Tuvel’s peers are busily wrecking her reputation
Jesse Singal has written a blast against the public trashing of Rebecca Tuvel’s article.
In late March, Hypatia, a feminist-philosophy journal, published an article titled “In Defense of Transracialism” by Rebecca Tuvel, an assistant professor of philosophy at Rhodes College in Memphis, as part of its spring 2017 issue. The point of the article, as the title suggests, is to toy around with the question of what it would mean if some people really were — as Rachel Dolezal claimed — “transracial,” meaning they identified as a race that didn’t line up with how society viewed them in light of their ancestry.
Tuvel structures her argument more or less as follows: (1) We accept the following premises about trans people and the rights and dignity to which they are entitled; (2) we also accept the following premises about identities and identity change in general; (3) therefore, the common arguments against transracialism fail, and we should accept that there’s little apparent logically coherent reason to deny the possibility of genuine transracialism.
Anyone who has read an academic philosophy paper will be familiar with this sort of argument. The goal, often, is to provoke a little — to probe what we think and why we think it, and to highlight logical inconsistencies that might help us better understand our values and thought processes. This sort of article is abstract and laden with hypotheticals — the idea is to pull up one level from the real world and force people to grapple with principles and claims on their own merits, rather than — in the case of Dolezal — baser instincts like disgust and outrage. This is what many philosophers do.
Fortunately for us, because it’s a good idea to probe what we think and why we think it and to highlight logical inconsistencies that might help us better understand our values and thought processes. One of the things I loathe most about the “SHUN HER NOW” school of non-thought is the way it forbids all that and insists that thinking has to be replaced with formulas and that the formulas have to be repeated exactly or dire punishment will follow. In short I loathe the banning of thought and probing and questions. I think I knew I couldn’t stay at FTB any longer when the goons started mocking me for daring to say it made a difference whether we were talking about ontology or politics. Fucking hell, if we can’t make distinctions as basic as that how can we think at all?
Tuvel is now bearing the brunt of a massive internet witch-hunt, abetted in part by Hypatia’s refusal to stand up for her. The journal has already apologized for the article, despite the fact that it was approved through its normal editorial process, and Tuvel’s peers are busily wrecking her reputation by sharing all sorts of false claims about the article that don’t bear the scrutiny of even a single close read.
The biggest vehicle of misinformation about Tuvel’s articles comes from the “open letter to Hypatia” that has done a great deal to help spark the controversy. That letter has racked up hundreds of signatories within the academic community — the top names listed are Elise Springer of Wesleyan University, Alexis Shotwell of Carleton University (who is listed as the point of contact), Dilek Huseyinzadegan of Emory University, Lori Gruen of Wesleyan, and Shannon Winnubst of Ohio State University.
It’s shocking. What the open letter people are doing is shocking.
Singal goes through the open letter and lists the many mistakes and false claims in it. I recommend reading the whole thing.
All in all, it’s remarkable how many basic facts this letter gets wrong about Tuvel’s paper. Either the authors simply lied about the article’s contents, or they didn’t read it at all. Every single one of the hundreds of signatories on the open letter now has their name on a document that severely (and arguably maliciously) mischaracterizes the work of one of their colleagues. This is not the sort of thing that usually happens in academia — it’s a really strange, disturbing instance of mass groupthink, perhaps fueled by the dynamics of online shaming and piling-on.
Others within academia criticized Tuvel’s article in misleading ways as well. In his article, Weinberg highlights a popular public Facebook post by Nora Berenstain, a philosophy professor at the University of Tennessee, that has since been taken down but which read as follows (I’m introducing numbers to take the new points on one by one):
(1) Tuvel enacts violence and perpetuates harm in numerous ways throughout her essay. She deadnames a trans woman. She uses the term “transgenderism.” (2) She talks about “biological sex” and uses phrases like “male genitalia.” (3) She focuses enormously on surgery, which promotes the objectification of trans bodies. (4) She refers to “a male-to- female (mtf) trans individual who could return to male privilege,” promoting the harmful transmisogynistic ideology that trans women have (at some point had) male privilege.
