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Alyosxa Tudor | at53@soas.ac.uk
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This is the Accepted Version of the article ‘Dimensions of Transnationalism’ published by Sage in
Feminist Review; Issue 117: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41305-017-0092-5
Accepted Version downloaded from SOAS Research Online:
http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/22468/
‘Dimensions of Transnationalism’ – Feminist Review 117
Alyosxa Tudor – Centre for Gender Studies, SOAS University of London
Abstract
This article identifies and analyses links between conceptualisations of trans-gender and
trans-national and aims for a critical redefinition of political agency. Through an examination of
theories on transing, passing and performativity in queer-, trans-, and transnational feminist
knowledge production and illustrated by discursive examples from transgender communities and
Romanian migrant communities, I call for a conceptualisation of entangled power relations that does
not rely on fixed, pre-established categories but defines subjectivity through risk in political struggle.
I suggest that ‘transing’ the nation and ‘transing’ gender could be thought as critical moves for
a radical deconstruction of gendered and national belonging. Rather than provide a static definition of
the term ‘transnationalism’, the article explores potentials and limits of going beyond ‘the national’ and
‘gender’ and intervenes in forms of minority nationalism that reproduce racism, sexism,
heteronormativity and gender binary as the norm of Western national belonging. In particular, building
on Jasbir Puar’s conceptualisation of homonationalism, the article shows how forms of nationalism in
Western transgender and migrant communities rely on a combination of heteronormative binary
gendering and the exertion of racism. While a conventionalised approach to transnationalism defines
the term as a political strategy based on transnational politics, I play with suggesting different
dimensions of transnationalism: it could mean ‘transgender nationalism’; the 'assimilation of
transgendered persons to the Western nation'; or 'cross-border-nationalism', a form of nationalism
often established in migrant communities that constructs the diaspora as a nationalist extension of the
homeland. My focus, therefore, is on analysing privilegings, contradictions and ambivalences in
gendering, racialising and nationalising ascriptions of (non)belonging.
Overall, and as an alternative to romanticised knowledge productions of crossing national and
gendered borders, I suggest a power-sensitive epistemological and methodological shift in thinking
entangled power relations, belonging and subjectivity in trans-national feminist knowledge productions.
Keywords: transfeminism, transgender, transnationalism, Romanian migrant communities, passing,
intersectionality
Alyosxa Tudor | at53@soas.ac.uk
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Dimensions of Transnationalism
Intro
This article explores what difference it would make to feminist political solidarity not only to
consider ‘transnationalism’ as a question of mobility across borders or a form of movement
and solidarity beyond nation states, but also as a term that names two forms of minority
nationalism (transgender nationalism and cross-border-nationalism) and exposes their
logics.
i
As I aim to show, ‘transnationalism’ could mean a 'political strategy based on
transnational politics', but moreover, building an analogous term to Jasbir Puar's
conceptualization of 'homonationalism' (2007), it could mean the assimilation of
transgendered persons to the nation. In a third level of meaning, 'transnationalism' could
refer to 'cross-border-nationalism' or 'diasporic nationalism' – a form of nationalism often
established in migrant communities that constructs the diaspora as nationalist extension of
the homeland. In both 'transgender nationalism' and 'cross-border-nationalism' the
reproduction of repro- and heteronormative binary gendering plays a crucial role in
consolidating fantasies and possibilities of national belonging.
My approach starts with a critical discussion of concepts of passing and being read.
Passing, in the definition I am advocating here, is making oneself readable as privileged from
a discriminated positioning. It is about provisionally undermining the perceptibility of
‘structural difference’ (Ahmed 1999b: 93). Being read is not the same as passing, but is part
of the complex of not/passing, and can lie transversal to the self-conception of one’s own
performance. Mis/Readings, therefore, rely on conventionalised, situated and contextual
habits of reading, seeing and perceiving.
Furthermore, I elaborate on the concept of transing. I define transing as a critical
move rooted in specific political movements. It means to go beyond a certain category; to
question a category; to deconstruct a category.
ii
If transing gender means going beyond
gender, one could say in consequence that even the very existence of gender as category is
Alyosxa Tudor | at53@soas.ac.uk
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problematic. Similar thoughts concerning 'the national' can be found in transnational feminist
approaches (see for example Campt 2011).
In Part II of the article, I relate the readings of passing/being read and transing that I
conduct in Part I to strategies of hegemonic co-optation of certain marginalised groups, on
the one hand, and their desire to belong to the dominant norm at any cost on the other hand.
With my analyses of these examples, I aim to show that in Western/European contexts,
ascriptions of migration, racialisation and gendering rely on each other in specific ways and a
problematic normative nexus of racialisation and binary gendering is reproduced in forms of
minority nationalism. In accordance to my claim to conceptualise passing and being read in
intersectional terms, I call for an intersectional response to these forms of minority
nationalism and their effects and strategies.
My analysis plays with dimensions of 'transnationalism' and puts different feminist
anti-nationalist strands into critical dialogue. The term ‘dimensions’ indicates that I am
interested in analysing layers, thinkabilities and limits in meaning making processes in
relation to ‘transnationalism’. It is not my aim to replace the conventionalised term, but rather
to juggle different meanings in order to engage with the work of the ‘trans’ and the
‘national/ism’ in it (see Campt 2011: 131). Rather than provide a static definition of the term
‘transnationalism’, the article explores potentials and limits of going beyond ‘the national’ and
‘gender’ and intervenes in forms of minority nationalism that reproduce racism, sexism,
heteronormativity and gender binary as the norm of Western national belonging. To do this, I
analyse theoretical and political terrains of engagement where ‘transing’ the nation and
‘transing’ gender are conceptualised and highlight how these two dimensions can be thought
about together. I revisit queer/trans feminist theoretical interventions on transing, passing
and performativity and aim to elaborate possibilities of intervention that disrupt nationalist
and racist logics of gender binaries. In conclusion, I suggest an epistemological and
methodological shift for transnational feminist approaches to intersectionality
iii
, and offer a
way of re-thinking belonging, discrimination and privileging in transnational feminism through
solidarity and risk in political struggle.
Alyosxa Tudor | at53@soas.ac.uk
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Part I: Theories
Passing and Being Read
I am read as a dyke and/or as a transperson in specific contexts, in different moments and
places. In others I am read as a teenage boy, which also potentially transes me. When I am
read as a woman (indeed always as a gender-deviant woman), my age is read in a way
corresponding to the conventionalised data in my papers. When I am read as male it always
reduces the age people read. When I am read as a teenage boy, people mostly read me also
as migratised. When I am read as a gender deviant woman, people mostly read me as non-
migrant. When I am read as migratised, I mostly get read as male. When I am read as non-
white, I am never read as Black, but as migratised and therefore PoC. In Kreuzberg, Berlin,
where I have considered myself to be at home for a while, being read as migratised, in most
cases, means being read as migratised=Muslim=PoC, as being a migrant there means being
a Muslim in a hegemonic understanding. In other words, despite my being privileged through
racism, sometimes I am read as Person of color, namely when I am read as migratised and
this ascription of migration becomes a racialisation.
