a performance of the famous interview scene from The Importance of Being Earnest. It was followed by a showing of the Quintin Crisp film, Resident Alien, which was fascinating.

One thing I learned from it is that Sting’s song, “An Englishman in New York”, was written about Crisp. It works even better when you know that.

But what stuck with me most from the film was when Crisp made a comment about why he left England. He said something like this: “They don’t like effeminate men in England, but then they don’t like effeminate women much either.”

Of course Crisp’s reputation was built in a large part on making outrageous statements for which he didn’t really need proof, but it did get me thinking about women that England has taken a liking to. There’s people like Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Margaret Thatcher and Twiggy, none of whom are particularly femme. Princess Diana is an obvious exception, but both she and Felicity Kendall have a girlish innocence to them. Possibly it is OK to be feminine as long as you are not sexy. I suspect that sportswomen such as Jessica Ennis and Laura Robson will get pilloried by the tabloids if they glam up when not in competition. And I also think that Clare Balding will always be more popular than Gabby Logan; Delia Smith more so than Nigella Lawson; and that this won’t be entirely to do with their abilities at their jobs.

Of course I have no more evidence for this than Crisp, and its entirely likely that other countries are just as bad, but it seemed worth an idle conversation weekend post.

What I’m Sick Of

I’ve pretty much given up on pointing you folks at online petitions about trans people because most of them only attract a few hundred signatures and are easily ignored by those they are aimed at. This one, however, has serious traction, thanks to it being backed by the stars of the My Transsexual Summer series.

The purpose of the petition is to encourage the World Heath Organisation to remove transsexualism from its list of mental illnesses. The WHO moves very slowly. It wasn’t until 1990 that they removed homosexuality from the same list. Another revision is due, and it is time that the WHO caught up with current medical thinking. Medical professionals working in the field of trans health called for de-psychopathologisation (lovely word) more than two years ago. The EU has petitioned the WHO to make the change. Hopefully, with a few more kicks up the backside, the WHO will move on this. You can help.

Some of you may have seen rumblings of discontent in trans communities that this change will somehow cause trans people to be denied treatment. It won’t. Or at least compared to the usual tabloid scare stories about waste of public money it will be a very minor issue. No one is saying that trans people don’t sometimes need medical procedures. What they are saying is that trans people are not crazy.

For those people who do have surgery, not much post-op treatment is required. However, trans women like me do need a regular supply of estrogen to prevent them developing osteoporosis. It’s very cheap. In fact I believe that the NHS makes a profit on prescribing it. But because successive GPs have insisted that I’m mentally ill, even long after a successful transition, I still have to spend a lot of money each year on visiting a private specialist to be declared sane before I’m allowed my prescription. I am sick of this. The main thing that causes trans people mental health problems is other people’s attitudes towards us. I’d like that to stop. Starting with the WHO.

Update: Here’s the excellent Monica Roberts with more on the background to the depsychopathologisation campaign.

TMW Conference Report

I spent most of today at a London conference organized by Trans Media Watch. It proved to be very useful for a number of reasons, and also quite interesting. Here are a few highlights.

The first panel got a bit derailed when Sky, the young person from the National Union of Students, mentioned gender-neutral toilets. Let me explain why this is a potentially contentious issue. I’m very much in favor of gender-neutral toilets being provided as a third option for people who don’t identify as either male or female for whatever reason, or who lack the confidence to use bathrooms provided for their preferred gender. I’m also mostly happy with gender-neutral toilets being the only option in most cases (as indeed is commonly the case in cafes, trains, aircraft and private homes), though I appreciate the need for women-only spaces as places of refuge in venues such as pubs and clubs where drunk men may behave badly. Where it gets problematic is if the provision of gender-neutral toilets suddenly results in all trans people being told that they must use them, even if, like Roz and myself, we’ve been happily using the bathrooms provided for our preferred gender for decades. I spoke to Sky during the coffee break, and they assured me that there was no intention of forcing anyone to use gender-neutral toilets against their wishes. In those circumstances I have no objection to people continuing to press for their provision.