I read Berenstein’s post yesterday, more than once. I find it skin-crawling. It’s still readable on Google’s cache. Singal notes a fraction of what’s wrong with her post too, and then comments:
I could go on and on. This is a witch hunt. There has simply been an explosive amount of misinformation circulating online about what is and isn’t in Tuvel’s article, which few of her most vociferous critics appear to have even skimmed, based on their inability to accurately describe its contents. Because the right has seized on Rachel Dolezal as a target of gleeful ridicule, and as a means of making opportunistic arguments against the reality of the trans identity, a bunch of academics who really should know better are attributing to Tuvel arguments she never made, simply because she connected those two subjects in an academic article.
But it’s quite clear from her own words Tuvel doesn’t believe it’s an apt comparison to make Breitbart-y arguments about Dolezal and trans people. Here’s what she says in her very first endnote: “Importantly, I am not suggesting that race and sex are equivalent. Rather, I intend to show that similar arguments that support transgenderism support transracialism. My thesis relies in no way upon the claim that race and sex are equivalent, or historically constructed in exactly the same way.” She is making a very specific, narrow argument about identity in an academic philosophy setting, all while noting, every step of the way, that she believes trans people are who they say they are, and that they should be entitled to the full rights and recognition of their identity. This pile-on isn’t even close to warranted.
So why are they doing it? Because it’s so much fun? Because they’re fanatics? Because they’re afraid? I don’t know. I don’t get it. I never have. The venom directed at me was out of proportion too, and I never got that either.
(It started with Dolezal in my case too.)
Unfortunately, Hypatia simply surrendered to this sustained misinformation campaign. On April 30, one of the journal’s editors, Cressida Hayes, posted a lengthy apology to Facebook, later posted to the journal’s Facebook page as well, from “the members of Hypatia’s Board of Associate Editors.” Among other things, the apology notes that “[i]t is our position that the harms that have ensued from the publication of this article could and should have been prevented by a more effective review process.” Like the critiques themselves, the apology deeply misreads and misinterprets the original article: “Perhaps most fundamentally,” write the editors, “to compare ethically the lived experience of trans people (from a distinctly external perspective) primarily to a single example of a white person claiming to have adopted a black identity creates an equivalency that fails to recognize the history of racial appropriation, while also associating trans people with racial appropriation.” At no point in Tuvel’s article does she come close to doing anything like this. Rather, the entire premise of the article is to examine what genuine instances of deeply felt transracialism would tell us about identity and identity change in light of the progressive view of trans rights. Early on, she even effectively sets Dolezal aside, writing that she isn’t particularly interested in what Dolezal really feels, since that’s unknowable, but is rather interested in dissecting some of the underlying issues about identity in a more hypothetical way — “My concern in this article is less with the veracity of Dolezal’s claims,” she writes, “and more with the arguments for and against transracialism.”
They’re interesting. Some people are interested in such things. It shouldn’t be treated as a crime.
It is pretty remarkable for an academic journal to, in the wake of an online uproar, apologize and suggest one of its articles caused “harm,” all while failing to push back against brazenly inaccurate misreadings of that article — especially in light of the fact that Tuvel said in a statement (readable at the bottom of the Daily Nous article) that she’s dealing with a wave of online abuse and hate mail.
Some other academics have already reacted angrily to the extent to which Hypatia rolled over in the wake of this outrage-storm. On his Leiter Reports philosophy blog, for example, Brian Leiter, a philosophy professor, writes
…what you already know he writes, because I posted about it yesterday.
[W]hat’s disturbing here is how many hundreds of academics signed onto and helped spread utterly false claims about one of their colleagues, and the extent to which Hypatia, faced with such outrage, didn’t even bother trying to sift legitimate critiques from frankly made-up ones. A huge number of people who haven’t read Tuvel’s article now believe, on the basis of that trumped-up open letter and unfounded claims of “violence,” that it is so deeply transphobic it warranted an unusual apology from the journal that published it.
We should want academics to write about complicated, difficult, hot-button issues, including identity. Online pile-ons cannot, however righteous they feel, dictate journals’ publication policies and how they treat their authors and articles. It’s really disturbing to watch this sort of thing unfold in real time — there’s such a stark disconnect between what Tuvel wrote and what she is purported to have written. This whole episode should worry anybody who cares about academia’s ability to engage in difficult issues at a time when outrage can spread faster than ever before.
I second that.