Do these readings turn me into a boy? Into a teenager? A Muslim? A non-migrant? A
Person of color? Discriminated by racism?
iv
In this article, I want to bring conceptualisations of passing and being read not only together
with forms of transing (going beyond established categories), but also with discussions of
complex misreadings, performative becomings and ambivalent privilegings within the
process of social ascription. Therefore, I introduce queer-feminist ideas of passing and
discuss their contribution to thinking intersectional privilegings and discriminations in relation
to subjectivation and to processes of becoming socially positioned through power relations.
Both Sara Ahmed and Judith Butler criticise approaches that assume that passing
references a ‘real’ that is abandoned or that equates practices of reading with visual
evidence (Ahmed 1999b; Butler 1993). Ahmed emphasises that conceptualisations of
passing are problematic when they reproduce the idea of an essential self that is mis-
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represented, understand passing as automatically transgressive or assume an equivalence
between two binarised positionings (Ahmed 1999b). Jasbir Puar follows Butler in highlighting
that, in the process of perceiving and ascribing persons, reading and seeing often get
collapsed into each other. By way of this, the socially learned ability (that relies on normative
ableism) to deduce conventionalised meanings from habits of seeing is naturalised (see Puar
2007: 183). In line with these interventions, the concept of passing I am interested in here is
not about performing an identity that does not correspond with one’s own original and
essential identity, but is about subverting momentarily and contextually the perceptibility of
structural difference. Moreover, I want to investigate the process of passing in relation to the
process of being mis/read in order to discuss mis/readings and reactions to mis/readings in
the second part of this article.
Ahmed distinguishes between discriminated and privileged forms of passing and
subjectivation by defining risks and danger of death that come (or do not come) with passing:
“Would one worry, would one fear being caught out, if one did not already perceive oneself to
be passing for white? Would there be danger, would there be death?” (Ahmed 1999b: 93;
emphasis Ahmed). She elaborates on the fundamental distinction of essential and structural
difference (ibid.) where structural difference is the power difference between binarised social
positionings
v
and plays a role in the process of passing:
The difference between the black subject who passes as white and the white subject who passes as
white is not then an essential difference that exists before passing. Rather, it is a structural difference
that demonstrates that passing involves the re-opening or re-staging of a fractured history of
identifications that constitutes the limits to a given subject’s mobility (ibid.; emphasis Ahmed).
This means, in a certain sense, that every performance of whiteness is a ‘passing’ as white.
But of course there are differences between the passing as white from a white social
positioning and the passing as white from a Black social positioning. Passing has, at any one
time, a “history of self-identification and identification by others” (ibid.). Ahmed begins her
elaborations on passing with a reading of Butler’s Gender Trouble and Bodies that Matter
(Butler 2007 [1990], 1993). She explicates that Butler underlines in Bodies that Matter, why
Gender Trouble is not an invitation to a power-evasive play with gendering. Her reading
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brings to the point what is important about Butler’s conceptualisation of performativity for my
understanding of social positioning and critical positioning (see Tudor 2014): it is not about
fixed identities, but it is just as little about simply putting off any ‘structural difference’ (Ahmed
1999b: 93) in voluntaristic acts. Conceptualizations of performativity have a strong potential
for the argument I aim to make here. Butler criticises approaches which state that gender is
irrelevant, because it can be subverted any time by practices like cross-dressing: “gender is
constructed through relations of power and, specifically, normative constraints that not only
produce but also regulate various bodily beings” (Butler 1993: x; emphasis mine). Butler
warns against the assumption that gendered positionings can be taken out of the closet
every morning independently from their entanglement with power relations: “Such a willful
and instrumental subject, one who decides on its gender, is clearly not its gender from the
start and fails to realise that its existence is already decided by gender” (ibid.; emphasis
Butler). The question, “Would there be danger, would there be death?” (Ahmed 1999b: 93) is
therefore not only relevant for passing, but for any form of negotiation of power relations and,
in my opinion, for processes of subjectivation in and through political struggles. From which
positionings is fighting against power relations connected to danger and death? How then
are social positionings constructed through the exposure to danger and death?
In relation to gender, passing becomes complicated through a questioning of binary
gendering as its starting point. In the story about myself which I have shared here, this
means I understand my gendered passing or being read not as the one of a ‘woman’ who
passes as a (younger) ‘man’, and neither as that of a ‘transman’ who passes as a ‘cisman’,
but as that of a transing person who passes as unambiguously gendered in situations that
request the performance of (one side of) binary gendering (and who often fails). Moreover, in
some cases, it seems to be impossible with a conventionalised repertoire of possibilities of
perception to recognise several structural discriminations simultaneously. This means, in
reverse, that processes of ascribing make some positionings appear hypervisible and some
positionings get constructed as mutually exclusive, while some even get totally erased. My
example of being read and misread ambivalently in connection to gender and migration
Alyosxa Tudor | at53@soas.ac.uk
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shows that this is connected to a very complex process of shifting between discriminated and
privileged positionings. “We are all trans” (Halberstam 1994: 226)
vi
and ‘we’ are all in the
process of passing in different ways. However, the reflection of these processes rely
fundamentally on the perception, reflection and politicization of the risks, through which these
processes are defined. “But passing is not becoming” (Ahmed 1999b: 96), explicates Ahmed.
According to her, passing is an ambivalent process that does not turn the passing subject
into a being subject. However, passing does not pass without a trace, but ascribes itself as a
part of an always newly written history in the process of subjectivation.
It is my point here that passing and mis/reading – making oneself readable and being
read in relation to conventionalised social positionings (dimensions that do not necessarily
have to coincide) – can become contradictory through specific intersectional power relations.
This means, if there are only either/or registers available, discriminations get constructed as
mutually exclusive. Or, a switching effect is produced: in my case this means being
constructed as a migratised
vii
, male youth in one moment and context and, in the next
moment and context, as a non-migrant lesbian and, in the next, as a gender deviant woman
– cross-fadings of conventionalised reading habits in an infinite loop. What this shows us is
that the ‘real’ under the mis-reading is itself not stable. Nevertheless, it becomes clear that
social positionings are not simply undone by (repeated) mis-readings (as I don’t become a
Muslim teenage boy or a non-migrant woman despite being repeatedly read as such). There
arises a paradox of perception and non-perception, of hypervisibility and denial of structural
difference. The rules of this are mostly hegemonic. Passing is a strategy that adopts those
rules from a discriminated perspective and uses them in an oppositional way.
In the discussion of my own experience, I am concerned explicitly with the de-
perception of intersectional structural discriminations through conventional practices of
perception. Importantly, this ‘transing’ of stable positionings is about intersectional social
readings that also suggest that an intersectional response is necessary. It complicates
concepts of passing and performative becoming both in terms of practices of reading/being
seen but also in terms of essences.
Alyosxa Tudor | at53@soas.ac.uk
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When I am not being read as a migratised male teenager, but as a gender-deviant
adult woman, I usually do not get migratised, as in Western European hegemonic
understandings of gender deviance is imagined as mutually exclusive to migratisation. Do
these conventionalised readings then turn me into a non-migrant or into a Muslim boy? Or do
they turn migratised, gender-transing persons into abjects – non-readable within the
conditions of legibility of migratisation and gendering? What do these projections have to do
with me, what effect do they have on my self-constructions and on the possibility to feel
represented in discourses and to be able to critically position myself?
