From the comfort of my armchair in
Washington and no longer inhabiting the ivory towers of academia, I
had no idea what a shitstorm of debate, both in Ireland and in the
social sciences, I was wading into with my blog post commenting on
'Pantigate' and use of the word homophobia. A slightly edited version of it appeared as a column in last Friday's Irish Times.
It certainly provoked mixed responses:
@Cripipper
@IrishTimes
One of the finest contributions yet to this whole debate. Brilliantly
written and argued
— Mark Paul (@MarkPaulTimes) February
7, 2014
(my mum on the Irish Times comment section, using the pseudonym 'Labhaoise O'Donovan') |
I
don't think I persuaded many by my argument, as each side in the
debate is fairly entrenched, but I still feel that it is the one that
would have been accepted by the High Court (which was the legal
advice that RTÉ also received). In some respects by paying out, RTÉ
has saved the the gay rights activist community from a loss in Court
that would have affirmed that to be against gay marriage is not to be
homophobic per se.
But
in the past week, the debate has further broadened and has led me to
ask, why do we even use the term 'homophobia' at all?
Society
has moved on greatly since the phrase was coined, in a period when
gays were indeed feared and hated. This is, of course, not to deny
that there are people who still genuinely loathe homosexuals. Gay
bashers and men and women still in the closet who repress their own sexuality
(often one and the same) exist in every community. And as Rory
O'Neill has eloquently expressed, in the heart of every gay man there
exists a dark recess of self-loathing - homophobia - created by the
social norms that make us feel we do not quite fit in.
On
these terms then, to a greater or lesser extent, everybody in society
is homophobic because everybody accepts that the starting point for discussion is that to be straight is 'normal' and society is structured to reflect that. Anything that deviates from that is 'abnormal' (my much cleverer big brother would call this pervasive heteronormativity). And whether they themselves are motivated by
homophobia or not, those who oppose marriage equality or other equal
rights for gays and lesbians do cause harm. They feed the
self-loathing, shame and fear that exists at one time or another
inside every gay man and woman or questioning teenager, which comes from the realisation that you are, through no choice of your own, abnormal.
Indeed,
while writing this post I was overpowered by emotion on imagining
what my 16-year old self would have said to the idea that I would
write a column in a national newspaper in Ireland discussing my civil
partnership and the issue of gay marriage.
And
then I was forced to wonder would I ever have even written it if my father
had still been alive.
So
all that is to say that I do not believe that those who oppose equal
rights for gays and lesbians do not do harm. It may even be the case
that the homophobia that is problematic is not the one that motivates
those opposed to marriage equality, but is the one which is fed by
their opposition. This in itself shows the redundancy of the word.
And
when we connect that again to the gay marriage debate, we are still
left with the problem of motive: even if we accept that everyone is homophobic, that still does not define their motive when it comes to a particular issue. The term confuses
more than it enlightens.
Furthermore,
the debate in Ireland about same-sex marriage is conducted under the
influence of the American experience, where marriage equality has
been achieved in a large number of states not through legislative or
popular initiative, but via the legal fiction of judges discovering
rights that previously existed but which were yet unrecognized. In
Ireland we can dispense with this: there is nothing wrong in the
Irish context with acknowledging that same-sex marriage involves the
(welcome) creation of new rights, instead of pretending that right has
existed since the ratification of the Constitution.
It
appears to be that when each side in the debate talks about the
connection between homophobia and the right of gays to marry, they
often have in their minds totally different concepts.
The
social sciences have recognised for some time the limitations of the
word, and have instead started substituting it with 'heterosexism',
'homonegativity', and 'sexual stigma'. It is clear though that none
of these is a term that fully encapsulates what is meant, and they are
certainly not going to catch on in popular parlance. The one that
comes closest to conveying what is meant in modern society is
'homoprejudice', but that sounds too much like a film in which Mr.
Darcy and George Wickham gallop off into the sunset together to be of
much use either.
What
we need is a word that is the functional equivalent of racist and
sexist (which is not to say that the definitions of these are
universally agreed upon). We need a neologism, a new word, whose
meaning is 'someone who is prejudiced or believes it is acceptable to discriminate against individuals or groups of people on account of their sexual orientation; someone who believes that others share similar views'.
The
word needs to be catchy, easy to understand, and won't require people
to scramble looking for a dictionary the first time they hear it.
That
word is 'gayist'.
Now
you may think that it will be too easily mixed up with 'gayest' to be
of any use, but context and grammar will tell you everything you need
to know, and there should be little room for confusion.
For
example, “Chris Connolly is the gayest person I know” clearly has
a very different meaning to “Breda O'Brien is the most gayist
person I know.”
But
if Rory O'Neill had said either of those things on television,
Ireland wouldn't be having the debate that it is now.
Please remove my comment in the snapshot from this article. I am Labhaoise O'Donovan.
ReplyDeleteWhy?
ReplyDeleteGreat bloog I enjoyed reading
ReplyDelete