Abstract
Introduction
According to mainstream media, the United Kingdom is currently in the midst of a ‘trans culture war’.
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While pushback against trans rights is far from new, the latest polarisation is linked to plans to reform the Gender Recognition Act (GRA), which were announced by the Conservative government in 2017 and opened to public consultation the following year (Pearce et al. 2020).
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The proposed reforms were met by concerted opposition from trans-exclusionary feminist activists, groups and organisations, a heterogeneous alliance that has continued to garner public attention through news and other social media platforms. Contemporary trans-exclusionary feminist discourse comprises various strands, including ‘gender-critical feminism’.
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One unifying trope across this discourse is the positioning of trans activism as antagonistic towards and/or in conflict with the aims of the feminist movement (Pearce et al. 2020). The GC philosopher, Kathleen Stock, for example, expresses concern that trans women are ‘coming to dominate political landscapes in the UK formerly reserved for women’ and questions whether trans women ‘can properly represent Women-who-are-Not-Transwomen’s experiences and concerns’ (Stock 2018: n.p.). Similar views are expressed by Julie Bindel (2021: n.p.) in her recent book,
The arguments set out by trans-exclusionary feminists like Stock, Bindel and Burchill have been roundly criticised for,
Laura Sjoberg (2012) suggests that feminist International Relations (IR) scholars have not, as yet, been caught up in the explicitly trans-exclusionary currents that have swept through some feminist academic and activist spaces. Yet the blind spot on the political economy of trans oppression is not just confined to GC and other trans-exclusionary feminist discourse. To date, critical and specifically feminist international political economy (IPE) has paid scant attention to trans subjectivities and struggle, beyond more general discussions of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer or questioning (LGBTQ+) politics. One exception to this trend is the renowned Marxist feminist scholar Silvia Federici (2020), whose latest collection,
In this article, I explore the epistemological and ontological roots of the neglect of trans oppression within critical and feminist IPE. 4 Against this background, I set out an alternative account that highlights why trans oppression matters for understanding social reproduction and ‘the body’ under capitalism. Evidently, the project of examining the political economy of trans oppression could be far-reaching. There is already an emergent corpus of scholarship that explores how neoliberalism produces and perpetuates racialised hierarchies of trans life (Snorton & Haritaworn 2013; Spade 2011; Stryker 2014), which has been largely overlooked within critical IPE. While IPE can benefit from better integrating trans oppression into the analysis of global capitalism, this scholarship, I argue, can also be advanced through closer engagement with some of the key epistemological and ontological debates that animate critical and feminist IPE.
To do this, the article seeks to illuminate some of the key material bases for trans oppression and show how they are inherently connected to other forms of gender oppression under capitalism. 5 The article thus breaks new ground in critical and feminist IPE and offers fresh insights into the political economy of gender oppression and the materiality of ‘the body’ more broadly. 6 It also advances the small corpus of studies that analyse trans oppression from a materialist perspective, notably recent work on ‘transgender Marxism’ (Gleeson & O’Rourke 2021; see also Lewis & Irving 2017; Irving 2008). Finally, taking inspiration from Leslie Feinberg (1992: 6), who argues that ‘solidarity is built on understanding how and why oppression exists and who profits from it’, the arguments presented here have an important political dimension: they demonstrate how political economy analyses of gender and social reproduction can be mobilised to advance rather than undermine trans struggle.
The article begins by examining the blind spot on the political economy of trans oppression within critical and specifically feminist IPE. 7 It then asks: how can political economy accounts of gender oppression and social reproduction better address trans struggle? And what does trans oppression tell us about the political economic roots, drivers and facets of gender oppression under capitalism more broadly? The article argues that feminist IPE has powerful tools with which to make the links between different racialised, gendered and sexualised inequalities in the global economy, including those experienced by trans people, and to uncover their co-constitutive character. However, theorising trans oppression in/through feminist IPE will require scholars to engage more deeply with queer and trans theorising – and specifically to adopt a queer account of heteronormativity and the body – and to relinquish the cis-normative attachments that shape some conceptualisations of capitalism, gender and social reproduction, notably within the Marxist feminist tradition.