The second panel was about the situation in Europe. I was delighted to see delegates present from Germany, Switzerland and Italy (and possibly a few other countries as well), alongside the usual crowd from Britain and Ireland. Thanks in particular to Alecs from TGEU for providing suggestions as to how I might contact trans activists in Ukraine so that I can make an informed decision regarding whether to attend next year’s Eurocon.

Finally we had a panel on regulation of the media featuring lawyer-journalist David Allen Green and Guy Parker of the Advertising Standards Authority. Generally speaking it is very hard to regulate the media, especially if you wish to maintain freedom of speech, and given the ease of publication afforded by the Internet. However, I suggested to the panel that a useful option might be to make newspapers responsible for the content of comment threads on their websites. To my delight, David agreed with me. Personally I think that one of the most useful things that the Leveson Inquiry could do is make the likes of the Daily Malice moderate their comments for hate speech, because that would mean they would no longer have a reason to post “news” that is nothing more than troll bait (for example this).

And Podcast

Well that was a great day out. And the folks at Ujima are very quick getting their podcasts online. You can find my main appearance here. I start about 15 minutes in. And when Paulette discovered that I publish ebooks she asked me back for a brief segment in her second hour, starting around 35 minutes in to this recording. I think I did OK, though I really must remember to mention bi people more often.

What really got me excited about the day, however, is that Ujima has launched a project called Sounds Reads. It is backed by the Lottery and Bristol Libraries, it is a project to encourage reading amongst immigrant communities in the city. There will, of course, be a particular emphasis on young people. Some of you are going to get emails from me about this. There’s a short segment starting 17 minutes into the second show with three guys talking about the problem of getting boys to read. (And some slightly dubious stuff about gender that I’ll talk to Pauline about later.)

Friends and Phobias

As many of you will know, Neil Gaiman and I have been friends for a long time. We first met in 1984, when I was still living as male. Neil is also a long-time friend of Roz Kaveney. You may therefore be somewhat surprised to learn that he’s often accused of transphobia. So often, in fact, that he had felt the need to address the issue in public.

There are many reasons why this happens. Partly it is because Wanda in A Game of You encounters a lot of transphobia in her story. There will always be readers who can’t tell the difference between a writer portraying discrimination by his characters and a writer who shares those characters’ beliefs. Also, Roz is a high profile trans activist, and as such she and her friends are always prone to being accused of transphobia by people who have a “one true way” attitude to their activism. Heck, there are probably people out there who think I’m transphobic. I have certainly been told that I’m Doing Trans WRONG!

So I want to spend a little bit of time looking at what real transphobia is like. Last week, on the same day that Neil wrote that Tumblr post, the Scottish Transgender Alliance released this report (PDF) which looks at the mental health of trans people in the UK. I was one of the respondents to the survey, and I’ve corresponded with one of the authors, Louis Bailey, as I had hoped to book him as a speaker for LGBT History Month last year.

When they say “mental health”, they don’t mean “these people are crazy because they are trans”, they mean the same thing that anyone would mean if they did a survey of the mental health of soldiers on active duty, of students sitting exams, or pretty much any group whom one might think has a stressful life. Let’s take a look at some of the results.

70% of the participants felt that transitioning had improved their lives for the better, while only 2% felt that it had made things worse. Satisfaction rates with various types of medical treatment, including hormones and gender surgery, were even higher; all over 85%, with the numbers dissatisfied always below 4%. Nevertheless, 81% avoided certain social situations out of fear of the consequences; 37% had experienced threats of or actual violence; 25% had been forced to move away from home. 14% had been harassed by the police simply for being trans.

88% of respondents reported suffering from depression at some point in their lives. 53% reported that they had self-harmed. 84% had considered suicide at least once. 35% had attempted suicide; 11% in the past year.

A government paper on suicide prevention published today dismissed trans people as a significant problem area, noting only that there are “indications” that there “may” be higher rates of suicide amongst that group.

