Sooo just a reminder:
Dresses were the norm for boys in 100+ years ago, and the color pink was a color for boys as well.
Oh yea and in the 1700s it was normal fashion for men to wear high heels.
But hey, lets make up whatever fake history we want to make gender norms sound like they have always been the same and that "cross dressing" and "drag" are somehow new inventions.
Sure they did.. cross-dressing specifically to wear styles of the opposite gender was **also** very common and not a modern invention by any means.
Fashion does change, but the pursuit of beauty probably does not.
Suits look great on gentlemen, but also handsome on women. Likewise, although dresses (in modern times) are generally considered to be women's clothing, they look just as good on men when properly dressed.
I don't think clothing should be tied to gender, if it looks good, then it's pretty/beautiful. If it's not, kindly offer your advice (about dressing techniques, not your opinions about genders and clothes), or just turn your head away, simply don't look.
Also, cats generally don't share the same gender with humans, but human clothes look pretty on them too.
*sighs*
They were still conforming to the gender stereotypes of the time. It's important to remember that it's 2023, not <1923
No not always. The high-heels was not at all common for men to wear until the king decided to wear them (cross-dressing) at which point other men began adopting it as a fashion norm, but only after.
We also have countless famous figures who cross-dressed throughout history.
True.
As we do today. However, it's not known that we had people across history identifying as the other sex while cross-dressing. It's not cross-dressing that's unprecedented, but rather identifying as the opposite sex while doing so. Although, there are some fringe historical cases in which this has occurred...
* cue Nero & Sporus reference as a #Succession fan *
Huh there are tons of historic examples of people who were of one sex identifying as another sex... we have whole stories written about it.. Joan de arc is among the most famous.
Her entire story is her dressing like a man withe the intention of being identified and treated as a man.
@freemo Hmm I'm not finding any record of her identifying or trying to be treated as a man.
Wait what, thats literally the whole story around her.. She dressed as a man to get into the military.
@freemo Ah I see. I thought you were saying that she believed herself to be a man, rather than dressed up as a man as part of a disguise.
Im not sure what "I beleive I am a man" means.. She acted like a man, looked like a man, demanded people refer to her as a man, and people did.
Today man is split between sex (your dna) and gender (how you appear on the outside).. back then sex was related to your genitals mostly and gender was largely the same.. Unless you were talking about penises and vaginas you were talking about gender.
@freemo Do you understand the difference between how you want other people to treat you, and your own conception of yourself? For example, the concept of disguises?
Sure.. perception of ones self would simply be your perceived gender.. so how you see yourself is basically saying "do you think when you look at yourself you look male or female"... the perception of others is also gender, just what gender they perceive... its all gender.
@freemo lol what? "It's all gender" isn't a response 😂
Self conception is: I am a man/I am a woman
It is possible to want people to perceive you to be something other than your self conception, and that's what I'm getting at here. One can believe themself to be a woman, but want others to treat them as a man.
The thing you are missing here is woman has 9 separate dictionary definitions.
So when you say "I am a woman" without any context makes no sense.. which definition of woman are we using...
Generally in the vast majority of conversation we mean gender, which is one of hte 9 possible definitions.
So what your asking is, can a person dressed like a woman, and who looks like a woman to someone else lopok at themselves and go "I dont think I am a woman".. or vice versa... yea, whats the point?
I mean, if there was a old lady with a moustache, she just so happened to have the sex of a woman, but she looks rather manly... you look at her and despite the fact that she is in a dress, you think overall she looks more like a man.. do youdeclare this poor old woman is a man and treat her as such until she shows you her vagina, or do you defer to her own self-image and treat her like a woman despite the fact that you have no idea what her genitals look like?
> The thing you are missing here is woman has 9 separate dictionary definitions.
So when you say "I am a woman" without any context makes no sense.. which definition of woman are we using...
Generally in the vast majority of conversation we mean gender, which is one of hte 9 possible definitions.
I feel like we're getting into some pedantic territory here...I mean "believe they're a woman" in the sense that a #trans woman believes there's a woman. Whatever definition that is, that's the one I'm using
> you look at her and despite the fact that she is in a dress, you think overall she looks more like a man.. do youdeclare this poor old woman is a man and treat her as such until she shows you her vagina, or do you defer to her own self-image and treat her like a woman despite the fact that you have no idea what her genitals look like?
I mean I don't treat people differently based on their sex tbh, so I wouldn't declare anything
Well, if the person is a woman I might give them a normal hug rather than a "pound hug" since rubbing your forearm against a random woman's boob is generally frowned upon. And if the person is pretty attractive to me, I may stutter awkwardly. But otherwise, yeah I don't treat men and women differently.