That’s my school Shotwell is at (but in Soc & Anthro, not Phil). I heard her speak a year or so back; I was not impressed. I don’t claim to understand more than half of what she said, but what I did understand seemed either obvious or wrong. But what do I know? I’m just a retired engineer and a mere philosophy undergrad.
Is this a hopelessly stupid question? If someone’s being “transracial” is such an obvious absurdity, what is the argument? How is it different from being trans? I hear all the time that it’s different, but I’m not at all clear on the reasoning. It isn’t obvious to me.
Because outrage and self-righteousness are infectious, and because going along with the crowd is the obvious easy path in comparison to thinking for yourself, even for those who have tried all their lives to cultivate the habit of doing otherwise.
Individually, either of those factors are dangerously seductive, and most of us have probably fallen for them at one time or another. Together, they’re dynamite.
@ #2 Ben:
I can’t resist pointing to my own guest post here at B&W from last year when I asked the same questions. I have to admit I was afraid to post what I wrote, even from this anonymous account — that’s how deep the fear goes that the outrage mob will get to me somehow.
http://www.butterfliesandwheels.org/2016/guest-post-when-you-take-some-of-the-arguments-about-race-and-reword-them-for-gender/
(I don’t work in academia but I do work in a Bobo-lefty nonprofit-y environment — which is generally great, so long as I avoid the topics of science, vaccinations, homeopathy, feminism, GMO crops & radical trans activism. Touch those rails and you might as well be really electrocuted; it’ll send shockwaves through your life that are just as devastating.)
Because it’s easier to feel offence than to explain.
One thing about Hypatia’s apology on FB – and apologies if this has been pointed out before. It’s signed by “A Majority of the Hypatia’s Board of Associated Editors”; I’m dying to know more about what’s going on behind the scenes with that. What about the remainder of the board?
@ #5 Enzyme
No doubt there will be fallout-to-the-fallout and at least one person on the Board will speak out. (Or at least I hope so — not because I enjoy all this Internet drama but bc I hope at least one person on a respected feminist philosophy pub’s board has some independent spirit.)
Yes, I’d love to know that too.
Considering there is a much larger percentage of mixed race people than there are intersex folks, and most of us have DNA from multiple ‘races’, the idea of transracial seems like it should be easily accepted.
However, once you ask ‘what makes a person transracial’, and the answer given is ‘because they FEEL that way’, and that implies Asian brains are different than Caucasian brains and both are different than African brains, etc. so that is why a person can ‘feel’ like they are a different race than they are genetically.
Or, alternatively, it could mean that each race has stereotypic behaviors, interests, etc, which define what it means to ‘feel’ like that race.
Or maybe it’s clothing preference.
I cannot see how transracial is any more or less problematic than transgender.
‘This is not the sort of thing that usually happens in academia’
Really? As so much of the ‘progressive’ community retreats into comical ineffectuality, it seems absolutely normal. Think how much safer and and less oppressed the actual, real-life, transfolks are feeling today with all this heroic ‘support.’
One of the things I loathe most about the “SHUN HER NOW” school of non-thought is the way it forbids all that and insists that thinking has to be replaced with formulas and that the formulas have to be repeated exactly or dire punishment will follow. In short I loathe the banning of thought and probing and questions.
How right you are. However, would you react with the same magnanimity to people and viewpoints with whom/which you vehemently disagree? The ‘SHUN HER NOW’ school of non-thought now dominates everywhere. be it Middlebury College or Brandeis.
It seems to me like a lot of people have lost any grip on the notion that the appropriateness of particular speech varies with the venue or forum.
If Tuvel had walked into a meeting of her university’s transgender student group and started musing on transracialism, that would be rude and offensive. But publishing an academic analysis in an academic journal is entirely appropriate; it’s what such journals are supposed to be for. The stuff Ophelia writes about transgenderism here would be inappropriate for some other blogs.
It reminds me of many of the kerfuffles over “New Atheists.” Critics were treating the act of writing a book or an op-ed column as the equivalent of barging into a church or into their grandma’s hospital room and smacking the Bible out of her hands. (It was always grandma, too, never grandpa — more sympathetic that way, I guess.)