Professional help for trans people is patchy at best. 62% of those who had attended NHS gender clinics reported some negative experiences from doing so. 11% felt that attending the clinic had been a negative experience overall, while 33% said they were afraid to discuss mental health issues with the clinic. 30% had experienced a healthcare professional refuse them treatment for trans-related issues. Over 50% were told by a health professional that treatment could not be provided because the professional did not know enough about trans issues. Can you imagine any other condition where GPs would refuse treatment rather than educate themselves or refer to a specialist because the condition was unfamiliar to them?

20% of respondents reported wanting to self-harm as a direct result of their treatment at the hands of the health services.

I could go on, but I’ll end the numbers by looking at responses to the question, “How supportive have the following been?” The percentages in “Very supportive” for key groups are as follows: parents 28%; extended family 17%; religious community 5%; non-trans friends 43%; trans friends 71%. Most trans people, of course, don’t have that many trans friends, so you can see why non-trans friends are so important. That’s why I very much value people like Neil, Kim Newman, Marc Gascoigne, Dave Langford, Martin Hoare and everyone else who was a friend before my transition, and has stuck by me though it.

Of course supportive friends can turn into supportive parents. After Neil published his Tumblr post his elder daughter, Holly, posted this about her life partner. I don’t know Holly at all — I’m not sure if we have even met — but I wish her and her partner all the best for their relationship. Sadly, they will need lots of love and support.

While I was at the Miéville conference on Friday I was scanning Twitter for reactions from my fellow attendees and another Scottish Trans Alliance tweet caught my attention. It was a report of the death, by liver failure resulting from a paracetamol overdose, of Natasha Lauren Brown, a student at Staffordshire University. She was 20 years old. According to this report Brown “began a downward spiral after she was taunted and beaten.” Her parents are quoted as saying, “We’d just like to say we strongly believe the mental health services could have done more to help her than they did.”

Brown’s name won’t be included in the memorials at this year’s Transgender Day of Remembrance because that is only for people whose lives are actively cut short by the violence of others. If we included all of the suicides, all of the people who died from issues related to poverty, homelessness and desperation, then the numbers memorialized would be significantly higher.

And that, dear readers, is what transphobia is all about. It is not a matter of authors failing to make trans characters sufficiently heroic, or about being trans in the “wrong” way. It is about being abandoned by friends and family; about institutional discrimination, even by those whose job it is to help you; it is about being bullied, beaten and killed. Until those things stop, we should be grateful for all of the support that we get.

Shout Out Podcasts Live

Mary the Producer must have been working very hard yesterday, because all of the podcasts from Saturday’s marathon at the Shout Out Bristol radio show are now live. I am in both hours of the “Out and About” show. I’m about 40 minutes into the first hour, and 25 minutes into the second. I’ve just listened to the first one and it sounded OK (much relief). It has plugs for Patrick Ness, Melissa Scott, Lethe Press, Aqueduct Press and BristolCon. And you get to find out which song I chose.

There’s also a lot of other good material. I want to listen to the “God Loves Gays” show. Also my friend Dru Marland was on earlier in the day, though I’m not sure when. And of course I want to listen to Natalie’s show which is all about getting dolled up for a party. The poor girl had to spend hours in a beauty salon “for research”.

A Grand Day Out

I spent most of the day in Bristol. After a little book shopping (so, Tad, you have a new novel…) I turned up for the first half of the BristolCon meeting where much good stuff was plotted. Then I headed out for the Bristol Community Radio studios for my appearance on Shout Out.

I had two slots on The 16:00-18:00 show. During the first I got to talk about SF, including plugs for Wizard’s Tower, Lethe Press and BristolCon. In the second I teamed up with Jess from Bi Visible Bristol and Peter from Off the Record (a support service for LGBT youth) to talk about how different parts of the community experience being out.

The show should be available as a podcast in a few days time via this page.