>I feel like we're getting into some pedantic territory here...I mean "believe they're a woman" in the sense that a #trans woman believes there's a woman. Whatever definition that is, that's the one I'm using
Trans people make the same mistake, they arent clear about definitions or technicalities and start a lot of needless drama. Why are we adopting that pattern?
While im not sure many trans people know what definition their using, as I said, it seems that we are mostly using the gender-based definition, which we covered.
> I mean I don't treat people differently based on their sex tbh, so I wouldn't declare anything
Well you refer to them as a he or a she, and in conversations if asked "was that a woman" you would have different answers.
So the question here is if you see an elderly lady that looks like a man who is cross dressing, but you dont actually know what sex they are, and their gender appears to be a male attempting to present the gender of a woman and you ... well do you refer to them as a woman or a man? In other words, are you categorizing the woman and the men around you based on sex (their genitals) or based on how they attempt to present (are they trying to look like a woman or a man).. or are you basing it on how they actually present (you judge them to look more like a man despite them trying to look like a woman so you call them a man)
> Well you refer to them as a he or a she, and in conversations if asked “was that a woman” you would have different answers.
This is also true. But beyond that, yeah not much would change.
Sure I get that. but this is the one point that is such an issue as of late... No one cares if someone is a "real woman" because that is a nonsensical statement... what people care about is if you treat someone like a woman or a man (what bathroom can they use, what pronoun do you use, etc).
> No one cares if someone is a "real woman" because that is a nonsensical statement
Hmm? What's your source for this? And I'm a bit surprised that you're saying that "real woman" is a nonsensical statement; a bit redundant, perhaps, since women are women, so I generally don't use that term, but it's not ridiculous in any way to refer to "real women"
@freemo @realcaseyrollins Joan of Arc only did that to be able to access an privilege reserved to men, not because of some gender identity conflict.
We dont know that, the reality is we have no clue what motivated her to cross dress or her views on identity.
Also we need to be clear here these are different issues, both of which are under the spotlight recently..
1) people who dress as the opposite sex but dont identify as the opposite.. these would be called cross dressed (if not entertaining) and a drag queen if they take an entertainment role.
2) Trans people who may or may not dress as the opposite sex but are int he process of adapting their gender to that sex.
This post is intending to focus on cross-dressing, not trans.
@freemo Oh I see, thanks for the clarification; yes, people have done this across time. There was actually an OT commandment telling the Israelites to not cross-dress (Deuteronomy 22:5) so the practice likely has more or less been around forever.
Although, cross-dressing in the #USA as a serious act I think is new; traditionally it was relegated to comedy sketches. I could be wrong tho.
@1db113ebbf6dca151c2971fc8e61e378d2b2c95b5b029789a996ea47a775d16f @realcaseyrollins
It could mean anything that causes their outward appearence to approach the other gender. If you look more like the opposite sex (intentionally) then you are somewhere along transitioning.
Actually yes, John was the name she used when she was presenting as a man.
How much of it was a disguise or pseudonym vs them actually identifying is not recorded. Their personal motivations wasnt really recorded as far as I know, in fact much of the details are lost to history.
"Yes, men working on farms wore high heels."
"The majority of men laboring on the land wore high heels."
"Factory workers during the Industrial Revolution wore high heels."
Shut up, you dumb ass.
It does seem like a double standard that modern women can wear skirts or pants, but men can only wear pants, not skirts. (Kilts may be a technically permitted exception, but "kilts for men" are awfully overpriced last time I checked.)
@freemo I have a charming photo of my granddad and his sister. He's got on a frock, she wears dungarees. They are both in clogs though.
Heels were designed to help in riding horses either for sport or war.
In other words, it did not start out being about fucking fashion; heels served a practical purpose.
You've reversed the sequence. That's fake history.
Pay closer attention to my words.. I didnt say heels I said "high-heels" this particular form of heels was very much for fashion unlike shoes with raised heels more generally which had different purposes depending on the circumstances.
You wrote "normal fashion," which is to claim it was the norm for men.
It wasn't.
The elites of the day had the $ and the "fashion sense."
So...like 89%, 69%, 45%, 37%, 23%, or less than fucking 5% of the male population in the 17th century wore high heels?
Incorrect.
In the 1700's this style was only in courts for the elites(who ultimately lost their heads for their extravegance, not normal for regular people.
Don't confuse French court macaroni nonsense with the behavior of 99% of the rest of the population.
As for dresses 100 years ago.
Show me a picture of an American wearing a dress in 1923.
You are smarter than that.
Seriously.