This is why I hate seeing people sneer at the concept of “safe spaces.” It’s a good concept. We all have times where we don’t want to be confronted with certain views, or when we want to seek out only positive influences. It’s fine to set up a club, or a support group, or a website, and limit who gets to participate. The problem is when people want to extend that concept and demand that an entire campus, or branch of academia, or even the entire internet, be their safe space.
I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that the law of averages would suggest that there should be approximately as many transmen as transwomen. Given that, why do we hear so little from transmen on these issues? It always seems to be the transwomen doing all of the shouting and demanding.
Does anybody have any ideas why?
Screechy, what do you mean the stuff I write about transgenderism here would be inappropriate for some other blogs? I mean the “what do you mean” literally, not as a passive-aggressive “how dare you.” I can see how it would be unwelcome, unlikely, surprising, etc, but I’m not sure about “inappropriate.” Unless you just mean that institutional / professional blogs have particular subject matters and off-topic posts in general are inappropriate.
Acolyte – oh yes. Many people have any ideas why. It has to do with trans women having the experience of growing up male [however much they may have violated the norms of being male] and thus seeing women as people they get to bully and silence.
Ophelia,
I meant “inappropriate” as in “unwelcome” or “would not meet the objectives of the owners/editors.” Not a subject matter issue, but more of a viewpoint issue. Like, if there was a blog that was explicitly intended for trans people to write about the problems they face and receive supportive comments, they might not welcome some of the questions you like to raise.
Blogs were probably a bad example because posting privileges are typically limited anyway, so it’s a little awkward to speak of a blog post being inappropriate on a blog because the person who decides what’s appropriate is probably the person who posted it in the first place. (Though maybe it applies to group blogs or similar structures: I don’t expect that a “why Trump is the greatest president ever” post would be welcome at Daily Kos.) Blog comments, or discussion groups, would probably have been better examples.
*nods* That all makes sense.
And also just in general having been taught to be more assertive, stand up for themselves, etc. Those things are “not feminine” and so those of us who were raised women tend to have been raised to have those things beat (sometimes literally) out of us.
One argument against this is that many transwomen felt female from their earliest life; yes, that’s probably true, but if society viewed them as male, they were getting male-oriented messages. And if they were viewed as insufficiently male, they may actually have received more of those messages in an attempt to force them into a more “appropriate” role. Many transwomen deny that, but in reality, they probably wouldn’t have noticed it, any more than I noticed the way that my Algebra teacher beat down my taste for math by never calling on me, by mocking me, and by generally ignoring me (and all the other girls in the class). As I was learning years later that I was good in math, I was able to look back at that and see it from a distance, but only because I had been reading about these subtle messages. I was not aware of them while they were happening. (I was quite aware of the beatings, but didn’t really equate that so much to socialization as just to Mom being angry about something I saw as ridiculous to be angry about, for some reason I could not understand – Mom was like that a lot).
So, yes, socialized to male-stereotypic traits, even as denying that they were socialized to male-stereotypic traits.
By the way, in case any of you are concerned – my Algebra teacher has been thoroughly defeated and put to rest. I love math.
Ophelia, iknklast, that was pretty much my train of thought, too. Man must have control, even when man becomes woman, because that’s how they were raised. I suppose it would be fair to assume that the transwomen who weren’t subject to a lot of gender-reinforcement would tend not to be the ones making all the noise.
Well, you know, there’s also just the fact that they’re humans. We tend to think of all this as purely political (at least I do), but there are of course personality issues, psychological issues, manners issues. I suspect that the trans people – especially trans women – who make all the noise aren’t the more committed or impassioned political ones, but the shitty ones – the ones who are just shitty people, like Trump.
I think there’s a trap with lefty politics, where we equate passion and intensity to rightness – sort of “if you feel that strongly about it you must be onto something.”
Without that, frankly, I can’t figure out why and how trans politics got so horrible with such speed.
That would make the alt-right onto something. And the neo-Nazis (I realize there is a huge overlap in the Venn diagram of the two groups). And the MRAs, MGTOWS, Catholic bishops, anti-abortion activists – hey, why don’t we just make a rule that whoever has the most passion wins? I can show tons of passion about what I’m involved in, but I just don’t express it in shitstorms at random people on the Internet. Shall we have a “passion contest”? No, that would be stupid, and counter-productive, and I suspect people would get hurt.
I know. It’s stupid, but I think it’s a thing people do anyway.