It becomes clear that transphobia, dyke/queerphobia and migratism complicate my
potential legibility as unambiguous. This has effects on my possibilities of passing as
privileged by migratism or as binary gendered or as straight. Migratised womanhood gets
inseparably connected to a sexist, heteronormative and bigendering culturalised image of
‘traditional femininity’. My argument, therefore, is that legibilities and the possibility of
performing social positionings get complicated, cancel each other out or become even
impossible through intersectional discriminations.
But passing as privileged by racism, passing as privileged by migratism
viii
and passing
as privileged by sexism, for example, do not function in a parallel way and cannot be
analogised directly. Thus, thinking about intersectionalities of racist, sexist, trans- and
dykephobic discrimination together and through each other complicates conceptualisations of
passing and being read necessarily more than monolithic approaches. This im/possibility,
abjectification and in-betweeness that is constructed through ambivalent readings and
ascriptions does not only get reproduced constantly in mainstream contexts, but also in
migratised communities and family contexts and, likewise, in non-migrant queer, trans and
feminist contexts, as they often implicitly conceptualise trans/dyke/lesbian/queer and
migratised as mutually exclusive. And, it is especially migrant communities and ideas of
transgender emancipation that I want to revisit in the following to investigate tendencies of
assimilation to dominant ideas of belonging.
Alyosxa Tudor | at53@soas.ac.uk
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Transing: Thinking together Transnational Feminism and Transgender Studies
From one category, one label to another, the only way to survive is to refuse. (Trinh 2010: 48)
What is important to me in the discussion I want to initiate here, is that mis/readings of
belonging and non-belonging and ascriptions of ambivalence and in-betweeness are
complex and contradictory. Therefore, making sense of these processes in a responsible
way needs a reflective thinking together of intersectional power relations. Politicising this in
social movements requires careful consideration of performativity, passing, self-appellation
and privileging. One way to think beyond stable and pregiven forms of gendered and national
belonging is to question the very existence of gender and nation as categories. Transing
could do the work of going beyond categories, deconstructing categories. In the following, I
therefore bring insights from transnational feminism together with transgender studies and
explore their shared investment in ‘trans’ as potential for an intersectional approach on
gender, racialisation and nation that goes beyond fixed categories. With this in mind, I
elaborate an understanding of ‘trans_feminism’ that builds upon approaches within
transgender feminism and transnational feminism which question essentialised pre-given
categories of gender and nation.
Many strands in feminism have always been invested in deconstructing gender. Finn
Enke, for example, defines ‘trans’ as constitutive of gender studies and feminism (Enke
2012a: 2), and thinks of “feminism as a transgender phenomenon” (ibid.). Enke underlines:
“Some version of gender self-determination and resistance to binary gender norms and
oppressions has always been central to feminism” (ibid.). For Enke, ‘transfeminism’ is a
vision that opens up ‘feminist’ and ‘trans’ for each other and connects them to various other
approaches “by participants whose names we may not even yet know” (Enke 2012a: 3).
Susan Stryker et al. understand ‘transing’ as a critical crossing of categories: “Trans: -gender,
-national, -racial, -generational, -genic, -species” (Stryker et al. 2008: 11). Trystan Cotton,
connects in his edited volume Transgender Migrations (2012) geopolitical perspectives with
transgender politics, asking how can various “transit/ions“ (ibid.: 2) – “national, cultural,
economic, and geographical migrations” be thought together with “transing gender” (ibid.)?
Alyosxa Tudor | at53@soas.ac.uk
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Building on these interventions that stress the importance of ‘trans-ing’ or ‘going
beyond’ as central, I argue for a change of perspective in the conceptualisation of
intersectional categories. In my view, ‘transing’ has the potential to shift our focus away from
categories and towards power relations, but it is also important to highlight ways in which
some conceptualisations of ‘trans’ reproduce categories instead of deconstructing them.
While transing can do the work of creating solidarity and at the same time challenge borders
and boundaries (with respect to nation and migration), it works less well in respect of ‘race’.
‘Trans’ in relation to some categories, such as race for example, is problematic, and
ambivalences and ruptures in relation to race have to be grasped in different dimensions
ix
.
The questioning of categorisations and the effort to make thinkable different
dimensions of ‘going beyond’ is a central claim in transnational feminism. As Ella Shohat
(2001) so carefully explicates, transnational feminism is about solidarity, political alliances
and community building. ‘Transnationalism’ is widely used as a term for politics based on
transnational networks and social movements that transgress national borders. Similarly,
transnational feminism tries to extend solidarity and political struggles beyond nation states.
In a broad move of crossing over, transnational feminism connects analyses of colonialism,
racism, diaspora and global division of labour with critiques of hegemonic knowledge
productions and intervenes in approaches that conceptualise gender without geopolitical and
postcolonial restrictions (see for example Alexander and Mohanty 1997; Brah 1996; Campt
2011; Frankenberg and Mani 1993; Grewal and Kaplan 2006; Mendoza 2002; Mohanty
2003a; Shohat 2001, 2002; Trinh 1989).
Breny Mendoza engages with the meaning of ‘transnational’ in transnational feminism
and asks what benefits there are for understanding power dynamics in relation to
globalisation/’the Global’, transnational capitalism, Third World/First World divisions, political
economics, and feminist ethnocentrism (Mendoza 2002). Mendoza calls for a focus on
feminisms that is not constructed as co-dependent on Western feminism (Mendoza 2002:
320) and identifies the “gaps between the intentions […] and outcomes of transnational
feminist mobilizations.” (ibid.: 328). Another meta-reflection on ‘transnational feminism’ is
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offered by Tina Campt, who questions the meaning of the term ‘transnational’: “What is the
‘trans’ in transnational feminist practice, and what is the work of the national therein?”
(Campt 2011: 131). Campt insists that there are no ultimate answers to these questions and
calls for an ongoing rethinking of connections, ambivalences and tensions of global and local
dimensions of power, of the specific and the universal (ibid.: 134). She criticises ‘the national’
as a too often unquestioned category and finds transnational approaches problematic that
reproduce ‘the national’ as stable common ground. It becomes clear, that one of the
difficulties of transnational feminist approaches is the task to go beyond national/ist
paradigms and at the same time reflect on the hierarchisation of nations and national
belonging (see Bhanji 2012: 161; Mendoza 2002: 313). This also means that (Western)
transnational feminist attempts to de-center Eurocentric/Western feminist knowledge
productions without re-centering the West and Europe are fragile. This idea reveals one of
the key problems of a Western transnational feminist approach: it remains concerned with
the division of ‘the West and the Rest’ (see Hall 2006) and thereby often reproduces this
binary. Feminist theorists in the Global South and/or working on the Global South challenge
this reproduction of Eurocentrism within transnational feminism while questioning ideas of
non-Western purity (see for example Al-Ali 2009; Herr 2014; Mama 2004, 2011; Sangtin
Writers Collective und Nagar 2006; Sayegh 2015; Wilson 2012).
