Germaine
Greer, the second-wave feminist best known for her 1970 book The Female Eunuch, accused Caitlyn
Jenner of “stealing the limelight” from the other women of the Kardashian clan
in an appearance on BBC2’s Newsnight.
During
the interview, Greer said that “misogyny played a big part” in Glamour magazine’s decision to award Jenner
their woman of the year award.
She
also defended previous statements in which she claimed that trans women were
not “real women.” via The Guardian;
“She
also refused to back down from her position that transgender women, who have
begun life as men before undergoing surgery and hormone treatment to become
women, are ‘not women,’ saying they do not ‘look like, sound like or behave
like women’.”
Greer’s
statements prompted a petition circulated by Cardiff University students. The
petition, aimed at having Greer barred from giving a speech on campus, was
started by Rachael Melhuish, women’s officer at the Cardiff University
Students’ Union. It claims that Greer has“demonstrated time and time again her
misogynistic views towards trans women, including continually ‘misgendering’
trans women and denying the existence of transphobia altogether.”
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By
Saturday, the petition had more than 800 signatures.
In
response to the petition, Greer told The
Guardian:
“I
don’t really know what I think of it. It strikes me as a bit of a put-up job
really because I am not even going to talk about the issue that they are on
about.
What
they are saying is that because I don’t think surgery will turn a man into a
woman I should not be allowed to speak anywhere.”
Despite
both controversy and petition, Cardiff University said that it would not cancel
Greer’s speech. “Our events include speakers with a range of views, all of
which are rigorously challenged and debated,” a university spokesperson said in
a statement to the New York Times.
Greer’s
comments on trans women very much echo Elinor Burkett’s controversial New York
Times article, “What Makes a Woman.” The two seem to share a kind of gender
essentialism in which biology, and the experiences that often result from that
biology, determine gender identities. It’s a weird and inconsistent
perspective, particularly for second-wave feminists like Greer, whose
ideologies are ostensibly underpinned by deconstructing the very idea of fixed
and never-shifting gender.

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