The first section of the article locates the topic of trans oppression and embodiment within feminist and queer scholarship on political economy. I examine the critical insights provided by the literature(s) on sexuality, capitalism and the body and highlight what they do and do not tell us about the political economy of trans oppression. Based on this analysis, I respond directly to Federici’s (2020) argument in
Locating trans oppression within feminist and queer political economy
Over the past two decades, scholars of sexuality and capitalism have established a heterogeneous body of literature examining the relationship between non-normative sexuality and gender and the capitalist mode of production (Chitty 2020; D’Emilio 1993; Drucker 2015; Duggan 2003; Floyd 2009; Hennessy 2000; Smith 2020). One key area of interest within this scholarship pertains to the role of the state and supra-state modes of governance in regulating and disciplining sexuality (Bergeron & Puri 2012; Duggan 1994; Lind 2009, 2012; Peterson 2014; Puri 2016). Scholars have thus uncovered the heteronormative foundations of global development policy and practice (Bedford 2009; Bergeron 2009; Cornwall et al. 2008; Lind 2009) and critiqued the take-up of LGBT rights agendas within international financial institutions such as the World Bank (Rao 2015, 2020); This corpus of scholarship further overlaps with work in International Relations that looks at the queer sexual politics of statecraft and sovereignty, and specifically the role of hetero- and homonormativity in sustaining and shaping configurations of international and inter-state power (Agathangelou 2013; Peterson, 2014, 2017; Picq and Thiel, 2015; Weber 2016).
Heteronormativity is, according to Berlant and Warner’s (1998: 548) oft-quoted definition, ‘the institutions, structures of understanding, and practical orientations that make heterosexuality seem not only coherent – that is, organized as a sexuality – but also privileged’. In this sense, heteronormativity refers to the vast web of institutional, legal, social and economic norms that delimit what forms sex and gender can take, render these forms coherent and cohesive, and work to regulate them through key capitalist institutions such as the state, the market and the family. Put otherwise, heteronormativity works across micro, meso and macro scales, through the site of the (patriarchal) family/household, state practices and laws, structures of global governance and ‘sexualised orders of international relation’ (Weber, 2016: 6). Importantly, however, formations of heteronormativity are also shifting and contingent, with dominant family-forms and models of intimacy and kinship transforming over time. This reveals how shifts in the social relations of production and reproduction essentially shape and re-shape the limits and (im)possibilities of sexual freedom and repression (Sears 2017; see also Valocchi 2017). In this context, as Lisa Duggan argues, neoliberalism has given rise to a ‘new homonormativity’, in which certain queer subjects – married, procreative, monogamous – have been assimilated into the contemporary nation-state. This assimilationist politics has been adopted by mainstream gay and lesbian organisations and works to create queer populations that are de-mobilised and de-politicised, ‘anchored in consumption and domesticity’ (Duggan, 2003: 50). 8
V Spike Peterson’s work has long encouraged scholars of IPE/IR to take up insights from queer approaches to examine the interrelationship of the cultural and the economic and to challenge the tendency to ringfence queer sexuality and gender from the global economy. Drawing on Butler, Peterson (2014: 390) documents how the gender binary was produced and reified through early state-making practices: ‘making states makes sex’, as she puts it (p. 390). Peterson thus explains the codification and institutionalisation of binary sex and gender (i.e. male–female sex and masculine–feminine gender identities) in relation to laws concerning marriage, tax, inheritance and property and through the constitution of differently gendered socio-economic spheres. Peterson’s queering the state approach illuminates not only why it is important to uncouple gender – ‘the cultural meanings that the sexed body assumes’ (Butler, 1990: 9) – from sex, but binary sex – female–male sexed bodies – from biology. In other words, understanding the sexual politics of state-making requires a constructivist understanding of both gender identities and biological sex.
Recent work on the history of sex work in Britain further articulates the value of queer theory to feminist IPE (Smith 2020). According to Nicola Smith (2020), where feminist IPE has shed light into the inseparability of economic production and social reproduction, queer approaches can illuminate the production and repression of sexuality within these same circuits. Significantly, this account centres individuals and groups who are excluded from or marginalised within capitalism’s profit- and life-making circuits, that is, those who are considered ‘economically unproductive and/or socially unreproductive’, and highlights the key role that normative regimes of gender and sexuality (and the construction and disciplining of the non-normative) play in grounding and upholding the system as a whole (Smith, 2020: 23). The co-constitutive logic of capitalist sexual politics is similarly evoked by M.E. O’Brien, who notes how ‘family, on one hand, and sexual deviancy, sexual minority identities, sexual rebellion, on the other, are necessary counterparts to each other in the history of capitalist society’ (O’Brien et al, 2022: 66).
