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APA Division 44
Many of the problems raised by publication of The
Man Who Would Be Queen by J. Michael
Bailey intersect with the upcoming battle over depathologizing gender variance.
Many of the political gains made by gays and lesbians can be directly linked
to the decision to depathologize homosexuality by the American Psychological
Association in 1973. Bailey, Blanchard, and Lawrence promote a taxonomy that
plays into the outmoded idea that gender variance is an expression of a psychosexual
pathology.
The Society for the Psychological Study of Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Issues
was founded in 1985 as a Division of the American Psychological Association,
to represent sexual orientation issues within and beyond the Association. The
Division sponsors 9 committees and 3 task forces in order to fulfill its mission.
Nicknamed DIV 44, they maintain an online presence here:
http://www.apa.org/divisions/div44/
The official name as it stood in 2004 still does not include "Transgender,"
suggesting DIV 44 is woefully behind the learning curve regarding the complex
relationships involving aspects of gender variance and sexuality. Unfortunately,
into this vacuum of ignorance has poured an infestation of Clarke
Institute psychologists with a taxonomy of gender variance to promote and
an axe to grind.
James Cantor and the Clarke Institute infest DIV 44
James Cantor is a notably virulent representative
of the transphobia rampant at the Clarke Institute and in pockets of resistance
within this psychology trade group.
Cantor has clear political aspirations in his field. Cantor was probably involved
in orchestrating an event in August 2003, where DIV 44 President James
Fitzgerald inexplicably gave an award to Cantor's mentor Ray
Blanchard of the Clarke Institute
for his "contributions" on gender identity.
As noted by sociologists like Ekins, Blanchards "science" is
yet another example of that tradition within the medical model and positivist
science which seems overly preoccupied with classification, in the service of
diagnosis, etiological theorizing and the management of "disorders."
Blanchard has another protégé named Anne
Lawrence, who vigorously defends the diagnosis of "autogynephilia"
that Ray Blanchard created. The similarities between Blanchard's work on gender
variance and pre-1973 "science" about the pathology of homosexuality
are striking.
In 2003, Cantor had an incident placed on his personnel record after heckling
a transgender presenter invited to the Clarke Institute. Ironically, the presenter
was there to work on repairing the historically strained relationship between
that mental institution and the Toronto transgender community. The Clarke Institute
is nicknamed "Jurassic Clarke" for its regressive policies regarding
access to health services for gender-variant clients. Though it has since changed
its name, The Clarke has not shaken the sociobiological stigma of its namesake,
renowned eugenicist Charles Kirk Clarke, and the Canada's notorious policies
toward "the unfit," including the GLBT community.
Cantor praises J. Michael Bailey in the name of DIV 44
James Cantor wrote a glowing review of The
Man Who Would Be Queen by J. Michael
Bailey for their Summer 2003 newsletter. Cantor and Bailey are both protégés
of Ray Blanchard. Bailey considers himself an adherent of evolutionary psychology
and claims that "evolutionarily, homosexuality is a big mistake,"
and that homosexuality may represent a "developmental error."
http://www.apa.org/divisions/div44/vol19nu2.pdf
(PDF: requires reader)
The review appears on page 6, or you can read it on this site's page on James
Cantor.
Cantor's shill review was later used in promotional material by Bailey's publisher,
Joseph Henry Press. In Summer, 2003,
the APA DIV 44 Newsletter
printed a review of Bailey's book
by James Cantor of Toronto's Clarke Institute.
This review was in turn used in promotional
materials by Joseph
Henry Press on their website.
Publicist Robin Pinnel failed to include
Cantor's name with the blurbs, suggesting that Cantor's views represented all
of DIV 44's assessment of the Bailey book. Cantor's name was added after DIV
44 protested.
Below is a sample of the wide-ranging concerns about this book's ideology:
Harry Benjamin International Gender Dysphoria
Association president Eli Coleman called it "bad science."
Virtually every transgender advocacy group has expressed concerns about the
biased and sensationalized storytelling.
Kinsey Institute Director John
Bancroft M.D. told Bailey in front of a crowd of peers the book "not
science."
Hate group monitor Southern
Poverty Law Center has reported on Bailey's and Blanchard's ties to eugenicists
and right-wing journalists.
Concerned
psychologists have written numerous responses.
Dr. Madeline Wyndzen responds in DIV 44's Spring 2004 newsletter
Dr. Wyndzen has written several essays outlining flaws in Blanchard's thinking
and methodology. She was invited by DIV 44 to respond with a full-length article,
which is available here:
A personal and scientific look at a mental illness model of transgenderism
by Madeline H. Wyndzen, Ph.D. (pen name)
Division 44 Newsletter, Spring 2004, page 4.
Editors Note: Ms. Wyndzen originally submitted a brief letter
to the editor in response to a recent book review of The Man Who Would Be
Queen in this Newsletter. I invited her to expand on that letter here.
If a man sought therapy due to unhappiness over his attraction to other men,
a therapist would likely diagnose him with Depression. If a transsexual sought
therapy due to unhappiness over his or her biological sex, a therapist would
almost certainly diagnose him or her with Gender Identity Disorder. Whereas
gay men and lesbian women are diagnosed for how they suffer , transsexuals
are diagnosed for who they are. As a psychologist and transsexual, I find
that the mental illness label imposed on transsexuality is just as disquieting
as the label that used to be imposed on homosexuality.