One of the assumptions of Western/European nationalism is the automatised nexus of home,
nation and racialisation (see for example Ahmed 1999a; Bhanji 2012; Aizura 2006; El-Tayeb
1999; Mohanty 2003b; Wright 2004; Yuval-Davis 1993). In the long 19th century, the colonial
competition of the emerging European nations became one of the central themes of
European identification and national identification as European (El-Tayeb 2001: 61). The
idea of supremacy in relation to the colonised is partly realised by the emergence of scientific
racism which is backed up by and feeds into culturalised ideas of modernity and
enlightenment. As a result, intelligible Europeanness becomes racialised as white (see for
example Bhambra 2007: 120ff; El-Tayeb 2001; Gilman 1985; Gilroy 1993; Stoler 1995: 16;
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Wright 2004). Given this history, the question of home and belonging is an important one
when considering transing the nation and transing gender together and in relation to
processes of racialisation. Nael Bhanji is one of the few authors who theorises trans-
nationalism in ways I have found converge with my argument and they have influenced my
reading here. So, I will introduce their key points in some detail. Bhanji explicates that “trans-
identified person[s] of color living in the diaspora” never can feel at home: “Forever in transit,
we find ourselves living on the borders of homes” (Bhanji 2012: 159). A similar idea from a
queer feminist perspective is expressed in Olumide Popoola’s and Beldan Sezen’s book
Talking Home (Popoola and Sezen 1999). With their focus on home and longing for
belonging accessed from a woman/queer of colour perspective, they open up an explicitly
anti-racist and anti-migratist queer-feminist approach to the delocalising effect of racism and
migratism. They describe the failure to belong that is imposed by racism and migratism as
the feeling of ‘never be[ing] whole’, eternally searching, homeless and dispossessed (ibid.: 2).
“‘Home’ is a location of dislocation and desire” (Bhanji 2012: 160), emphasises Bhanji,
and they further express a deep frustration with many transgender studies approaches that
are invested in metaphorical usages of border crossing, travelling and homecoming. Bhanji
aims, in contrast, to think of ‘trans politics’ as critical towards a celebration of homecoming
and easy belonging (ibid.: 157f) and criticises research on transgender that uses migration,
home and transit as metaphors without reflecting on privilegings through citizenship, racism
and nationality. Often these dimensions cannot even be thought of within the de-politicised,
monolithic approaches to transgender. Bhanji remarks that, inherent to the “politics of home”,
there is the attempt of normalisation and this becomes even more relevant when home is
understood in a double sense of being at home in one’s body (unambiguously and at any
cost, as it is the case in many transgender narratives) and “being able to call a nation home”
(ibid). Bhanji vehemently criticises understandings of belonging to one side of the binary
gender system as homecoming. “The journey home for the transsexual may come at the
expense of a recognition that others are permanently dislocated from home – that they
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13
occupy the inhospitable territories in between”, warns Bhanji, “the unhabitable ‘geographies
of ambiguity’” (Bhanji 2012: 170).
I read the complexity of non-belonging to a gender binary as one aspect of a broader
critique of understandings of transgender or transsexual that rely on ideas of unambiguous
binary gendering. “We are all trans”, argues Jack Halberstam provocatively (Halberstam
1994: 226): “[W]e have already surgically, technologically, and ideologically altered our
bodies, our identities, ourselves” (Halberstam 1994: 215). Enke points in the same direction,
criticising some self-appellations (in thoroughly critical intention) as ‘cisgender’ and
underlines that they imply a re-essentialisation of gendering. For that matter, Enke refers to
Simone de Beauvoir’s statement “One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman” (Enke
2012b: 1; Beauvoir 2010: 293). The definition of ‘cis-’ as non-transition does not allow us to
understand gender as always already a process of becoming, argues Enke (ibid.). This is
related to Monique Wittig’s conceptualisation of lesbians as outside of the category of women
(Wittig 1993). In Wittig’s thinking, lesbians are not women, in part, because they are not
giving energy or labour (reproductive or affective) to, or are not in the service of, men. “It is
the refusal of the economic, ideological, and political power of men” (Wittig 1993: 105), that
puts lesbians outside of the category of women. Halberstam points out that some trans
concepts re-essentialise lesbians, dykes and butches and fix them in the binary category of
‘women’ (Halberstam 1998: 173). Following Halberstam here, I oppose the idea that lesbians
or dykes are necessarily non-trans and therefore ‘cis’, and advocate an understanding of
transgender that can embrace certain lesbian and dyke positionings. Obviously, not every
conceptualization and self-construction of lesbians and dykes transes binary gendering, but
this is paradoxically also true, as for example Halberstam and Bhanji show, for many
conceptualizations of transgender. My reliance on ‘trans_feminist’ embraces, therefore,
feminist knowledge productions that politicise going beyond gender in a power-sensitive way.
Many (but of course not all) lesbian feminist and queer feminist politics and knowledge
productions trans gender in specific ways and deconstruct essentialised ideas of gender
binaries. With this, they enable in many dimensions a going beyond gendering and politicise
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14
the fact that many queer, lesbian and dyke feminist positionings cannot be at home in one
fixed and pre-existing gendered category. In my understanding they are, therefore, not ‘cis’
and this idea challenges the meaning of ‘cis’ fundamentally.
With this in mind, it becomes clear that we need to conceptualise differences between
trans- and cis- gender in ways that do not only reproduce a simple binary. I agree with
interventions in simplified trans- and cisgender concepts, but I think it is necessary to
distinguish the process of transing gender, that constructs, ascribes and stabilises over time
intelligible gender (“One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman“; emphasis mine), from
the process of transing gender, that constructs people as beyond intelligible binary gendering,
that transes them in the sense of making them unreadable within the possibilities of reading
that are framed by binary gendering. In my intervention, I aim to problematise the fact that
not all notions of transgender are critical of gender binaries and heteronormativity – some
reproduce gender binaries and heteronormativity – and not all border crossings produce
subjects opposed to nationalism. “A heightened awareness of national boundaries, notions of
belonging, and diasporic positionings does not preclude participation in nationalisms,
fundamentalisms, and the like; in fact, such awareness may often facilitate them”, asserts
Puar (1998: 408). Brought together with the thoughts on passing that I discussed earlier in
this paper, one can say that passing as unambiguously gendered or racialised is not always
a way of deconstructing relations of discrimination. On the contrary, some passing strategies
do stabilise binary possibilities of legibility of social positionings. Yet, passing is sometimes
essential for the survival of discriminated persons and can be therefore a strategy of
resistance (Ahmed 1999b; Fütty 2010). Passing can fail from many positionings and/or within
specific contexts or constellations. It can become fundamentally impossible within
conventionalised habits of perceiving. The impossibility of passing, the impossibility of being
read as privileged in relation to certain power relations, poses a specific risk. This does not
mean that persons who can pass are not in danger (on the contrary, passing is a precarious
situation, see Fütty 2010: 67), but that not being able to pass is risky and precarious in a very
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15
specific way. It means that passing cannot be used as a strategy of resistance. Thus, a
potential instrument to protect oneself from violence, discrimination and harm is not available.
