Preview PDF
Preview PDF
Preview PDF
MARJORIE GARBER
This edition published 2011 by Routledge:
Routledge Routledge
Taylor & Francis Group Taylor & Francis Group
711 Third Avenue 2 Park Square, M i l t o n Park
New York, N Y 10017 Abingdon, Oxon O X 1 4 4 R N
Garber, Marjorie
Vested interests : cross-dressing and cultural anxiety / Marjorie
Garber.
p. cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 0-415-92034-5 (pbk)
1. Transvestism. 2. Transvestites. I. Title.
HQ77.G37 1991
306.77-dc20 91-20171
FOR BARBARA
CONTENTS
Picture Credits
ix
Acknowledgments
xi
Introduction: Clothes M a k e t h e M a n
1
I. TRANSVESTITE LOGICS
1. Dress C o d e s , o r t h e Theatricality o f D i f f e r e n c e
21
2. C r o s s - D r e s s f o r Success
41
3 . T h e Transvestite's Progress
67
5. Fetish E n v y
118
6. B r e a k i n g t h e C o d e : Transvestism a n d G a y Identity
128
CONTENTS
7. Fear o f F l y i n g , o r W h y Is Peter P a n a W o m a n ?
165
8. C h e r c h e z la F e m m e : C r o s s - D r e s s i n g i n Detective F i c t i o n
186
9. Religious Habits
210
11. B l a c k a n d W h i t e T V : C r o s s - D r e s s i n g the C o l o r L i n e
267
13. T h e Transvestite C o n t i n u u m : L i b e r a c e - V a l e n t i n o - E l v i s
353
Notes
391
Index
427
viii
PICTURE CREDITS
M a d o n n a , Express Yourself, p h o t o g r a p h by A l b e r t o T o l o t , p r o p e r t y o f W a r n e r B r o s .
R e c o r d s ; R o m a i n e B r o o k s , Una, Lady Troubridge, 1966.49.6, o i l o n canvas, 1924, 50 1/8"
ix
PICTURE CREDITS
x
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
xi
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
xii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
xiii
INTRODUCTION:
CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN
Although the logic of anatomy might suggest otherwise, skirts are the
traditional garb of women and pants the traditional garb of men—harem
bloomers and kilts, the exceptions that prove the rule.
Boston Globe Magazine, August 28, 1988
When you meet a human being, the first distinction you make is
"male or female?" and you are accustomed to make the distinction with
unhesitating certainty. Freud, "Femininity" 1
M a n y readers o f the New York Times w e r e startled recently to learn that one o f t h e i r
m o s t cherished assumptions about c l o t h i n g a n d g e n d e r was, apparently, w i t h o u t g r o u n d .
Baby clothes, w h i c h since at least the 1940's have been r o u t i n e l y d i v i d e d a l o n g g e n d e r
a n d c o l o r lines, p i n k f o r girls, blue f o r boys, w e r e , said the Times, once just the o t h e r w a y
about. In the early years o f the t w e n t i e t h c e n t u r y , before W o r l d W a r I, boys w o r e p i n k
("a stronger, m o r e d e c i d e d c o l o r , " a c c o r d i n g to the p r o m o t i o n a l literature o f the t i m e )
w h i l e girls w o r e blue ( u n d e r s t o o d to be " d e l i c a t e " a n d " d a i n t y " ) . O n l y after W o r l d W a r
II, the Times r e p o r t e d , d i d the present alignment o f the t w o genders w i t h p i n k a n d b l u e
c o m e i n t o being.