Book Review – Beyond Binary

I’m almost caught up on book reviews now. The latest one is for Brit Mandelo’s anthology, Beyond Binary, which is a book that I probably had unrealistically high hopes for, and which nevertheless managed to provide a lot of stories that I liked a lot. It is certainly a book that I’m proud to have in the store. You can read the review here.

Motherhood and Trans: A Strange Parallel

I was listening to the new Galactic Suburbia podcast this morning and heard Tansy enthusing about a story called “Foundlings” by Diana Peterfreund. It is an SF tale about a future in which teens who get pregnant are disappeared by society. That’s not really SF, of course, it is exactly what often happened to unmarried women who got pregnant for much of the 20th Century. Their children were put up for adoption, and they were consigned to lunatic asylums, sometimes for life. But that isn’t what Tansy was talking about.

As a relatively recent mother, Tansy is only too well aware of how much pressure is put on pregnant women by the media. “You must do these exercises, you must eat these foods, otherwise your baby will be damaged and it will be ALL YOUR FAULT!” This isn’t by any means new. And it doesn’t stop once you have given birth. There are plenty of people queuing up to explain to you why you are a Bad Mother for failing to follow the latest child rearing fad. And most of the people who do this policing are other women. They would know, right?

Then it hit me that this is exactly what happens with trans women. As soon as you start to transition you get besieged by people eager to tell you that you are Doing It Wrong. And many of those people who get on your case are other trans women.

The explanation is the same in both cases. If something the women do is being heavily policed, people become so desperate for approval that they are only too willing to assist the process by dumping on anyone that doesn’t do that activity the same way that they do.

So: sisterhood. It is OK to be different. Enough with the policing of behavior.

ReaderCon Discussions on Podcasts

The Readercon sexual harassment debacle has been discussed on a couple of podcasts recently. Gary and Jonathan had Genevieve Valentine as a guest on Coode Street at the weekend, and a good part of the episode was given over to the Readercon issue. I thought it went very well. Kudos to a couple of old, white, cis, straight males. 😉

The latest episode of the SF Signal podcast also discussed the issue. The ladies on the podcast did a good job of explaining the issue, including mention of a truly awful story from a previous World Fantasy that Jeff VanderMeer rightly jumps all over here. However, I do with that Patrick Hester had done some research before the show. And I also wish that they’d had someone on who was more closely involved in running conventions. While I’m very keen to see conventions adopt good anti-harassment policies, I’m staring to lean more towards the view that the smart thing to do is to get out of con-running.

More Podcasting

Today I caught up with the latest episode of The Writer and The Critic (with special guest Jonathan Strahan). Again I’m late. My excuse is that the darn thing is well over 2 hours long. Fortunately you don’t have to listen to all of it. The first half hour is given over to discussion of some sort of Internet blow-up that appears to have resulted from people misinterpreted something I wrote in a blog post. You don’t need to listen to that. Then there’s some discussion of Galveston by Sean Stewart (which I didn’t like much when I read it, but should probably revisit if only I had the time), and Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor, which I definitely want to read. Most of the last hour is given over to discussion of The Drowning Girl by Caitlín R. Kiernan, and quite right too. In my not-so-humble opinion it is best book I have read thus far this year.

Of course that is only my opinion, and while I do think I am a reasonably good judge of literary quality, I recognize that people don’t always judge a book by the same standards that I use. Lots of people absolutely loathe books with unreliable narrators, or books that they can’t neatly pigeonhole into one genre or another. There is some discussion of this in the podcast.

One issue that Kirstyn raises is that works by women writers that contain some autobiographical elements are often dismissed out of hand because of that, whereas works by men that are similarly autobiographical are widely praised. She cites the furor that greeted Cat Valente’s story, “Thirteen Ways of Looking at Space/Time”, as an example. Mondy, because one of his functions on the podcast is to play the clueless, sexist male, asked for examples of stories by men getting praise, and Kirstyn provided a few, but what immediately sprang into my mind is the fact that the archetypal plot for a LitFic novel is that of a middle-aged literature professor with an unhappy marriage who has an affair with a student. I suspect that a lot of those are either autobiographical or wish-fulfillment. And of course the reason this happens is that for far too many people the course of men’s lives is a matter of supreme importance, whereas the course of women’s lives is irrelevant. Give the sort of social structures we’ve had in recent history, it is hardly surprising that people think that way.