Deconstructing gendering and national belonging can be grasped more productively,
as I have tried to show, when we put into critical dialogue the insights from different schools
of thought that seem often at odds with each other. Most importantly, it becomes clear that
Western constructions of the entanglement of binary gender and nation are always racialised,
as most explicitly queer and trans of color critiques show (see for example Bhanji 2012; El-
Tayeb 2011; Haritaworn 2012a). Consequently, existing currents in feminist, postcolonial,
queer and trans studies have to be increasingly crossed over and thought about in relation to
each other. The following is an analysis of ‘transnationalism’ that relies on such a crossing
over.
Part II: Transnationalism
If one of transnational feminism's projects is to go beyond the national, to criticise the
stabilization of nations and nationality as 'natural' entities and to fight nationalism, might the
term 'transnationalism' thus be misleading, carrying 'nationalism' within it (and maybe not
only on a terminological level)? I do not suggest we replace the conventionalised term, but
rather play around with different dimensions of meaning in order to interconnect transnational
feminist and transgender feminist approaches, redefine the work of transing in the term,
question their reliance on categories and intervene with help of their insights in reproductions
of nationalism.
To do so, I analyse the following phenomena of transnationalism in relation to each
other. First, I turn to transnationalism as in ‘transgender nationalism’ and show how it relies
on the reproduction of binary gendering and the exertion of racism. As a second step, I
discuss transnationalism as in ‘cross-border-nationalism’ that is too rooted in practising
racism and reproducing hetero and binary gendered norms. In my readings of the examples,
I juggle the concepts of passing/being read, transing and performativity which I have
introduced above and aim to intervene in the logics of minority nationalisms and the idea that
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16
co-optation by majority nationalisms is a desirable goal on the way to belonging “without
complication to a normative social sphere” (Aizura 2006: 290)
Jin Haritaworn criticises the tendency of white transgender and genderqueer persons
to reproduce belonging through racist understandings of nation (Haritaworn 2012a: 12).
Haritaworn describes this as a form of ‘transgender nationalism’ borrowing from Puar’s
concept of ‘homonationalism’ (Puar 2007). Hetero norms of gender and kinship are
entangled with the reproduction of racialising and nationalizing norms (ibid.: 30). In a similar
move, Aren Aizura (2006) questions the appropriation of nationalist ‘politics of home’ by
giving the example of white transsexuals
x
in an Australian context. Aizura discuesses the
reproduction of normative white, heterogendered and capitalist citizenship and its role in
constructing ‘normal’ Australian citizens who are entitled to rights like (hetero-)marriage and
the founding of a nuclear family. Aizura criticises the practices of some white, (paradoxically)
unambiguously gendered trans persons to inscribe themselves into the nationalist
mainstream. This is based on a phantasy that functions to depoliticise one’s own social
positioning: trans persons become unambiguously gendered men or women and legitimise
themselves in acting as nationalist, racist and heteronormative as other white cisgendered
Australians (ibid.: 299).
It is a strategy that can be called ‘transnationalism’, a rather different way of thinking
the term than it is usually the case, when it is used as talking about solidarities beyond
national boundaries. Similar cases of transnationalism recently went viral in social media. In
2015, the internet platform BuzzFeed published two stories, within days of each other, of
transgender persons serving in the military. On January 19th, the story of Hannah
Winterbourne, Captain in the British army, was issued under the title “Meet The First
Transgender Officer In The British Army”
xi
and, on February 3rd, the story of ‘Shachar’
followed with the stunningly similar title “Meet Israel’s First Out Transgender Military Officer”
xii
.
The British case is subtitled with “Captain Hannah Winterbourne decided to transition
while serving in Afghanistan” and, while there is no hint that, for Winterbourne, ‘realness’ in
gendered terms is connected to serving in the army as a woman, the rhetoric reproduces the
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17
narrative of a white, Western person finding their ‘real’ self during a colonial mission.
Moreover, we are told in another article that the British army is a "fantastic employer for trans
soldiers"
xiii
and the case seems to be used as an image campaign for the British military, one
that relies on presenting the organisation as progressive and open-minded. This helps to
redirect the public’s attention from the British implication in wars and (neo)colonialist
missions abroad, a strategy that can be analysed under the term ‘pinkwashing’ (Puar 2013).
Pinkwashing, a state practice that is made possible by homonationalism, is “the cynical
promotion of LGBT bodies as representative of […] democracy” (ibid.: 338). Puar and others
use the term mostly in relation to Israel, but it becomes clear, as with the example of the
British case, that it is a broader strategy of Western nationalism.
In the story of the Israeli officer, pinkwashing is also prominent but the focus of the
article lies less on the narrative of finding oneself during a colonial mission than on the
reproduction of binary gendering. ‘Shachar’, the Israeli transgender soldier, is quoted as
saying: “For me, serving in the army and being recognised for who I really am by my fellow
soldiers made me feel like a real man for the first time in my life. It made me feel like
myself”.
xiv
Here, it becomes clear that ‘realness’ in terms of gender identity is connected to
nationalism, in this case to a heavily militarised form of nationalism that enables settler
colonialism. Interestingly, serving in the army in Israel is not at all restricted to men, so it is
not necessary to become a man in order to fulfil nationalism to such an extended degree.
Thus, becoming a ‘real man’ here with the help of the recognition of the ‘fellow soldiers’
means simply being recognised by the nation state as serving it as a man; it means a
nationalist celebrating of the possibility that a nation state not only does not care about
having transgendered people serving in the military, but enables (properly binary gendered)
transgendered persons to be a full part of the nationalist colonial project. The recognition of
binary gendered ‘realness’ is one of the rewards that comes with defining and defending a
home
xv
through nationalism and settler colonialism.
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18
Through my readings of theories and media examples so far, I have been trying to show that
processes of mis/reading, passing and ascribing are complicated and analyses have to
achieve a high level of complexity to deconstruct specific intersectional discriminations,
privilegings, power relations and processes of normalisation and to address them in specific
politics. Building on these considerations, I aim to bring together the theorisation of
ascriptions, nationalist self-assurances and performative reproductions of gendering,
racialisation and national belonging in a phenomenon that can be named as transnationalism,
as in ‘cross-border-nationalism’.
xvi
I argue that this is based on similar strategies as the
cases of transgender nationalism that I discuss above: on the reproduction of binary
gendering and the exertion of racism. The readings of the following example are informed by
the intersectional conceptualisations of transing, passing and mis/reading that I elaborate
earlier in this article.
What happens if white (groups of) persons are being read as non-white? What
happens for example, if (groups of) persons who consider themselves as being white
Romanians, are being read in Western European contexts as Roma? Is this ascription
antiromaist? And if so, for whom? For those who define themselves as white Romanians, or
for the Roma? Or for both?
