Difference between revisions of "Third-Gender Roles in Indiana-Area Native Americans"

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Though it is presumptuous to attempt label Native American cultural phenomena using purely Western terminology, it is clear to the observant historian that certain Native identities resemble, at least on the surface, modern queer identities. Though it would, again, be presumptuous to say that such identities really exist on the Western queer identity spectrum, it is difficult to avoid drawing parallels and making some level of identification, even for North Americans with solidly European family histories.  
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==Native American Cultures and White LGBT Identities==
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The racial history of Indiana contributes to a complicated politics of cultural identification for white LGBT people living there now, who often feel sympathy for displaced native cultures, identify with them as members of another oppressed social group, and celebrate aspects of those cultures that resonate with ways that contemporary LGBT communities think about their own identities and sexualities. It has been especially common for contemporary LGBT people to be fascinated by, and to romanticize, native cultural practices variously labeled as “berdache,” “two-spirit,” “third-gender,” “gay Indian,” or “transgender native.” Although it is presumptuous to label Native American cultural phenomena using purely Western terminology, it is nevertheless true that certain Native practices and statuses superficially resemble modern queer identities.
  
Unfortunately, the violent imperialism of European colonization and, later, all-American Manifest Destiny have largely erased these identities from history. Some records and research, however, have begun to uncover the histories of these social positions that demonstrate the paths that might have been taken had Europe itself…happened differently.
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==Third-Gender Roles in Indigenous Peoples of Contemporary Indiana==
  
== Tribes of the Midwest ==
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Although our research has not yet turned up information on whether the Shawnee people had categories of sex, sexuality, gender, and identity that didn’t easily correspond to dominant Eurocentric notions of “man” and [[Image:Indian east.jpg|upright|thumb|200px|Approximate pre-Columbian home ranges of Native American tribes of the eastern United States]]“woman,” several other tribes of the Midwest certainly did. The Miami had a status known as “Waupeengwoatar,” (White Face); the  Potawatomi had “M'netokwe,” (a masculine name with a feminine suffix), and the Illini had “Ikoneta.” This role was closely associated with the “Manitou,” or ancestor spirits, and it was restricted to male-bodied individuals. Those in the role were ineligible for status within the male hierarchy but could win recognition in the female hierarchy, and they spoke in the language inflection reserved for women. The Chippewa, who were closely related to the Illinois, had a third-gender role for male-bodied individuals called “Egwakwe,” and a gendering system that divided the objects in the world, including people, into active or passive categories, without reference to a person’s genital status. The Iroquois also had a third-gender role, and a system of leadership that ensured that women had a relatively large amount of power in making decisions compared to European colonists and other Midwestern tribes.
Several tribes of the Midwest had third-gender roles or non-western conceptions of gender.
 
[[Image:Indian east.jpg|upright|thumb|200px|Approximate pre-Columbian home ranges of Native American tribes of the eastern United States]]
 
  
The Iroquois, who covered much of modern Indiana prior to European colonization, had a third-gender role and a system of leadership that ensured that women had a relatively large  amount of power in making decisions, compared to European colonists and other local tribes.
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===Social Realities===
The Illinois had a third-gender role closely associated with the term manitou (itself a word referring to spirits or ancestors) restricted to male-bodied
 
individuals. Those in the role were ineligible for status within the male hierarchy but could win recognition in the female hierarchy and spoke with the language inflection reserved for women.
 
  
The Chippewa had a third-gender role for male-bodied individuals called egwakwe, and a gendering system dissimilar to European models, which divided the objects in the world as possessed of either active or passive force. These categories did not easily relate to European male and female categories, transcending genital sex as the best (or even an important)  determinant of one’s role.
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Not all Native American tribes had “third-gender” social positions. Many had instead a simple male/female dichotomy similar to the dominant Western gender system, and one should take care to remember that even those peoples whose culture had identity options we’d now be tempted to label “progressive” were still generally dominated by male-bodied individuals filling a male-typical role. The Iroquois, for example, in spite of having a third-gender role and privileging women’s votes for leaders, segregated social roles by sex, and restricted most leadership positions to men. Furthermore, even when cultures had a third-gender roles, members of those cultures sometimes expressed ambivalence about the individuals who occupied them. One well-known account involves a female-bodied/third-gender Lakota individual who was killed by fellow tribesmembers after taking female lovers in violation of the social norms for that role.
  