Discussion of how others might see the book moved inevitably on to discussion of its chances in awards. Mondy, bless him, is still hung up on the daft notion that if a book is really good then it should win all the awards. If that was the case there would be no point in having multiple awards. I can’t see The Drowning Girl appearing on the Hugo or Nebula ballot, though I’ll be voting for it in the Hugos. Those awards simply don’t favor this sort of book. I do expect it to appear on the Shirley Jackson Award ballot, as it is very much their sort of thing. It has been suggested to the Tiptree jury, but I think they are far more likely to go for something like Beyond Binary or 2312 where gender is more central to the book. As for World Fantasy, I’d love to see it there, but juries can be capricious. It won’t win the popular vote, and one of the three jury slots will doubtless be taken by Graham Joyce’s Some Kind of Fairy Tale. I’ll keep my fingers crossed, but I’m bearing in mind that Deathless didn’t make this year’s ballot, which is a travesty if ever there was one.

Finally I’d like to address Jonathan Strahan’s comments about the trans elements of the book. Jonathan says he’d like to see more work discussing why trans people do what they do, because he and other cis people find it so very hard to understand. Now Jonathan is a good friend, so I know he’s approaching this with the best of intentions, but what trans people tend to hear when faced with requests like that is, “I think you are crazy, I demand that you justify yourself”, which is one reason why we don’t write about it much.

Another reason is that there’s not a lot to say. Jay Lake did a great blog post a few years back in which he asked cis people to justify their gender (without reference to their biology). It’s not easy. You just are who you are. A good illustration of the issue comes up in a recent BBC radio show on philosophy. The program focuses on a well known philosophical problem known as “Theseus’ Ship”. The idea is that Theseus has a ship which is so old, and has been repaired so often, that not one of the original timbers remains: is it the same ship?

One of the guests on the program is my friend Cathy Butler (whom I’m sure Jonathan knows as well). She’s a trans woman, and she makes the point that since her transition many people have told her that she has become a “different person”. Indeed, some people claim that the “person she used to be” is now “dead”. That’s an excuse that families often use for ostracizing trans relatives. But, Cathy says, as far as she’s concerned, she’s still the same person. I’d go further than that. For many trans people, post-transition we are still exactly the same person, with the exception that we no longer have to be habitual liars. Surely that makes us better people?

So I’m not sure, Jonathan, that I can give you an explanation. I am who I am. So are Cathy and Caitlín and all of the other trans people you know. All we can do is ask you to accept that we are being honest about ourselves and accept that we feel the way we do, much as you might accept someone’s word if they say that they are color-blind, or can “feel” a phantom limb after an amputation, or any of the other odd things that our bodies and minds do to us.

Panel Parity at Finncon

Tero Ykspetäjä has run the numbers on panel participants at the recent Finncon. They look pretty good overall, close to 50:50. Drilling down, men were in a clear majority when the subject was science, but women had a clear majority on panels about writing SF. So for Helsinki next year we need more women scientists and more male writers. Volunteers?

Book Review – A Civil Campaign

I’ve managed to check on another of the books with trans characters that people keep recommending to me. And also, of course, I’ve looked at a series that people keep recommending to me. I can see why people love Bujold’s books so much. She’s very good at what she does. As to the trans character, well, no, but there is a good feminist point being made in a very clever way so I’m not going to complain. You can read the review here.

Further Thoughts on Harassment

The thread on anti-harassment policies is collecting some useful ideas. This post is not about that. It is about illustrating some of the complexities of the issue.

I’d like to start by addressing the idea, expressed in many posts on the subject, that people, specifically women, have the right to feel safe at conventions. I certainly support that, but at the same time I’m rather sanguine about it as a target because, to a certain extent, I stop feeling safe when I get outside my front door.

