Sunday, October 22, 2006

Gay cowboys in 2005

http://www.mcsweeneys.net/links/lists/23PatrickT.Hewlett.html

I'm not sure if this was his point or not, but I've heard some people say that the LGBTQ film selection out there isn't too great. The criticism is that the films are shoddily acted/directed, or that the themes are simplistic and repetitive--mostly corny romantic comedies or else centered around young people trying to come out of the closet.

Sometimes I wonder if this opinion is right on, and sometimes I wonder if these folks just aren't looking in the right places for good queer-themed film. Anyone out there feel similarly to them, or disagree entirely?

For that matter... anyone out there at all? Come now, don't feel so bashful about commenting.


- Mitra

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

AIDS Mary urban legend

You might've heard the legend about the HIV-infected needles stuck in movie theater seats. Snopes.com, the urban legends reference website, debunks a variation of this tale:

http://www.snopes.com/horrors/madmen/aidsmary.asp

While the legends aren't really true, they highlight the stigma of AIDS patients. Now, there's a stigma behind venereal disease in general. I mean, you might not want anyone to know you have crabs or genital warts, either. But I suspect that the embarrassment that sometimes accompanies those conditions tends to be different (in degree and maybe even in overall character) from the humiliation that often accompanies AIDS. Sometimes it's implied that AIDS patients should feel morally guilty. Is it just the severity of the disease, or is it due to the frequent assumption that male AIDS sufferers are gay?

Or does it stem from AIDS's association with many different kinds of 'taintedness'--being queer, having sexual contact with a gay/bisexual man, injecting oneself with illegal drugs, being a sex worker, or just being poor, period? I'm bringing up that last item due to a recollection that in 16th century London, all levels of society could be afflicted with venereal disease, but usually only upper-class sufferers were the ones who could afford confidentiality of their condition, and I wonder if the case is similar here. And the public's gradual realization that many sufferers are female may also have changed AIDS's reputation as 'the gay disease'. Nowadays, it seems the AIDS patients portrayed in the media are just as often poor South African women as they are gay American males.

It's strange that queer people are frequently assumed to be middle-class or higher, but besides male-to-male sexual contact, the other common ways of contracting AIDS are associated with the lower class. Perhaps this ties into the classism among some queer communities, which someone mentioned in an earlier SAGA meeting.


- Mitra

Sunday, October 01, 2006

NYT article on intersex

Katie and Anne pointed out this New York Times article on intersex, which particularly focused on whether or not to perform genital surgery on intersexed children:

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/24/magazine/24intersexkids.html?pagewanted=1&ei=5087%0A&en=99d209ec7c8c7694&ex=1159416000

I agree with postponing operations on intersex children until they are old enough to decide for themselves, except in cases of medical emergency. However, I'm leery of many intersexed activists' belief that all individuals need to be assigned a gender of male or female at birth, not leaving room for other options. I realize that much of the world is not accepting of genders beyond male or female, and that this may complicate life for an intersexed child. But are those reasons compelling enough that we should insist that parents stick to the gender binary?


- Mitra