Finally, beyond the boundaries of IPE, Roderick Ferguson’s (2004) ‘queer of colour critique’ usefully clarifies the character and functioning of heteronormativity vis-à-vis race within processes of capital accumulation. For Ferguson, the production of racialised and gendered transgression, that is, the nonheteronormative, is part and parcel of the production of the idealised and the normative (white, middle-class, heterosexual). This is not incidental, but intrinsically linked to capital’s need to divide and accumulate, in Ferguson’s account through the exploitation of African American labour. This analysis identifies
In parallel to the scholarship on heteronormativity, queer politics, and political economy, feminist scholars have sought to ‘write the body into’ IPE, notably through studies of commercial sex (Pettman, 1996, 1997, 2000; Agathangelou 2006). This work has been key to re-positioning questions of embodiment within the boundaries of the economy – on the ‘inside’ of globalisation and capitalism (Smith 2012) – and to unsettling the ‘displacement’ of bodies onto women (Pettman 1997), as part of the broader ways in which masculinity and femininity are coded (Hooper 2000). While there are varying conceptualisations of the body advanced within this literature, there is a common emphasis on (1) uncovering how axes of oppression and relations of power such as class, race, gender and sexuality come to be inscribed upon (labouring) bodies (Pettman 1997; Smith & Lee 2015); (2) documenting the ways in which bodies both produce and are produced by political economic processes and structures (Smith 2012) and (3) combining an interest in the materiality of the body with an understanding of the effects of discourse (Youngs, 2000: 21; see also Agathangelou 2013). In this way, feminist scholars have sought to demonstrate why corporeal politics matter for IPE and to challenge the tendency to
This diverse literature has offered important correctives to the body-blindness of mainstream IPE and to the long-standing neglect of (queer) sexuality within analyses of global capitalism. Nonetheless, critical IPE, including feminist IPE, has largely overlooked matters of trans embodiment and oppression. With the exception of Smith’s work, there has also been little overlap between the feminist scholarship on corporeal politics and the queer-inflected scholarship on sexuality and capitalism (or indeed between the feminist scholarship on the household and social reproduction and the queer Marxist literature). It is almost 20 years since Peterson (2006: 499) encouraged feminist scholars of IPE to move beyond binary approaches to the study of men and women in the global economy – what she termed ‘empirical gender’ – to focus on ‘how masculinity and femininity . . . produce, and are produced by, political economy’. Yet, from an empirical and theoretical perspective, feminist IPE continues to focus overwhelmingly on women and, when it comes to corporeal politics, on women’s bodies. This preoccupation with women’s bodies has produced its own exclusions and omissions, with ‘male and transgender bodies consequently erased from the analysis’ (Smith, 2012: 590). Moreover, even within the feminist IPE literature on non-normative gender and sexuality, rarely do minoritised sexual and gendered lives represent the core focus of enquiry (Gore, 2022). Rather, they are typically recognised as heteronormativity’s ‘Other’ – that is, as people who are invisibilised within or excluded from macrolevel economic policies and processes – and/or as groups who are differentially impacted by political economic phenomena, such as poverty or austerity. In practice, this means that some of the key insights of queer theory – namely, that the Othering of the non-normative serves as an essential means to naturalise and shore up hegemonic sex/gender norms and power relations (and thus has both a social and
Undoubtedly, there has been an urgency to feminist IPE’s work on women, given the ways in which gender operates as a structural relation of inequality, the sheer extent of social and economic disparities between (cis) men and women in the global economy, and not least because both orthodox and critical IPE has historically neglected the study of women’s lives and labours (Waylen 2006). However, this does suggest that the implicit feminist subject in IPE remains women and, where this does extend to the analysis of gender as a meaning system, gendered subjectivities are conceived as cis-masculinities and cis-femininities. Put otherwise, one potential reason why trans subjectivities and oppression are confounding for feminist IPE is that, unlike other ‘identities’ contained within the LGBTQ + umbrella, they are essentially about gender, not sexuality. Trans modes of difference therefore challenge, stretch and, I argue, reveal the limitations of existing theorisations of gender and social reproduction in the field and, relatedly, existing understandings of how gender operates as a structural relation of power within the global economy.