Similar to antiquated ideas suggesting that homosexuality is a deviant sex-drive,
Ray Blanchard (1989, 1991) proposed
that transsexuality is a mis-directed form of either heterosexuality (named
autogynephilia) or homosexuality. Rather than asking the scientifically
neutral question, What is transgenderism? Blanchard (1991) asks,
"What kind of defect in a male's capacity for sexual learning could produce
autogynephilia, transvestitism
?" (p. 246).
Blanchards model is featured prominently and uncritically in J.
Michael Baileys (2003a) recent book, The
Man who would be Queen: the Science of Gender-Bending and Transsexualism.
A balanced portrait of Blanchards key empirical findings (1989) would
reveal that they: (1) have never been replicated, (2) failed to include control
groups of typically-gendered women, (3) failed to covary the acknowledged
age-differences from ANOVA, and (4) drew conclusions about causality from
entirely observational data.
Inconsistencies between transsexuals self-portraits and Blanchards
model are reconciled by Bailey (2003a) with the suggestion that some transsexuals
are deceptive: There is one more reason why many autogynephiles provide
misleading information about themselves that is different than outright lying.
It has to do with obsession (p. 175). Aware of concerns that some may
be troubled by his portrayal of them, Bailey has said, I cannot be a
slave to sensitivity (quoted in Wilson, 2003), and There is good
scientific evidence that says you should believe me and not them (quoted
in Dreier & Anderson, 2003). In a critique of Baileys book available
on my website, I provide alternate interpretations of this evidence:
http://www.genderpsychology.org/autogynephilia/
Bailey (2003b) contends that negative reactions to his book are merely identity
politics that are a "hindrance" to "scientific truth"
(Bailey, 2003b). Contrasting his objectivity with others politics reminded
me of 81 Words, a radio documentary about the removal of homosexuality
from the DSM (Spiegel, 2002). Those who diagnosed homosexuality
as a mental illness genuinely felt that they were helping their clients. I
know that Ray Blanchard, J. Michael Bailey, and others are similarly concerned
about the welfare of transsexuals. I only wish they would see the bias in
their theories and diagnoses. When I listened to 81 Words, I was
struck by how foreign it sounded to talk about being gay or lesbian as a disorder.
I am too young to remember that time. My hope is that someday my children
will think it just as unfathomable that I was once diagnosed and treated for
Gender Identity Disorder.
References
Bailey, J. M. (2003a). The Man
who would be Queen: the Science of Gender-Bending and Transsexualism.
Joseph Henry Press, Washington
DC.
Bailey, J. M. (2003b, July 19). Identity politics as a hindrance to scientific
truth , presented at the conference of the International
Academy of Sex Research. Abstract retrieved July 16, 2003, from http://www.iasr.org/meeting/2003/ABSTRACTS2003.doc
Blanchard, R. (1989). The
Concept of Autogynephilia and the Typology of Male Gender Dysphoria. The
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 177(10), 616-623.
Blanchard, R. (1991). Clinical Observations and systematic studies of autogynephilia.
Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy, 17(4) , 235-251.
Dreier, S. and Anderson, K. (2003, April 21). Profs
book challenges opinions of human sexuality. The Daily Northwestern, retrieved
December 31, 2003, from http://www.dailynorthwestern.com/
Spiegel, A. (2002, January 18). 81 words. This American Life , retrieved January
18, 2002 from http://www.thislife.org/pages/descriptions/02/204.html
Wilson, R. (2003, June 20). Dr. Sex: A human-sexuality expert creates
controversy with a new book on gay men and transsexuals. Chronicle of Higher
Education , retrieved June 27, 2003, from http://chronicle.com/free/v49/i41/41a00801.htm
http://www.apa.org/divisions/div44/2004Spring.pdf
(PDF: requires reader)
Transgender Task Force mission statement
DIV 44 has been taking steps to be more responsive to the needs of transgender
people interacting with mental health professionals, including the mission statement
below:
http://www.apa.org/divisions/div44/missionstatement.htm
One of the most important steps DIV 44 can take is to learn about the context
of the Clarke Institute's historically adversarial relationship with the clients
they were supposed to serve.
The upcoming controversy
The American Psychiatric Association (http://psych.org) is currently gearing
up to revise the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders from
the DSM-IV-TR to the DSM-V (due around 2010).
A reader notes:
In short American Psychological Association (APA.org) are our friends, but
American Psychiatric Association (PSYCH.ORG) are our
oppressors, the ones who who re-pathologize homosexuality if they thought
they could get away with it. I added their target date - 2010 - so as not
to raise false hopes of a constructive change.Personally I believe GID will
be rendered irrelevant for practical purposes (by increasing circumvention
of the HBIGDA SOC) before GID is abolished.
One of my research assistants saw similarities in this story of behind the
scenes manipulation of APA guidelines with the Bailey-Blanchard-Lawrence controversy.
http://www.thislife.org/pages/descriptions/02/204.html
The full text of this roundtable discussion transcribed by June L Roberts
can also be found here.
As a community, we must begin working with APA DIV 44 to counter the distortions
and pseudoscience that the Clarke Institute has used to dominate this important
debate. I encourage any of you with an interest in this matter to contact the
following community leaders:
LINK: Dr. Madeline
Wyndzen at genderpsychology.org
LINK: Dr. Katherine
Wilson at GID Reform
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