Spending more time reading 7/1/2024 ========================== My actual vacation for the academic year started late last week, after I finished a two day camp teaching kids about creative coding I'm trying to read more. I owe my rawtext compatriots my own write up of the book Computers As Theatre, which I've read through once but I feel weirdly intimidated to try and get all of my thoughts out about it, so instead I ended up reading something completely Not About Computers which is the book Female Husbands: A Trans History I'm in the conclusion with a few pages left when my concentration failed and, waiting for the rice cooker to be done so we can have a big pile of tofu and broccoli for dinner, I decided to write this post It's been a good read, one that shows just how messy the history of both gender non-conformity and queerness has been in the u.s. and u.k. It explores the ways that "biological sex" is, in many ways, the newer concept than gender There were people who lived as men and married women and, even after death, were still seen as having been men legally by virtue of the actions they took They were steady members of their community, churchgoes, married to women, and did work like other men so they lived out the "gender" of man But the book traces how biological essentialism was an outgrowth of backlashes to feminist organizing so that by the end of its two century journey we went from "oh did you know the guy down the street had lady parts after all? weird, right? well I'll go see how his widow is doing, I know she's taking his death hard" to anti-cross-dressing laws and "scientific" arguments for why feeeeemales were inherently unsuited to physical labor and governance alike Now I'm not saying the past was better, it was still really bad for a lot of these people and they faced punishment when their "deception" was found out but!! it's not as linear of a journey as you'd expect and I was actually kind of shocked to realize just how recent a lot of the ideas of having a "real" sex that is different than what you do in your community really is