The relative neglect of trans lives within feminist IPE is all the more notable when we consider that trans people, and trans people of colour in particular, have been disproportionately impacted by the post-recession retrenchment of neoliberalism: austerity, precarity, cuts to welfare services and the privatisation of social provisioning in key areas such as housing, employment, social care and mental health (Raha 2021). Globally, evidence also suggests that trans people are more likely to experience intimate partner violence than cis people, including cis women (Peitzmeier et al. 2020). Contemporary trans lives are thus shaped by a combination of state-sanctioned and extra-legal forms of discrimination, violence and targeted neglect, with Black, Indigenous and trans people of colour, and sex working trans people, especially those living in the Global South, at disproportionate risk of violence and premature death (Snorton 2017; Spade 2009). As the trans-exclusionary radical feminist ‘TERF wars’ discussed in the introduction illustrate, trans rights have also become a key site of political contestation and struggle in the United Kingdom and beyond, which includes attempts to roll back already existing rights for trans people. Against this background, this article argues that feminist IPE can and should engage with matters of trans oppression, as part of a broader research agenda focused on gendered forms of structural violence, social reproduction and everyday life under capitalism (Elias & Rai 2019). However, it is first worth addressing some of the misgivings and, I argue, misconceptions over the value of queer theory and the relationship between cis women’s and trans oppression as highlighted in Federici’s latest work. In so doing, I consider the writing in/out of the cis/trans body within Marxist feminist scholarship on gender and social reproduction more broadly.
On Federici and trans embodiment
With this categorical sleight of hand, Federici collapses together a heterogeneous and complex range of reproductive, embodied, and surgical technologies and practices: none of which are given any in-depth individual analysis in her essays. Thus, although Federici (2020: 4) acknowledges that these body remakes ‘widely differ’ in character, little attention is paid to their specificities. Instead, she concludes that: what looms large in each case is the power and prestige that medical experts have gained because of the life changes they promise. Such dependence on an institution that has a long history of cooperation with capital and the state should be a concern for us. (Federici, 2020: 4)
Cautioning trans people – who have been medicalised and pathologised throughout the 20th century (Gill-Peterson 2018) – of the power of the medical industry seems at best rather insensitive. It also reveals a worrying lack of engagement with the historical and contemporary realities of trans lives and activism and the wealth of trans scholarship on healthcare (Davy 2011; Lowik 2018; Pearce 2018; Occhino and Skewes 2020). In countries like the United Kingdom, trans people still require a formal diagnosis of gender dysphoria (previously known as gender identity disorder) to change the sex on their birth certificate. Relatedly, key diagnostic manuals such as the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders continue to classify gender dysphoria as a psychiatric illness. 10 Furthermore, according to a systematic review of legislation conducted in 2020, 13 out of the 41 countries in Europe and Central Asia that had a system for legal gender recognition required trans people to undergo mandatory sterilisation before changing their gender marker, including Czech Republic, Latvia and Romania (Transgender Europe 2021). 11 This is despite various international rulings and declarations seeking to ban mandatory sterilisation by actors such as the United Nations, the Council of Europe and the European Court of Human Rights (who ruled in 2017 that forced sterilisation is a violation of the right to private and family life).
However, as the Transgender Europe (2021: n.p) report highlights, in reality ‘many states continue to require sterility as a pre-condition for legal gender recognition. Legal texts can explicitly or implicitly request forced sterilisation by requiring proof of medical transition or insisting on a medical opinion that is typically provided only after gender-affirming surgery’. This indicates that although the landscape of trans rights in Europe is contested and evolving – and the implementation of existing laws may vary within and across jurisdictions – the medical and the legal remain intimately intertwined. It is therefore important to recognise continuity as well as change in the legal governance of trans subjectivities, not least because laws requiring mandatory sterilisation reproduce the eugenicist logics that informed medico-scientific discourse on race, sex, and gender in the late 19th and early 20th centuries (Gill-Peterson 2018). Put more simply, these types of legal requirement – whether based on medical certification/diagnosis, treatment, or sterilisation – reflect the ongoing ‘pathologisation of gender variance’ across the fields of government, law, and medicine (Lowik, 2018: 430). 12
Over the past 40 years, neoliberal attacks on state-provisioned healthcare, combined with the growing power of private insurance companies, have further exacerbated the barriers that trans people face in accessing safe, non-discriminatory and affordable healthcare across many parts of the world (Belinksy, 2021). This is why healthcare remains a major site of political organising among trans activists (a struggle which is essentially social reproductive in character). At the same time, trans activists and scholars have contested the rigid and medicalised pathways prescribed by doctors and psychiatrists to transition, as well as the ways in which medical professionals act as ‘gate-keepers’ to key types of trans healthcare (Lowik, 2018: 430). In this sense, it is structurally embedded forms of inequality and discrimination, patterns of neoliberal privatisation, and a lack of state provisioning for trans healthcare that creates the trans medical-industrial complex, not trans embodiment and transitioning processes in themselves. This wider political economic context is conspicuously missing from Federici’s account.
