Secondary Pathology: ‘Cisgender Fragility’ and the Pandemic Body Politic

Author:

Gamberton Lyman1

Affiliation:

1. SOAS University, London

Abstract

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has seen an international explosion of anti-transgender sentiment being elevated to the level of law. Legislatures from Idaho to Hungary have banned transgender student athletes from competing as their true genders; revoked existing protections for trans people; and mandated the addition of ‘sex assigned at birth’ to state-issued ID cards. This spike in anti-transgender laws would be alarming in any year, but carries extra force and urgency as the Coronavirus pandemic continues to unfold. The fact that so many different municipalities worldwide have used the opportunity of COVID-19 to enshrine anti-trans animus in law, or to propose its enforcement, or to prolong its effects, is not accidental. This raises the question of why now? I propose that transphobia and the concomitant championing of ‘traditional gender roles’ are intended to function not only as a distraction from mismanagement of pandemic responses, but as an attempt to create national cohesion by casting transgender people as subverters of the natural health and order of the body. Drawing both on the particular vulnerability of transgender people as a demographic in times of crisis, and on the critical concept of ‘cis fragility’, I argue that these anti-transgender policies function as attempts to reaffirm the ontological securitisation of the body politic.

Publisher

Edizioni Ca Foscari

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,Religious studies,Cultural Studies

Reference66 articles.

1. Adler-Nissen, Rebecca. (2014) “Stigma management in international relations: Transgressive identities, norms, and order in international society.” International Organization 68.1, 143-176.

2. Ako, Takamatsu, Harashina Takao, Yoshiharu Inoue et al. (2001) “Beginnings of sex reassignment surgery in Japan.” The International Journal of Transgenderism 5: 1

3. Aultman, B. Lee. (2019) “Injurious Acts: Notes on Happiness from the Trans Ordinary.” Writing From Below Special Issue: Happiness 4: 2

4. Barker, Meg-John. (2017) 2017 review: The transgender moral panic. www.rewriting-the-rules.com/gender/2017-review-transgender-moral-panic/ 

5. Browning, Christopher S. (2018b) “‘Je suis en terrace’: political violence, civilizational politics, and the everyday courage to be.” Political Psychology 39(2): 243–261

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1. Secondary Pathology: ‘Cisgender Fragility’ and the Pandemic Body Politic;Supplemento 59 | 2023 Fragile Selves;2023-12-01

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