I say “to a certain extent” because as trans women go I am very lucky. I’m not pretty enough to have ever suffered from sexual harassment — I’m much more likely to be told I shouldn’t be allowed out without a paper bag over my head (and indeed have had comments of that type from men) — but at the same time I’m not often followed down the street by people yelling “freak” and “weirdo” at me, though it has happened. I’ve never had any trouble using public bathrooms, or changing rooms in clothes stores. I do tend to avoid places like pubs unless I’m with friends, which is true for many cis women as well. But I do have specific events that make me nervous.

Ironically the worst types of events for me are public LGBT-focused events such as Pride days. That’s partly because people tend to go to them hoping to find some freaks to abuse, and partly because people seem to think that Pride is an excuse to ask people all sorts of intrusive questions about their private lives. Conventions, in general, are not a problem, but fear for my personal safety is the main reason why I have never attended the SFX Weekender.

As I noted in my previous post, there is a potential issue with RadFems. I didn’t stop going to WisCon over that. While there are (or at least used to be) people who attend the convention who hold such views, the WisCon committee generally gives them short shrift. If I had any qualms of that sort it was more along the lines of not wanting to be the person who was the cause of Great Drama at WisCon, even if things turned out in my favor.

A more pressing issue for me was potential trouble with trans activists. WisCon has many of those attending, and it became clear that some of them felt that I was Doing Trans Wrong. I had no particular desire to spend my convention being lectured by such people. Judging from what I have seen online, at least one person of that ilk now attends Eastercon, which is one of many reasons why I no longer go to that event.

Of course being lectured on one’s lack of gender correctness is a minor issue compared to sexual harassment or fear of being beaten up. The reason I bring it up is to illustrate that there are things that might make me uncomfortable at a convention, even to the extent of causing me to stop attending, that don’t amount to abuse and shouldn’t result in anyone being disciplined. If Kevin had been able to attend WisCon with me, rather than needing to be at BayCon that weekend, I may have kept attending as I would have had emotional support.

In a way this is a type of cultural issue. There was a prevailing culture at WisCon that made me feel uncomfortable. But even greater cultural issues can arise when you travel to non-Anglo countries.

Finncon, as you should be aware by now, has a sauna at the dead dog party. The Finns, as is traditional, do sauna naked. Most of them have been doing so with their families for years, and are very used to mixed gender naked sauna. For Finncon, because of the presence of foreign guests, a slightly different pattern has been adopted. There is a women-only sauna, followed by a men-only sauna, followed by an open period when anyone can go in. This allows foreigners to enjoy the naked sauna experience without being exposed to mixed-gender groups.

This year one of the Finnish men managed to miss the instructions and joined in the women-only sauna. Most of us were in the lake swimming when he arrived. I wasn’t, because I would have been bitten to death by mosquitoes had I gone outside, so I saw him walk in. He looked harmless to me, so what I did was wait in the ante-room for the others to come back and let them know what was going on. No one had any objections, so we got on with the sauna.

I want to stress that there was no question of any voyeuristic intent on behalf of the interloper. He sat there and chatted amiably with us, then went on his way. Most of the women involved were Finns and unfazed. Liz Williams is a practicing druid and probably used to mixed-gender nakedness elsewhere. And speaking for myself I’m just hugely grateful that I’m allowed in, rather than have someone complain that I’m “really a man” and should be excluded from the women’s sauna.

Sometime later Finncon staff had a quiet word with the interloper who was mortified at having made such a mistake. At the post-con debrief a new policy was adopted to make sure that, in addition to announcements at the event, notices would be posted on the sauna door making it clear who was allowed in and who wasn’t.

Of course it could have been very different. There might have been women involved who objected to a male presence, in which case I would have let my friend Karo quietly take care of the matter. She was head of convention security, after all, and she was right on the spot. And had it not been a mistake on the bloke’s part I have no doubt he would have been dealt with sternly.