Not all Native American tribes had “third-gender” social positions to be filled. Many instead had the familiar Western male/female dichotomy, and one should take care to remember that even those possessed of what we might call “progressive” identity options and categories today were still generally dominated by male-bodied individuals filling a male-typical role. The Iroquois, who had a third-gender role and who privileged women’s votes for leaders, still restricted most leadership positions to men (in fact most positions were sex-segregated, and more positions were male-only than were female-only), for example.
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==Imperialism and Extermination==
  
Likewise, Native American tribes were not always entirely friendly to those occupying third-gender roles. There is a well-known account of a female-bodied Lakota individual occupying a third-gender role who was killed by fellow tribesmen after taking female lovers, including several recorded homophobic statements made about the individual killed.
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Although some of these identities remain part of contemporary native cultures, colonization drastically diminished them in both cultural memory and current practice. The third-gender status among the Illinois, for example, was widely observed by French merchants in 1675, but had virtually disappeared by 1698, due largely to the influence of Catholic missionaries. Other tribes in the region similarly found themselves pressured to suppress such cultural traits as European colonization increasingly saturated Native American life.
  
== Imperialism, Colonization, and the Eradication of Native Cultures ==
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==Appropriation==
  
Obviously most Native American culture did not survive into the 20th century. Some aspects of Native cultures, however, especially those particularly repugnant to European thought, hardly survived first contact.
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While it is inappropriate to place Native American identities in the spectrum of modern Western queer identities, it remains difficult for many North Americans with solidly European family histories to avoid drawing suggestive parallels between the two. Although there is virtually no direct continuity between indigenous forms of sexuality/gender and the white settler society’s queer identities, native “third-gender” statuses nevertheless lead many to  wish that the sad history of cultural contact in North America had happened differently, and to envision an alternative social order in which queer and straight, as well as people from different cultures, could live harmoniously with each other.  
  
For the Illinois tribe, for example, the third-gender identity, which was well-established ca. 1675, all but disappeared by 1698, in a pattern tied strongly to Illinois exposure to European missionaries. Other tribes with similar non-European gender or sexual roles increasingly found themselves pressured to put an end to such cultural traits as trade with and missionaries from European colonies increasingly saturated Native American life.
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Sources
  
 
Patrick Califia, Sex Changes: the Politics of Transgenderism. Cleis Press, 2003.
 
Patrick Califia, Sex Changes: the Politics of Transgenderism. Cleis Press, 2003.
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Raymond E. Hauser, “The Berdache and the Illinois Indian Tribe during the Last Half of the Seventeenth Century.” Ethnohistory 37 (1990): 45
 
Raymond E. Hauser, “The Berdache and the Illinois Indian Tribe during the Last Half of the Seventeenth Century.” Ethnohistory 37 (1990): 45
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Beatrice Medicine, “Directions in Gender Research in American Indian Societies: Two Spirits and Other Categories,” Online Readings in Psychology and Culture. April 2009. http://orpc.iaccp.org/index .php?option=com_content&view=article&id=61%3Abeatrice-medicine&catid=7%3Achapter& Itemid=4 .
 
Beatrice Medicine, “Directions in Gender Research in American Indian Societies: Two Spirits and Other Categories,” Online Readings in Psychology and Culture. April 2009. http://orpc.iaccp.org/index .php?option=com_content&view=article&id=61%3Abeatrice-medicine&catid=7%3Achapter& Itemid=4 .
Katsithawi Thomas, “Gender Roles among the Iroquois,” Vanier College’s The Native Circle, http://ww w.vaniercollege.qc.ca/tlc/publications/native-circle/native-circle-2003/ashley-thomas3.pdf.
 
  
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Katsithawi Thomas, “Gender Roles among the Iroquois,” Vanier College’s The Native Circle, http://ww w.vaniercollege.qc.ca/tlc/publications/native-circle/native-circle-2003/ashley-thomas3.pdf.
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Sabine Lang, "Native Terms for Berdache." BC Holmes. http://www.bcholmes.org/tg/berdache.html (accessed March 28th, 2010)
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'''Navigation''' | [[The Midwest's "Queer Mecca": 40 Years of GLBTQ History in Bloomington, Indiana (1969-2009) | '''Home''']] | [[BEFORE STONEWALL: WHAT MADE BLOOMINGTON A GAY OASIS? | '''Before Stonewall''']] | [[FROM STONEWALL TO THE AIDS EPIDEMIC: 1969-1981 | '''Stonewall to AIDS: the 70s''']] |
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[[AIDS, ACTIVISM, AND COMMUNITY VISIBILITY: 1981-1991 | '''AIDS and Community Life: the 80s''']] | [[QUEER BLOOMINGTON: 1992-2001 | '''The Queer Decade: the 90s''']] | [[QUEER HERE AND NOW: CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN THE 21st CENTURY | '''Queer Here and Now: 2001-Present''']]
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[[Category:Before Stonewall]][[Category:Transgender]][[Category:Indiana]]
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Latest revision as of 12:50, 30 April 2010