F e w articles i n the Times occasioned as m u c h casual astonishment, at least a m o n g
people o f m y acquaintance. It was generally k n o w n that infants a n d s m a l l c h i l d r e n h a d
f o r h u n d r e d s o f years been dressed alike, i n f r o c k s , so that f a m i l y portraits f r o m p r e v i -
ous centuries m a d e it d i f f i c u l t t o tell the y o u n g boys f r o m the girls. " B r e e c h i n g , " as a
rite o f passage, was a sartorial d e f i n i t i o n o f maleness a n d i n c i p i e n t a d u l t h o o d , as, i n
later p e r i o d s , was the a l l - i m p o r t a n t m o v e f r o m short pants t o l o n g . G e n d e r d i f f e r e n t i a -
I
INTRODUCTION
2
INTRODUCTION
3
INTRODUCTION
4
INTRODUCTION
TOOT-TOOT-TOOTSIE G O O D B Y E
O f all the cross-dressing films o f t h e eighties i t was Sydney P o l l a c k ' s Tootsie (1982),
starring D u s t i n H o f f m a n , that m o s t c a p t u r e d the p o p u l a r i m a g i n a t i o n — a s w e l l as t h e
i m a g i n a t i o n o f literary critics. Indeed, " T o o t s i e " has b e c o m e s h o r t h a n d i n some circles
f o r a m a n w h o puts h i m s e l f o n parade as a feminist, w h i l e retaining, u n s e l f - c r i t i c a l l y , a
5
INTRODUCTION
male-centered view of w o m e n . 1 1
I w o u l d l i k e here to take a closer l o o k at Tootsie i n o r d e r
t o focus o n some o f the issues that have surfaced a r o u n d cross-dressing i n recent l i t e r a r y
criticism.
A s m a n y c o m m e n t a t o r s have suggested, the overt "message" o f Tootsie is that w o m e n
are better t h a n m e n . D o r o t h y M i c h a e l s , H o f f m a n ' s female character, is m u c h m o r e
sensitive, p e r c e p t i v e , sisterly, a n d professionally successful t h a n M i c h a e l D o r s e y , the o u t -
o f - w o r k actor w h o i n desperation assumes the role o f D o r o t h y . B u t the subtext, as a r g u e d
by E l a i n e S h o w a l t e r a n d others, is that m e n are better t h a n w o m e n . A m a n dressed as
a w o m a n c a n beat o u t " r e a l w o m e n " f o r a part. A s S h o w a l t e r points o u t , the success o f
the film comes p r i m a r i l y " f r o m the masculine p o w e r disguised a n d v e i l e d by the f e m i n i n e
c o s t u m e . P h y s i c a l gestures o f m a s c u l i n i t y p r o v i d e Tootsie's c o m i c m o t i f o f female i m p e r s o n -
a t i o n . D o r o t h y M i c h a e l s d r o p s her voice to call a t a x i , lifts heavy suitcases, a n d shoves
a b u r l y c o m p e t i t o r o u t o f the w a y . D o r o t h y ' s ' f e m i n i s t ' speeches t o o are less a response
t o the o p p r e s s i o n o f w o m e n t h a n an instinctive situational male reaction t o b e i n g treated
l i k e a w o m a n . T h e i m p l i c a t i o n is that w o m e n m u s t be taught by m e n h o w t o w i n t h e i r
rights." 12
"Tootsie d o e s , " says Showalter, "have a message f o r w o m e n , a l t h o u g h n o t the
one the filmmakers i n t e n d e d . It says that feminist ideas are m u c h less t h r e a t e n i n g w h e n
they c o m e f r o m a m a n " (139). F o r this reason, she maintains, "I s h o u l d m a k e it clear . . .
that, to m y m i n d , Tootsie is n o t a feminist film" (136).