In 2009 and again in 2011 the fascist Romanian party Noua Dreaptă launched a
poster campaign in Italy. On the posters, one can see two photos with Italian text
xvii
. In my
reading, the photo on the left side is meant to represent a ‘Roma’ family while the one on the
right side represents a (hetero-reprogendered) ‘Romanian’ family. With this contrasting
juxtaposition, a strong differentiation is produced. Under the right photo there is the word
“romeni“ (Italian for ‘Romanians’) and, under the left, the Italian antiromaist word for ‘Roma’,
followed by “rom” in brackets (the Italian word for ‘Roma’). Below the two images, one can
read the demand, “Notate la differenza!“ (Notice the difference!), and then the sentence,
“Sono due popoli dissimili!“ (They are two different/dissimilar people!”). The ‘Roma family’ is
represented as dressed colourfully and arranged as a ‘chaotic’ and open group in front of a
fence in the streets. The ‘Romanian family’ is draped in a photo studio setting, all dressed in
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19
white shirts or blouses and grouped in a closed arrangement. In my reading the latter are
blond, much blonder than my own image of family belonging and Romanianness would ever
suggest. The ones who are supposed to be recognised as Romanians are constructed as
white through visualised representations of skin and hair colour as well as through clothing. It
is about representing intelligible Europeanisation and, even more, intelligible Middle-
Europeanisation. The ‘Roma family’ is constructed in opposition to this as non-white. With
the construction of the ‘Romanian family’, a middle European norm of family is reproduced.
This is realised via the ordered grouping of the ‘Romanian family’ in contrast to the disorder
of the construction of the ‘Roma family’ and the relatable unambiguous representation of
kinship, age, number of persons, and gender. The norming of whiteness gets entangled here
with the norming of binary hetero- and repronormativity: in my own reading the ‘Romanian
family’ is constructed as consisting of father, mother and three children, while on the other
photo the repro-structure remains much less clear.
xviii
Noua Dreaptă’s posters react to a broader disposition in Romania and in Romanian
migrant groups in Western Europe. There is an omnipresent readiness to complain about the
fact that, in Western European contexts, ‘Romanian’ and ‘Roma’ get confounded. Therefore,
the ‘Romanians’ request a differentiation between these two terms that are constructed as
mutually exclusive in hegemonic Romanian discourse. There are, for example, attempts in
Romania and in the EU to enforce the official replacement of the appellation ‘Roma’ with the
antiromaist word, in order to prevent confusing it with ‘Romanian’. Thus, in 2010, the
Romanian president Traian Băsescu is cited as explaining that the request for differentiating
between the two categories was for “protecting the Romanians in gypsyphobic [sic!] regions,
as the bad treatment and negative discrimination of Roma could affect in an unjustified [sic!]
way Romanians too.”
xix
With this statement, Băsescu externalises antiromaism and locates it outside of
Romania. At the same time, he constructs antiromaism as something that can affect
Romanians in an ‘unjustified’ way. This implies that, in his opinion, there is a group of
persons that can be justifiably affected by antiromaism. However, in Romania the Roma are
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20
exposed to immense discriminations, explicates Jennifer Tanaka (1995). Moreover, there are
constant attempts from the white Romanians to distinguish themselves from the Roma. Anda
Nicolae Vladu and Malte Kleinschmidt show, with their analyses of Romanian fiction from the
19th century and recent media debates, that antiromaism is inscribed in the narratives that
have founded the Romanian nation from its beginnings and have been reproduced
constantly until today (Nicolae Vladu and Kleinschmidt 2009). Anikó Imre asserts, in relation
to Hungary, that the white Christian population of Eastern Europe has decided to distance
itself from the Roma in order to mask the insecurity about their own identity (Imre 2005: 86):
"With the collapse of socialism East Europeans have suddenly awakened from their relative
imprisonment […] and found their national boundaries vulnerable for influences from the
world" (ibid.: 81). According to Imre, one reason for the ongoing attempts of the Eastern
European, white, Christian population to distinguish themselves from the Roma is the fact
that Western media does not differentiate between the two different cultures: "[Eastern
Europeans] are treated as ‘Gypsies’ by the Western Media" (ibid.: 86). Imre uses the
antiromaist appellation and pejorative (Hornscheidt 2011) ‘gypsies’ repeatedly in her text.
Moreover, she conducts a problematic twist in her argument: in her opinion, it is not the
antiromaism of the Eastern European mainstream population that is responsible for their
vehement delineation from the Roma, but the fact that they are treated like Roma in Western
European discourses and because their cultures get conflated. I do not agree but, instead,
propose that antiromaism provides the opportunity for white Christian Eastern Europeans –
the aspirants of (Western) European participation (Boatcă 2013) – to demonstrate their
whiteness and to construct themselves as intelligibly European (Boatcă 2006: 99).
There is no doubt that Western European discourses that construct Romanians and
Romania are discriminating. Following Maria Todorova (2009), Manuela Botacă understands
the construction of Southeastern Europe as interstage between the Orient and Occident:
“Moreover, Southeastern Europe’s proximity to Asia and its Ottoman cultural legacy located
it halfway between East and West, thus giving it a condition of semi-Oriental, semi-civilized,
semi-developed” (Boatcă 2013: 6). It becomes evident that the European separation has
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21
been established for centuries and is not rooted in the relatively short period of state
socialism and the construction of the Eastern bloc (Boatcă 2006, 2013). Eurocentric
assumptions of backwardness are transferred to Southeastern Europe – it is constructed as
“Europe’s incomplete Self” (Boatcă 2013) by Orientalist discourses (Said 2003), as ‘epigonal
Europe’ (Boatcă 2013), trying to prove its proper Europeanness but constantly failing.
Racism, nationalism and fascism can be used as strategies to construct intelligible
Euopeanness; “the aspiration to Europeanness” (Boatcă 2013) is legitimised through racist
practices of the aspirants. In a migration context, this is realised through a phenomenon that
I call transnationalism or cross-border-nationalism.
(Groups of) Persons who are constructed as Romanians in Western European
contexts are, without doubt, discriminated against by migratism (Tudor 2014, 2017) and
Romania gets devalued chauvinistically in many dimensions (Boatcă 2006, 2013; Tlostanova
2012). In recent nationalist debates in Western Europe, the terms ‘Romanians’ and ‘Roma’
are indeed mostly used as synonyms (Nicolae Vladu and Kleinschmidt 2009). However,
through the analyses of my example, it becomes clear that the attempt to ‘correct’ a
‘misreading’ of one’s own social positioning and to persist on controlling the representation of
oneself is not automatically emancipatory, but can be racist and self-privileging. With their
racist delineation against the Roma, the white Romanians try to annul their own
marginalisation within a system of hierarchies in Europe.