Native American Cultures and White LGBT Identities

The racial history of Indiana contributes to a complicated politics of cultural identification for white LGBT people living there now, who often feel sympathy for displaced native cultures, identify with them as members of another oppressed social group, and celebrate aspects of those cultures that resonate with ways that contemporary LGBT communities think about their own identities and sexualities. It has been especially common for contemporary LGBT people to be fascinated by, and to romanticize, native cultural practices variously labeled as “berdache,” “two-spirit,” “third-gender,” “gay Indian,” or “transgender native.” Although it is presumptuous to label Native American cultural phenomena using purely Western terminology, it is nevertheless true that certain Native practices and statuses superficially resemble modern queer identities.

Third-Gender Roles in Indigenous Peoples of Contemporary Indiana

Although our research has not yet turned up information on whether the Shawnee people had categories of sex, sexuality, gender, and identity that didn’t easily correspond to dominant Eurocentric notions of “man” and

Approximate pre-Columbian home ranges of Native American tribes of the eastern United States

“woman,” several other tribes of the Midwest certainly did. The Miami had a status known as “Waupeengwoatar,” (White Face); the Potawatomi had “M'netokwe,” (a masculine name with a feminine suffix), and the Illini had “Ikoneta.” This role was closely associated with the “Manitou,” or ancestor spirits, and it was restricted to male-bodied individuals. Those in the role were ineligible for status within the male hierarchy but could win recognition in the female hierarchy, and they spoke in the language inflection reserved for women. The Chippewa, who were closely related to the Illinois, had a third-gender role for male-bodied individuals called “Egwakwe,” and a gendering system that divided the objects in the world, including people, into active or passive categories, without reference to a person’s genital status. The Iroquois also had a third-gender role, and a system of leadership that ensured that women had a relatively large amount of power in making decisions compared to European colonists and other Midwestern tribes.

Social Realities

Not all Native American tribes had “third-gender” social positions. Many had instead a simple male/female dichotomy similar to the dominant Western gender system, and one should take care to remember that even those peoples whose culture had identity options we’d now be tempted to label “progressive” were still generally dominated by male-bodied individuals filling a male-typical role. The Iroquois, for example, in spite of having a third-gender role and privileging women’s votes for leaders, segregated social roles by sex, and restricted most leadership positions to men. Furthermore, even when cultures had a third-gender roles, members of those cultures sometimes expressed ambivalence about the individuals who occupied them. One well-known account involves a female-bodied/third-gender Lakota individual who was killed by fellow tribesmembers after taking female lovers in violation of the social norms for that role.

Imperialism and Extermination

Although some of these identities remain part of contemporary native cultures, colonization drastically diminished them in both cultural memory and current practice. The third-gender status among the Illinois, for example, was widely observed by French merchants in 1675, but had virtually disappeared by 1698, due largely to the influence of Catholic missionaries. Other tribes in the region similarly found themselves pressured to suppress such cultural traits as European colonization increasingly saturated Native American life.

Appropriation

While it is inappropriate to place Native American identities in the spectrum of modern Western queer identities, it remains difficult for many North Americans with solidly European family histories to avoid drawing suggestive parallels between the two. Although there is virtually no direct continuity between indigenous forms of sexuality/gender and the white settler society’s queer identities, native “third-gender” statuses nevertheless lead many to wish that the sad history of cultural contact in North America had happened differently, and to envision an alternative social order in which queer and straight, as well as people from different cultures, could live harmoniously with each other.

Sources

Patrick Califia, Sex Changes: the Politics of Transgenderism. Cleis Press, 2003.

Raymond E. Hauser, “The Berdache and the Illinois Indian Tribe during the Last Half of the Seventeenth Century.” Ethnohistory 37 (1990): 45

Beatrice Medicine, “Directions in Gender Research in American Indian Societies: Two Spirits and Other Categories,” Online Readings in Psychology and Culture. April 2009. http://orpc.iaccp.org/index .php?option=com_content&view=article&id=61%3Abeatrice-medicine&catid=7%3Achapter& Itemid=4 .

Katsithawi Thomas, “Gender Roles among the Iroquois,” Vanier College’s The Native Circle, http://ww w.vaniercollege.qc.ca/tlc/publications/native-circle/native-circle-2003/ashley-thomas3.pdf.

Sabine Lang, "Native Terms for Berdache." BC Holmes. http://www.bcholmes.org/tg/berdache.html (accessed March 28th, 2010)


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