6
INTRODUCTION
7
INTRODUCTION
8
INTRODUCTION
T h e e i t h e r - o r s p i r i t o f a c e r t a i n c r i t i c a l response to Tootsie ( g o o d f o r w o m e n ; b a d f o r
w o m e n ) has been a c c o m p a n i e d by a certain tendency t o w a r d dismissiveness: the film, say
detractors, is slick, m a i n s t r e a m , unthreatening, n o t really a c r i t i q u e o f g e n d e r roles,
o p p o r t u n i s t i c a n d e x p l o i t a t i v e , a c o p - o u t . It is also, t o m y m i n d , a very g o o d film, even
r i c h e r i n detail o n r e v i e w i n g t h a n it is the first f e w times a r o u n d . If it is n o t a c r i t i q u e
o f gender roles, that m a y be because it is a c r i t i q u e o f gender itself as a category. A n d
i f it is slick, u n t h r e a t e n i n g , m a i n s t r e a m , etc., that m a y be because Tootsie, l i k e M i c h a e l /
D o r o t h y , successfully passes, a n d , i n passing, has b o t h its secret pleasure a n d its c u l t u r a l
effect.
9
INTRODUCTION
Some Transitional Types of Men and Women. B u t the " t h i r d s e x " turns o u t , f o r G i l b e r t , to be
largely a w a y o f securing p o w e r for (and c o p i n g w i t h the anxieties of) m o d e r n i s t women. 20
G i l b e r t ' s candidates for the t h i r d sex are not just any o l d h u m a n subjects b u t m i d d l e -
class W e s t e r n w o m e n , w h a t she calls " p o s t - m o d e r n i s t w o m e n " : the readers, i n fact, o f
p o s t - m o d e r n i s t c r i t i c i s m . B u t i f the t h i r d sex is made u p exclusively o f w o m e n , it w i l l g o
the w a y o f the f o r m e r l y m u c h - d i s p u t e d t e r m " M s . , " w h i c h denies the c r i t e r i o n o f m a r i t a l
status as a socially d e t e r m i n a n t label, b u t w h i c h is u t i l i z e d , largely, b y the already
c o n v e r t e d , the educated, middle-class, liberal w o m a n . In o r d e r to be m a x i m a l l y effective,
" t h e t h i r d s e x " m u s t be o p e n to m e n .
T h e " t h i r d s e x " c a n be thus assimilated to either the male o r the female p o l e o f the
h y p o t h e t i c a l g e n d e r b i n a r i s m : i n either case, it disappears. T o argue as G i l b e r t a n d G u b a r
do that " l i t e r a r y w o m e n generally persist i n seeking . . . a t h i r d sex b e y o n d g e n d e r "
(Sexchanges, 365) w h i l e " l i t e r a r y m e n " "express a nausea associated w i t h the b l u r r i n g o f
g e n d e r b o u n d a r i e s " is once again t o d i v i d e i n t o t w o camps, by b i o l o g i c a l g e n d e r rather
t h a n by sexual o r i e n t a t i o n o r any o t h e r c u l t u r a l d e t e r m i n a n t , that c o m p l e x r e a l m that is
a r t i c u l a t e d a n d d e c o n s t r u c t e d by transvestism i n literature a n d c u l t u r e .
T h i s t e n d e n c y t o erase the t h i r d t e r m , to appropriate the cross-dresser " a s " o n e o f the
two sexes, is e m b l e m a t i c o f a fairly consistent c r i t i c a l desire to l o o k away f r o m the
transvestite as transvestite, not to see cross-dressing except as male o r female m a n q u e ,
w h e t h e r m o t i v a t e d by social, c u l t u r a l , o r aesthetic designs. A n d this t e n d e n c y m i g h t be
called a n underestimation o f the object.
F o r m e , therefore, one o f the m o s t i m p o r t a n t aspects o f cross-dressing is the w a y i n
w h i c h it offers a challenge t o easy notions o f binarity, p u t t i n g i n t o q u e s t i o n the categories
o f " f e m a l e " a n d " m a l e , " w h e t h e r they are c o n s i d e r e d essential o r c o n s t r u c t e d , b i o l o g i c a l
o r c u l t u r a l . T h e c u r r e n t p o p u l a r i t y o f cross-dressing as a t h e m e i n art a n d c r i t i c i s m
represents, I t h i n k , an u n d e r t h e o r i z e d r e c o g n i t i o n o f the necessary c r i t i q u e o f b i n a r y
10
INTRODUCTION
n o name.