The cis/trans body in Marxist feminist political economy
Before developing this analysis further, it seems prudent to locate Federici’s latest work within the broader context of her scholarship, not least because theorisations of gender, violence and the body in IPE owe a great deal to her insights. In her path-breaking work,
This intervention connects to long-standing Marxist feminist debates over the role of biology, the body and social reproduction in the oppression of women. Reflecting on Lise Vogel’s scholarship, for example, Sue Ferguson and David McNally conclude that: It is not biology
In this excerpt, Ferguson and McNally note that women’s oppression is determined by the social (and, to an extent, biological) circumstances of their existence; the ‘male-dominant social order’ is not an
As these excerpts suggest, the bio-social materiality of women’s oppression under capitalism is a key insight of Marxist feminist theories of social reproduction; it is not the household,
McNally’s book is positioned as a critique of postmodern takes on the body, which are characterised as ‘de-materializing’, that is, as an attempt ‘to banish real human bodies – the sensate, biocultural, laboring – from the sphere of language and social life’ (McNally, 2001: 1). A similar critique underpins Federici’s writing, in which she rejects what she calls ‘performance theory’, that is, the work of scholars like Foucault and Butler, for destabilising the category woman to such an extent that it risks becoming politically and analytically unviable.
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This erosion of political identity, she suggests, will leave the feminist movement without ‘common experience of suffering and injustice’ (Federici, 2020: 2). Thus, for Federici, the material bases of women’s oppression – here conceptualised to include the biological, social and economic – are not just relevant to theories of political economy, but have important implications for feminist praxis: since she conceives of (cis) women’s bodies as a primary, essential locus of exploitation they also represent a crucial grounds for feminist solidarity-building and activism. This issue is explored at length in
The political economy of trans oppression: beyond bio/logics
Despite rejecting essentialist explanations of women’s oppression, these arguments retain what I term, borrowing from Sari van Anders (2014), an underlying form of ‘bio/logics’.
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In other words, while biological factors are not deemed to play a
This matrix, referred to in queer theory as heteronormativity, tells us that it is not biological difference itself but the construction and ascription of difference – biological, physical, corporeal – that is critical, as this underpins the social and economic conditions that determine gendered and sexualised oppression. Construction, as Butler (1993: 1) notes, does not mean something ‘artificial’ or ‘dispensable’; it means that sex functions as a norm and that the regulation of that norm ‘produces the body it governs’. Put more simply, queer and trans accounts of the body do not contend that there are no dimorphic sexual differences, that is, characteristics or features that can be understood as ‘male’ and ‘female’, but that how these differences are grouped together and classified is a fundamentally social (and disciplinary) act (Serano 2016; Stryker 2008). 17 There is also much greater variation and mutability in sexual characteristics than is recognised through binary sex categories focused on sexual dimorphism. This means, at the very least, that we must understand the biological constitution of bodies not as relatively fixed in an ontological sense, as per McNally’s account, but as fixed through a set of social acts, processes and interpretations.