Building on Puar’s conceptualisation of homonationalism, this phenomenon, which of
course does not occur in Romanian migrant communities only, can be named as ‘cross-
border-nationalism’: the attempts of a migratised group to assimilate to the nationalist
mainstream of their country of ‘origin’. Moreover, transnationalism relies on invoking racist
nationalisms as the supra-national commonality of Europeanness and self-construction as
intelligibly European. In my example, fascist supra-nationalism allows for a Romanian fascist
group, with the help of an Italian fascist group (Fuerza Nuova), to launch an antiromaist
poster campaign in Italy to secure the borders of intelligible Europeanisation.
xx
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22
Theorists such as Fatima El-Tayeb formulate critiques of these efforts to belong to
the norm in European contexts. There is a tendency amongst white non-migrant gays,
bisexuals and lesbians to want to be recognised, to be ‘normal’ and to dissolve as unmarked
within the nation. El-Tayeb calls this adoption and hyper-pronunciation of conservative ideas,
the preaching of traditional values and the insistence on normality ‘solidarisation with the
mainstream’ (El-Tayeb 2003: 132). Instead of practising solidarity with the marginalised and
deconstructing mechanisms of marginalization, this attitude reproduces racist, sexist and
neo-liberal exclusions (ibid.: 134). The logics of homonationalism can also be applied to
cross-border-nationalism and a similar process is discussed by Puar herself. In the US, after
9/11, there were a series of hate crime murders against Sikhs, as they were read as
presumed ‘Muslim terrorists’ (Puar 2007: 166). These hate crimes were answered by an
educational campaign with the goal of self-representing Sikhs as a group who personify a
form of “proper American heteromasculinity“ (ibid.: 167) and could therefore be distinguished
from the perverted “terrorist bodies“ – the ‘real Muslims’ (ibid.). Puar notices that the
attempts of delineation are rooted in the idea that the white Christian majority would be
interested in (perceiving) the difference between two groups that both are constructed as
non-white. Through a de-solidarisation with Muslims, some Sikhs tried to inscribe
themselves into the US American nation. But this undertaking cannot succeed, underlines
Puar (ibid.).
Applied to the violent self-construction of white Romanians as Not-Roma at the
expense of a re-essentialisation of Roma as ‘real Roma’, the question remains whether, in
this context and constellation, the undertaking can actually succeed? Is it possible for white
Romanians to wrench recognition from white Western Europeans in order to be perceived as
intelligible Europeans? The situation that is discussed in Puar’s text is different from my
example here and the difference lies in the self-construction of the group that seeks to be
read ‘correctly’. In the case of the Romanians, the self-construction is rooted in whiteness,
Christianity and Europeanness. In the example of the Sikhs, this is not the case. What
connects both examples is the similar process of de-solidarisation and also the
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23
overemphasis of repro- and hetero gender norms in order to secure a place within a non-
deviant part of the nation or Europe.
According to Lann Hornscheidt’s conceptualisation of pejorisation (Hornscheidt 2011),
it can be argued that the ascription as Roma of white Romanians is discriminatory – however,
not against the white Romanians, but against the Roma. A straight cis-woman who gets
appellated as ‘lesbian’, Hornscheidt argues, can only perceive this as a hurt if she
reproduces straightness as desirable norm and being a lesbian as something negative. Thus,
perceiving ‘lesbian’ as a slur is harmful for lesbians and not for straight women (Hornscheidt
2011: 37). Applied to the ascription as Roma, this is also fundamentally true for the
appellation: to perceive it as a harm to be named as ‘Roma’, to understand the appellation
as a slur and the misreading as Roma as wrongful, reproduces antiromaism. I follow
Hornscheidt’s analysis that straight women who feel wrongly interpolated as lesbians
reproduce in this idea of wrongfulness lesbophobia and heteronormative gendering. In order
to challenge Hornscheidt’s concept, however, one could ask: how many performative
repetitions of the appellation ‘lesbian’ does it take for a ‘straight cis-woman’ to un-become a
‘straight cis-woman’ and to be constructed discursively as a lesbian? Or does she then
become a straight woman who gets discriminated like a ‘real lesbian’, but does not become a
‘real lesbian’? Let me refer back to my own example of being ‘misread’ as a Muslim migrant
adolescent boy: How many readings does it take to become that Muslim migratised boy I am
mistaken for? In relation to my example of cross-border-nationalism one could ask if ‘white
Romanians’ can become ‘Roma’ through repeated performative appellations as ‘Roma’?
Does this happen, and if so, after how many repetitions? For whom does this happen? The
white Western Europeans (who are the appellators), or for the de-whitened Romanians (who
get appellated) or for the Roma (who become abjects)?
Especially in countries like Italy and Spain where many ‘guest workers’ from Romania
live, there occur repeated incidents such as pogroms against Romanian Roma but also
against white Romanians (for example rapes and murders of Romanian women, often sex
workers, that are only faint-heartedly prosecuted)
xxi
. It is not traceable if these persons are all
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24
murdered or attacked for antiromaist reasons. And, if this was the case, would the fact of a
white Romanian being killed by antiromaism be such an unambiguous ascription of being
Roma, that in death the murdered becomes Roma? Or is this ‘only’ mistaken identity? Why
do killings appear to be more unambiguous manners of death and more valid ascriptions
than ‘slow deaths’ (Berlant 2007), manners of death that are not recognised as such? Which
roles do intersectional power relations like sexism, migratism and racism play in relation to
the incidents, slow deaths and killings?
All of these questions could be answered in various dimensions. Of course, I do not
pose them here to find out the exact moment and the exact situation in which a person
becomes what they are ascribed, but to raise attention to the idea that processes of
becoming and performative ascriptions have a complex connection. In other words: I do not
pose these questions because I want to find unambiguous answers, but because I want to
provoke a reflection on how discrimination and power relations construct and fix persons or
their social positionings through performative acts. Following Ahmed, I argue that ascriptions
of non-whiteness do not automatically mean to become non-white and ascriptions of
masculinity do not automatically mean to become a man. Moreover, as I have stated above,
processes of gendering and racialisation do not function in parallel ways and transing gender
is not the same as deconstructing racialisation. So, performative processes of becoming
through repeated interpellations are intersectional in many dimensions but might work in
contradictory ways. Ahmed substantiates this with the “reopening or restaging of a fractured
history of identifications” (Ahmed 1999b: 93).
This means that Roma who are read as Roma have a history of self-identification and
identification through others that is formed by the discrimination by antiromaism, while white
Romanians have a history of self-identification and identification through others that is
formed by the privileging by antiromaism. Roma – in contrast to white Romanians – do not
have the possibility to construct themselves as white through a mixture of racist, nationalist,
gendered and sexualised norms. The self-construction of the white Romanian migrants
shows that neither crossing borders nor the status as migrant automatically creates a critical
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25
attitude or the rejection of national belonging, nationalism or Eurocentrism. “[T]here is a
distinction between transgressing ideologies of nationhood and transversing national
boundaries“, emphasises Puar (1998: 410).
Conclusion:
At this point, I do not want to come up with a ‘solution’ and do not want to offer ultimate
answers to my questions, but, instead, direct attention to the political concept of solidarity. If
straight women showed solidarity with lesbians and reflected their own privileging in relation
to heteronormativity as well as intervened in effects of sexism, dyke-, queer- and
transphobia, if they turned self-reflexively and in solidarity towards political alliances instead
of perceiving being named as ‘lesbian’ as offensive, the circle of reproducing gendered and
sexual normalisations would have been interrupted for a moment. Likewise, white
Romanians, who are being read as ‘Roma’, could put their energies in alliances based on
solidarity against antiromaism, migratism, racism and nationalism, without victimising
themselves and forgetting about their privileging in relation to Roma.