M a n y names have been g i v e n to this " t h i r d s e x " o r " t h i r d t e r m . " C a r r o l l S m i t h -
R o s e n b e r g talks about the d e v e l o p m e n t o f the concept o f the " i n v e r t " i n the n i n e t e e n t h
c e n t u r y . Renaissance d r a m a t i c c r i t i c s , l i k e Greenblatt a n d Stephen O r g e l , are interested
i n the c o n s t r u c t i o n o f the category o f the " b o y . " W e c o u l d argue that J o a n o f A r c
articulates a " t h i r d " category called " m a i d , " o r that M a x i n e H o n g K i n g s t o n establishes a
" t h i r d " as " w a r r i o r . " 2 4
11
INTRODUCTION
12
INTRODUCTION
"URINARY SEGREGATION"
13
INTRODUCTION
a m u l t i l i n g u a l clientele, the w o r d s " m e n " a n d " w o m e n " o r " l a d i e s " a n d " g e n t l e m e n " have
b e e n r e p l a c e d b y signs s h o w i n g a figure dressed i n male c l o t h e s — t r o u s e r s — a n d a figure
dressed i n female c l o t h e s — a skirt o r dress. Y e t n o one (except perhaps transvestites a n d
transsexuals) interprets these signs literally o r m i m e t i c a l l y . A w o m a n i n pants w o u l d n o t
o r d i n a r i l y g o t h r o u g h the d o o r m a r k e d w i t h a figure i n pants, n o r w o u l d a p r i e s t i n a
soutane o r a H a r e K r i s h n a advocate i n robes head f o r the d o o r w i t h the s k i r t .
14
INTRODUCTION
15
INTRODUCTION
16
INTRODUCTION
is not the gene itself, b u t its presence, that m a r k s the t r o u b l e spot, i n d i c a t i n g the l i k e l i h o o d
o f a crisis s o m e w h e r e , elsewhere.
In a similar w a y , I w i l l argue, the apparently spontaneous o r u n e x p e c t e d o r s u p p l e m e n -
tary presence o f a transvestite figure i n a text ( w h e t h e r fiction o r h i s t o r y , verbal o r visual,
imagistic o r " r e a l " ) that does n o t seem, thematically, to be p r i m a r i l y c o n c e r n e d w i t h
g e n d e r difference o r b l u r r e d g e n d e r indicates a category crisis elsewhere, a n irresolvable
conflict o r epistemological c r u x that destabilizes c o m f o r t a b l e b i n a r i t y , a n d displaces the
resulting d i s c o m f o r t o n t o a figure that already inhabits, i n d e e d incarnates, the m a r g i n .
T h u s a play l i k e D a v i d H e n r y H w a n g ' s M. butterfly, w h i c h tells the story o f a m a l e F r e n c h
d i p l o m a t a n d his affair w i t h a m a l e - t o - f e m a l e transvestite singer f r o m the C h i n e s e o p e r a
w h o t u r n s o u t t o be a spy, focuses attention o n E a s t - W e s t , O r i e n t - O c c i d e n t , a n d g a y -
straight tensions a n d redefinitions; that H w a n g s h o u l d choose f r o m c u r r e n t h i s t o r y
precisely this story, a n d that readers a n d reviewers o f his play s h o u l d regard transvestism
as its vehicle rather t h a n its tenor, as, once again, s o m e t h i n g t o be l o o k e d through o n the
way t o a story about m e n o r w o m e n , A s i a n o r E u r o p e a n — a l l o f this seems t o m e
s y m p t o m a t i c o f category crisis. A n d w e s h o u l d bear i n m i n d that H w a n g ' s play is based
u p o n a " r e a l " event; that the fantasies unleashed here are c u l t u r a l forces, n o t m e r e l y
" l i t e r a r y " ones.
17