This point is recognised, in part, by Sébastien Rioux (2015: 201), who notes that ‘racial hierarchies, gender orders and heteronormativity are not constructed out of thin air but rather through biological processes, corporal practices, and physiognomic attributes that are mobilized as physical markers of difference’ (p. 201). Rioux (2015: 198) further acknowledges that the connection made between biological difference and social facts within the social reproductionist tradition of Marxist feminism does not ‘provide a fully reconstructed theory of women’s oppression’. However, he does not develop this point further and instead quotes McNally’s argument that the ‘reinstatement of the body . . . must begin with the maternal body – understood in both its biological and social senses’. Again, Rioux’s account attributes a bio-social materiality to women’s bodies and women’s oppression that is fundamentally linked to processes of social reproduction. While this incorporates a constructivist understanding of gender, it does not apply this lens to the question of ‘biological’ sex. 18
This may seem like a relatively minor clarification. However, narrativisations of the body that focus on the necessary coincidence/conjunction of (female) biology and (gendered) social ‘facts’ not only risk reproducing the ‘displacement’ of the bodies onto women (Pettman 1997), overlooking the heterogeneity of actually existing family forms, kinship structures and intimate relations, and downplaying the extent of paradoxically, a testimony to the relevance of
In this passage, Federici emphasises differences between women and trans people in terms of their ‘physical makeup’, which she counter-poses with a constructivist view of gender identities. By framing this as a ‘paradox’, she seeks to impute a form of bio-essentialism to any trans person undergoing hormonal or surgical transition processes, an argument frequently advanced by trans-exclusionary feminists to critique trans politics and identities (Zazanis, 2021: 35). The passage is also rather contradictory, as Federici (2020: 50) goes on to highlight the limits of sexual dimorphism and the ‘broad range of possibilities that ‘nature’ provides’, using the example of intersex people. Nonetheless, the central point remains, according to Federici, that we cannot ignore key material and physiological facets of embodiment by arguing that they are culturally produced.
To address this ‘paradox’, for many trans and non-binary people, it is not surgery or hormones that define their transition but rather social acts of self-making, or what Rosa Lee (2021: 67) calls, ‘self-fashioning practices’. Trans subjectivities therefore challenge the duality and stability of sex and illuminate the extent to which sexed bodies and the gender they assume are contingent and mutable; they highlight the ‘social and temporal nature not only of gender, but of the sexed body’ (Lee, 2021: 67). While medical technologies are no doubt worthy of scholarly enquiry (and indeed trans scholars have themselves written widely on this topic), abstracting them from a broader set of social transitioning processes is misleading and obscures key insights into how categories of sex and gender are produced and regulated, as well as inhabited, subverted and resisted. This brings to mind Butler’s (1998: 41) interrogation of Marxist feminist theorising, where they asked: ‘how is it that suddenly when the focus of critical analysis turns from the question of how normative sexuality is reproduced to the queer question of how that very normativity is confounded by the non-normative sexualities it harbours within its own terms . . . the link between such an analysis and the mode of production is suddenly dropped?’ On the basis of this analysis, Butler’s question should be re-posed to include non-normative sexuality and non-normative gender identities, such as trans and non-binary.
From a political economy perspective, Federici’s analysis of gender reassignment surgery and the impossibilities of/threats to feminist solidarity posed by queer accounts of the body illuminate what is at stake when materialist approaches preserve the links between sex-as-biology, social gender, and oppression (even while critiquing them) and fail to take into account wider formations of racialised heteronormativity. From these cis-normative footings, trans bodies can only be positioned ‘inside’ the boundaries of capitalism in very narrow terms, as sources of profit for the medical-industrial complex, for example. These footings also work to downplay and disguise the
The commonalities in struggle between cis women and trans people are starkly highlighted by the eugenicist logics informing laws on forced sterilisation discussed earlier, which were historically not only applied to trans people, but to working-class women, Black, Indigenous, and women of colour and disabled people (Lowik 2018). These practices are one expression of the shifting forms of class-based, racial, gendered and bodily violence that have characterised the
These might seem like controversial claims, particularly given the contributions of the Marxist feminist tradition to unveiling invisibilised and feminised forms of labour, the social and economic bases and functions of gender roles and linking this to capitalist political economy. Indeed, I do not wish to overstate my critique here; there remains plenty to agree with in
In light of this, I argue that,
Read through the lens of queer political economy, the denial of trans people’s rights to parenthood, family life, marriage, their exclusion from employment, state benefits and access to healthcare – essentially the denial of full citizenship to trans people – is rooted in the same structures and relations that simultaneously rely on and devalue (cis) women’s identities, bodies, and work. The requirement that trans people be sterilised as a condition for legal recognition within some jurisdictions is not, in this sense, so much a
These reflections have sought to illustrate why it is both surprising and, in a sense, not surprising that Federici struggles to extend her analysis of violence and embodiment beyond (cis) women. In short, I have argued that there is an underlying tension within the ontology of the body as conceptualised within Marxist feminist scholarship on social reproduction, which could be resolved through greater attention to the concept of heteronormativity. Put more bluntly, my analysis suggests that the bio-social materiality of women’s oppression as it is construed within key strands of feminist IPE relies on heteronormative and specifically cis-normative assumptions, which attribute an ontological fixity to biological sex and/or retain an attachment to binary sex and biological difference that is not adequately problematised or deconstructed. This has the effect of confining gender variance (and the disciplinary regimes and social and economic power relations that constitute it), at best, to the footnotes of political economy analysis. This approach is insufficient to understand the coercive power of gender norms and the forms of exploitation and oppression experienced by minoritised gendered groups, as well as their centrality to the functioning of power within the capitalist state historically and contemporaneously, as will be illustrated in the following example.