In my own example, being ‘read’ might produce solidarities with ‘others’ whose ‘risks’
I do not claim as my own. While I have a history of being read as a boy and/or as gender
deviant woman and_or as dyke and_or as transperson, and while I have a history of being
migratised – ascribed with migration – in Western contexts, I do not have a history of self-
identification and identification through others as Muslim or PoC beyond some reading
incidents. Solidarity might mean reflecting and acknowledging the shared and divided
histories of being constructed as migrants in Western contexts while taking responsibility for
privilegings that come with a history of self-identification and identification through others as
white.
Binary gendering, racialisation and nation are entangled but they do not function in
parallel ways. While I think it is politically necessary to intervene in and oppose all forms of
European nationalism and deconstruct the automatised nexus of home and nation, I do not
per se criticise the desire (some) trans persons might have to belong to one side of the
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26
gender binary. My critique focuses on the mobilisation of nationalist, sexist and racist logics
for achieving the goal of ‘being at home’ in a binary gender category (see Aizura 2006,
Bhanji 2012).
Beyond these thoughts, I do not render readings, misreadings, ascriptions and the
related discriminations as absolute. Every reading is a misreading. Not every discrimination
is visible and perceivable for others. Not every story and history reveals itself and is legible or
intelligible (Haritaworn 2012b). As Ahmed puts it, it is not about actual visibilities, but about
stories and histories of positioning and being positioned (Ahmed 1999b), about
sedimentations of harm, vulnerabilities and complex forms of being exposed. One possibility
for translating my specific analyses into forms of activism is to start from power relations
which construct social positionings through movements, shiftings, cross-fadings and
contradictory discourses, and not from fixed categories. As nationalism is a paradigm of
(post)colonial processes of normalisation on the level of nation states, often the
unquestioned dispositive condition of social, constant conscious and unconscious re-
nationalisations cannot be avoided and have to be deconstructed in ongoing processes. The
translation of this insight into responsible politics asks for forms of transnational alliances
which reflect and deconstruct power relations like antiromaism, migratism, sexism, dyke- and
transphobia and colonial racism in their specific and spatial-temporary contexts and with their
shifting and contradictory effects. Resistance also means to resist nationalist logics and co-
optations by the mainstream. In these alliances, movements and struggles, different forms of
risks, vulnerabilities and exposure exist that are defined by, for example, racialisation,
citizenship, gendering, religion and ability. They are constitutive of the very meaning of the
struggles and movements and define what they can be, what they want and what they can
want.
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i
Thanks to Clare Hemmings and Wendy Sigle for responses to earlier drafts and to the reviewers and editors of
FR for their constructive engagement.
ii
For different usages of ‘transing’ see for example Noble 2012; Stryker et al. 2008; Tudor 2014.
iii
With my usage of ‘intersectionality’, I refer to Kimberle Crenshaw’s original formulation (Crenshaw 1991), but
follow also Gail Lewis who emphasises that the concept travels and has to be adapted to specific contexts.
Lewis makes clear though, that the analysis of racism is not optional in intersectionality theories and criticises
European adaptions of intersectionality that do not take racialisation and racism into account (Lewis 2013).
iv
Autobiographical approaches can be one way to access the complexity of politicising positioning within power
dynamics. For other autobiographical accounts that reflect on complex constructions of gendering,
racialisation, migratisation and belonging see for example Ahmed 1999b, Bhanji 2012; Haritaworn 2008.
v
I suggest to differentiate between social positionings and critical positionings. While former are processes of
ascription and constructed by power relations, the latter are the politicisations of social positionings: politicised
ways of making sense of processes of becoming through intersectional power relations. The possibility of
inhabiting an intelligible social positioning is often fixed within rigid binary registers of belonging (man/woman;
white/non-white etc.). My argument is that although social positioning can be thought as non-essential, but as
constructed through performative processes and as effects of intersectional power relations, they should not
be seen as the basis for political struggle. Rather it is the politicisation of social positionings – critical
positionings – that allows for (temporal, fragile and contradictory) solidarities, alliances and shared struggles
(see Tudor 2014).
vi
Halberstam contextualises this statement later on and withdraws it partly (Halberstam 1998: 173). I do not want
to suggest that all persons trans gender in the same way, but following Enke (2012c) I think it is relevant to
think gender always in terms of transing, as complex process of becoming and ascription.
Alyosxa Tudor | at53@soas.ac.uk
31
vii
‘Migratised’ means being ascribed with migration, being constructed as migrant. The term was coined by Tudor
2014, 2017.
viii
Migratism is the power relation that constructs migrants and ascribes migration as deviant position and non-
migration as the norm of Western societies. Migratism often is a strategy of racism, but not all forms of
migratism are racist. The term was coined and conceptualised by Tudor 2014, 2017.
ix
Gender and race do not work in analogous ways and power relations that construct gender and race function
not in parallels. Therefore, deconstructions of gender and race can not be equated. For making sense of the
ascription of in-betweeness in connection to racialisation see for example Haritaworn’s ‘mixed race’ approach
(Haritaworn 2012c).
x
Aizura subsumes ‘transsexuals’ and ‘transgender’ under the umbrella-term ‘trans’. ‘Transsexuals’ is in his
terminology an appellation for persons who undergo a physical transition with the goal to belong to one side of
the binary gendering. However, it is also a juridical and pathologising category and usages are not self-evident
or universal, warns Aizura (2006: 291f).
xi
www.buzzfeed.com/richardhjames/transgender-officer-in-the-british-army#.qlq1KmYD2 [06/12/2015].
xii
www.buzzfeed.com/sheerafrenkel/meet-israels-first-openly-transgender-military-officer#.cpOVZPNxg
[19/08/15].
xiii
http://i100.independent.co.uk/article/meet-the-first-transgender-officer-in-the-british-army--xkwc5UzMje
[06/12/2015].
xiv
www.buzzfeed.com/sheerafrenkel/meet-israels-first-openly-transgender-military-officer#.cpOVZPNxg
[19/08/15].
xv
See Judith Butler’s critique of Zionist homecoming and dissolving the Jewish diasporic condition through
creating new dispossessions and a situation of war, exile and persecution for the Palestinians (Butler 2012).
xvi
The term ‘cross-border nationalism’ has been used before. See for example Fitzgerald 2004; Pavlásek 2013.
For conceptualisations closest to my understanding, without necessarily using the term, see Gopinath 2003;
Grewal 2005; Puar 1998.
xvii
www.ziare.com/diaspora/romani-italia/afis-in-italia-rromii-si-romanii-sunt-doua-popoare-diferite-1138355
[18/09/2015].
xviii
See also Nicolae Vladu and Kleinschmidt in relation to a TV spot that was launched by Noua Dreaptă in Italian
TV (Nicolae Vladu and Kleinschmidt 2009: 224).
xix
My translation. See diepresse.com/home/politik/eu/593686/Rumaenischer-Praesident-fuer-Zigeuner-statt-
Roma-; stirileprotv.ro/stiri/politic/romi-sau-tigani-un-deputat-pdl-propune-inlaturarea-acestei-confuzii.html; [all
18/09/2015].
xx
www.ziare.com/diaspora/romani-italia/afis-in-italia-rromii-si-romanii-sunt-doua-popoare-diferite-1138355
[18/09/2015].
xxi
www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTHglfLsySk [18/09/2015].