So culture and intent play an important part on what can and can’t be done. The important part is that people should agree on what is acceptable behavior, and that those limits should be enforced. Where things go wrong is when one person engages in activities that others find threatening, and when that person is allowed to continue with their behavior despite clearly stated desires and rules to the contrary.

On Harassment Policies

While I’ve been away over the weekend there has been much chat online about an incident of sexual harassment at Readercon and how it has been handled by the convention. If you need to catch up on things there is an excellent links round-up available here. As someone who runs conventions, incidents like this are of interest to me because I want to know how we can do better in future, hence this post.

Before I say anything else I should note that I am not coming to this incident neutral, because the perp in question is well known to me. I have worked quite a bit with René Walling in the past, but more importantly he was one of the people who had me thrown off the Hugo Award Marketing Committee. I have a great deal of respect for the work he has done, and I know he has helped Kevin out a lot, but I am deeply unimpressed with some of his behavior.

That caveat aside, here are a couple of headline thoughts.

Firstly, if your convention policy says that a certain type of behavior will result in a lifetime ban, then it should result in a lifetime ban. Not a two year ban. Not a ten year ban that gets rescinded for good behavior after a few years. A lifetime ban. As Farah noted, it doesn’t matter if the person in question is a friend, or is well respected in the community or is a “nice person”. On the latest Coode Street podcast Gary Wolfe talks about having to deal with a very high profile author who had been pestering young women. Policy is policy, no matter who breaks it.

Having said that, as various people have noted, if the only choices that your policy gives you are a lifetime ban or letting the perp off without punishment, then you have backed yourself into a corner with no room to maneuver. Draconian punishments inevitably result in a tendency to let people off if there is any doubt at all that they deserve such treatment. Also, given the way that convention staffs change with time, I suspect that a “lifetime ban” would be highly likely to be rescinded if the person involved really wanted to get back. If you can’t, or don’t always want to, enforce a lifetime ban, don’t have it as your only disciplinary option.

These things, I am sure, have been said in very many blog posts about the incident, but what I want to concentrate on is how we can do this better. What should a convention anti-harassment policy look like? How should we punish unacceptable behavior if the convention is a one-off? Can we put measures in place that enable us to crack down on bad behavior at the con before things get out of hand?

Let’s start with a few objectives:

  1. We want all attendees to feel and be safe at conventions.
  2. We want a policy that is seen to be fair.
  3. We want a policy that can be implemented easily and effectively.
  4. We need to be aware that there will always be exceptions to simple rules.

That last point is important. René’s case appears to be cut and dried in that there were repeated offenses with plenty of witnesses and he admitted his guilt. Other cases may not be so simple. And there will be outliers. As a bizarre but entirely plausible example, what happens if you have both hard-line Radical Feminists and trans women at your convention? As far as some RadFems are concerned, the mere existence of trans women is an act of sexual violence against them. If they encountered one in a women’s bathroom at a convention I’m pretty sure an official complaint would result, regardless of how the trans woman behaved.

Some degree of flexibility in the policy is doubtless a good thing, but at the same time it has to be administered fairly, not used as an excuse for favoritism. Much of the problem with Readercon is due to the fact that their policy said one thing and they did something different. If people think that the policy is being applied unfairly then they will not feel safe.

In addition you have to be able to implement the policy. There’s no point in making the lifting of a ban dependent on good behavior if you have no means of checking on how a person behaves in between conventions. And it would be unwise to promise 24-hour rapid response to incidents if you don’t expect to have enough staff to provide such a service.

In the spirit of the “If I Ran The Zoo” Worldcon training game I have a few scenarios I’d like to throw out for consideration, but as they are all based on real events I’ll need to ask permission first. In the meantime I would appreciate your thoughts on what a good convention anti-harassment policy should look like. Please try not to derail discussion by getting into specifics about the rights and wrongs of what Readercon as done, or trying to understand RadFem theory.