The case of Sir Ewan Forbes-Sempill illustrates how UK law has historically and structurally grounded discrimination towards both women and trans people in terms of inheritance. Forbes was a trans man born as the child of Lord Sempill in Scotland in 1912. Assigned female at birth, Forbes later re-registered his birth certificate to change his sex to male. While his transition went relatively unremarked at the time, controversy arose upon the death of Forbes’ brother in 1982, which made him eligible for inheritance of the baronetcy, which included a sizable estate. Inheritance of the baronetcy was limited by primogeniture, meaning that the title could only be passed to male children (Playdon 2021: 36). Forbes’ cousin subsequently challenged the inheritance and forced Forbes into a legal battle to prove his status as a man. As Zoë Playdon (2021) explains, although the Scottish court eventually found in Forbes’ favour, many of the documents relating to the case were subsequently hidden or destroyed and the case was shrouded in secrecy, to the extent that it was almost entirely erased from legal record and could not be used as a precedent. Thus, while Forbes’ individual experiences were no doubt mediated by his class position, the institutional response to the case reveals the depth of the perceived threat to practices of primogeniture presented by trans subjectivities. This case was also the catalyst for changes to the law that imposed a series of complex legal and medical requirements on trans people’s ability to change the sex marker on their birth certificate. These changes lie at the heart of the current controversy over the GRA in the United Kingdom, as discussed in the ‘Introduction’ section, which continue to shape trans people’s struggle for full citizenship rights today.
Reading this historical example through a ‘queered’ social reproduction lens illuminates the intimate links between inheritance and property laws, the (re)production of the gender binary, and the uneven distribution of power and resources along gendered lines. In other words, it shows how the material basis of trans oppression is inherently linked to that of cis women’s oppression and to the institutional organisation of gender norms and social reproduction more broadly. This firmly positions trans oppression
Conclusion
Recent scholarship within queer political economy has highlighted the intimate links between sexuality and capitalism, as well as the potential insights offered by queer approaches to the study of IPE. This article has sought to advance this literature by examining the political economic foundations and facets of trans oppression and considering how this links to (cis) women’s oppression under capitalism. Specifically, the article responded to Silvia Federici’s claims about the threats posed to feminist political economy theory and praxis by queer accounts of the body and the incommensurability of feminist solidarity-building with trans modes of difference. In so doing, I argued that critical and feminist IPE scholarship needs to better understand the social construction of sex, as well as gender, and to grapple with how heteronormativity produces, and is produced by, the material (and discursive) bases of gender oppression.
My analysis of the writing in/out of the cis/trans body in IPE raises far-reaching epistemological, methodological and empirical questions as follows: how scholars working in the materialist tradition understand categories of sex and gender; how critical IPE approaches the study of the body and social reproduction under capitalism, including non-normative genders and sexualities; and whose voices and experiences of embodiment, oppression and exploitation matter when it comes to the study of global capitalism. In sum, the article has argued that a fully realised account of the political economy of gender cannot be established by ignoring or marginalising trans subjectivities and the types of oppression trans people experience. Nor can it be remedied by adopting an ‘add trans and stir’ approach. Rather, we need to revisit and revise our ontology of gender, power and social reproduction within the global capitalist economy using a queer and trans-inclusive lens.
In terms of future research, if we take seriously feminist IPE’s empirical and normative aims of documenting, understanding and challenging injustice and exploitation, then the project of analysing how capitalist social relations marginalise, devalue and at times render uninhabitable trans lives is especially pressing. As this article has sought to demonstrate, trans bodies, like cis women’s bodies, are a key site ‘upon which the hierarchies of global capitalism are inscribed, imprinted, produced and performed’ (Smith and Lee, 2015: 65). They are also a site where these hierarchies are challenged and subverted. In this sense, the social reproduction of trans life, particularly for working-class and poor trans people and for Black, Indigenous and trans people of colour, may be indelibly marked by oppressive structures and power relations, but it is also a crucial means of resistance.
