Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Shakespeare Offers Insight Into Trans Struggles, Experience: Scholar

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2016 01:17 PM
    VANCOUVER — The struggles of a gender-bending spirit servant in a Shakespearean classic offer unlikely but valuable insights into the experience of life as a modern-day trans person, argues a British Columbia scholar.
     
    Mary Ann Saunders, an English professor at the University of British Columbia, said she was struck after watching Julie Taymor's 2010 Hollywood interpretation of Shakespeare's "The Tempest" by parallels between the antics of Ariel and her own experience as a trans woman.
     
    In the play, the spirit Ariel, who is an indentured servant to the protagonist Prospero, is directed by his master on multiple occasions to take on the form of a woman.
     
    Saunders described an academic article that referenced Ariel's female depictions, with male features and a woman's breasts, as a grotesque and impossible horror.
     
    "I thought, 'Now wait a second. This body looks an awful lot like the bodies of a lot of trans women I know, and it looks an awful lot like my body, and our bodies are not grotesque and our bodies are not impossible,'" Saunders said in an interview.
     
    As a supernatural being Ariel is portrayed as someone who never belongs, mirroring the trans experience, she added.
     
    "Ariel is a trans figure who's always being excluded, but because of my own history I find a place of connection with her. So this analysis allowed me to see Ariel not as (an outsider) but similar to myself."
     
    Saunders will present her theory alongside dozens of other leading trans scholars at this week's Moving Trans History Forward conference at the University of Victoria.
     
     
    The school will host activists, academics, archivists, allies and artists to help preserve, explore and celebrate the history of trans and gender-non-conforming communities around the world.
     
    UVic professor and renowned sex and gender expert Aaron Devor, who is also the world's first research chair in transgender studies, said he hopes the four-day event will spur research into both the past and present experience of trans people.
     
    "It's important both to understand where we came from and also to have a look at where we're going," Devor said.
     
    He defined a trans person as anyone who feels their body doesn't fit their gender.
     
    He added that Canada has reached a tipping point where a "slim majority" has become knowledgeable and accepting towards trans people.
     
    "This is a very positive development. ... There's a thirst for understanding and knowledge about what is the right thing to do to properly integrate trans people into society," he said.
     
    "My hope for the future is that one day a person's gender identity and gender expression will simply be part of what that makes them unique and interesting, but not be the basis for stigma or discrimination."
     
    Longtime Vancouver-based trans activist Jamie Lee Hamilton is part of a four-person panel at the conference, where she will discuss the historic and present-day overlap between the trans and sex-trade communities.
     
    "We must remember the early pioneers, many of them adult-industry workers, and never forget them," she said during an interview.
     
     
    "They led the movement and we should never forget about them."
     
    The conference is scheduled to run until Sunday afternoon and will involve more than 150 people, mostly from the United States and Canada.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter

    Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter
    Genuine explosive materials are traditionally used to train dogs to detect explosives and to test their performance later on....

    Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter

    Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting

    Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting
    VICTORIA — A First Nations elder told a National Energy Board hearing that Kinder Morgan's proposed pipeline expansion threatens traditional hunting and food sources and the archeological sites of his people.

    Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting

    Demand For Low-End Smartphones Is On The Rise As Some Customers Favour Price Over Brand

    Demand For Low-End Smartphones Is On The Rise As Some Customers Favour Price Over Brand
    It might seem as though everyone has an iPhone or Galaxy smartphone. But many customers are eschewing the best cameras and screens — and their top-end price tags — and choosing models that can get the job done at less than a third of the cost.

    Demand For Low-End Smartphones Is On The Rise As Some Customers Favour Price Over Brand

    Mummy wearing jewellery unearthed in Egypt

    Mummy wearing jewellery unearthed in Egypt
    Spanish archaeologists have discovered about 4,000 years old female mummy wearing rare jewellery in Egypt....

    Mummy wearing jewellery unearthed in Egypt

    How a change in pitch alters power equations

    How a change in pitch alters power equations
    Altering the pitch of your voice can fundamentally change the way you speak, says a study, suggesting that others are then able to pick up on these vocal cues...

    How a change in pitch alters power equations

    Science bears witness to dog's love for master

    Science bears witness to dog's love for master
    Your dog loves you as much as you love it, researchers confirmed in a study that looked inside the brain of our canine friends using imaging technology....

    Science bears witness to dog's love for master