LGBT Rights Jumps The Shark

Today was Bristol Pride, so lots of people were in the city doing their best to celebrate despite the persistent drizzle. It was colorful, and it was loud. I was there helping out on the Out Stories Bristol Stall (which went about as well as my attempts to help out on convention stalls, you’d think I would learn by now). But there were some other people in town as well: about 300 members of the English Defence League. They were, they told us, marching in support of LGBT rights.

Wait, what did she say?

Yes, the EDL, were marching in support of LGBT rights. You see, they have got it into their heads that Muslims are horribly homophobic, and that therefore LGBT people and racists should be natural allies. There are, of course, some Muslims who are homophobic. There are also some Christians who are homophobic, as you might have noticed unless you have been living in a cave on Mars for most of your life. There are Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist and Pagan people who are homophobes too. That, however, doesn’t enter into the EDL’s calculations. After all, hating Muslims is what they do best, and they think that we should too. Apparently they even found a trans woman to give a speech at their event. Doubtless hordes of foreigners are coming to England and stealing our hormones. Well, their hormones anyway. Being Welsh, I’m one of the horde of foreigners.

Its a bizarre situation, and one that seems mainly laughable. But it does remind me that, just like everything else in politics, human rights issues can be co-opted by the devious and cynical. That’s one of the reasons why, these days, whenever I see mass outrage online I always try to read around the issue and find out what is really going on.

Medea – Not Guilty?

When I was a kid I spent a lot of time reading mythology. Of course I was very interested to find female characters with whom I could identify. I was never very fond of Atalanta. She seemed much too sporty, and probably a lesbian, which wasn’t my style at all. Medea, on the other hand, seemed rather cool. She was cunning like Odysseus, and she became a key part of Team Argo. Then it all fell apart. That toad Jason decided to dump her for the Corinthian princess, Glauce, and while Medea did get her revenge, she also killed the children she had with Jason. That final bit seemed terribly out of character to me at the time, and listening to Galactic Suburbia this morning I was reminded that it is by no means the only ending for the myth.

The child murder is best known from the play, Medea, by Euripides. Prior versions of the myth have the kids killed by the people of Corinth after Medea is exiled so that they won’t be rivals to Glauce’s children. I’m reminded from this post about the play that Robert Graves claimed Euripides was bribed by the Corinthians to alter the story so that their ancestors didn’t look bad. If that’s true, it is a very early, and very successful example, of political spin, because the charge has stuck and been repeated by many writers down the centuries.

I note in passing that while it was perfectly OK, even honorable, for Menelaus to declare war on Troy because Helen dumped him for Paris, therefore causing the deaths of huge numbers of people, the fact that Medea killed Glauce is seen as evidence of her villainy.

Of course there’s the whole Absyrtus thing as well, which is quite a different matter. There doesn’t appear to be any excuse for that, though again the murder doesn’t happen in all versions of the myth. Violent lot, those ancient Greeks.

Food For Thought #IBW12

I’ve been busily adding Aqueduct Press books to the store, and here are a few pieces on non-fiction that I’d like to draw your attention to.

Imagination/Space is a collection of essays and talks from Gwyneth Jones. The topics include Fiction, Feminism, Technology and Politics. Needless to say, Gwyneth is very sharp on all of those issues. The book has enthusiastic reviews from Gary K. Wolfe and Farah Mendlesohn. I don’t need to add to that.

Next up is The Secret Feminist Cabal, Helen Merrick’s cultural history of feminist science fiction. The book was a Hugo nominee, won a Ditmar, and was on the Tiptree honor list. It is a must read book for anyone interested in the intersections of feminism, science fiction and fandom.

We Wuz Pushed is a shorter work in the Conversation Pieces series of chapbooks. Written by Brit Mandelo, it is based on her PhD thesis and is an extensive study of the work of Joanna Russ.

Finally there’s another Conversation Pieces book, Writing the Other. Written by Nisi Shawl and Cynthia Ward, it is a guide for authors wishing to write books containing characters from outside of their own culture.

These are all great (and in some cases famous) books. I’m delighted to have them in stock.