lovelybookshelf
Written on Oct 6, 2016
Kate Bornstein really is a gender outlaw! She skates between the lines of all sorts of labels. She claims the word “tranny” and unabashedly uses the word “she-male.” It is what it is. [Here’s a thoughtful clip from I Am Cait where Bornstein and Jennifer Finney Boylan discuss “tranny.”]
Bornstein provides first-person insight into early feminist and trans rights movements. Reading about her experiences helped me understand some of the attitudes of older trans women I’ve met (Bornstein grew up in that Father Knows Best / Leave It to Beaver era). I didn’t understand their perspective at all before, but I gained insight learning about the troubled history between feminists and trans activists, and infighting within the trans community.
The bulk of A Queer and Pleasant Danger talks about Scientology, because Bornstein was involved in that for twelve years, until she formally left in 1981 and was banned from contact with her family (including her 8-year-old daughter Jessica, who is now an adult with children of her own) . There’s a lot of information here, much of it downright chilling. The memoir ends with a heartfelt letter to Jessica, should she and her children ever read the book.