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wanktastic ([info]wanktastic) wrote in [info]unfunnybusiness,
@ 2009-10-24 16:44:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:good news

William & Mary is awesome
In news that shockingly doesn't make me want to set the world on fire, The College of William & Mary elects its first genderqueer/transgender homecoming queen



Jessee Vasold ’11 made history at the College of William and Mary Wednesday when ze was announced as the school’s first transgender homecoming queen, representing the Class of 2011.

Vasold identifies as gender-queer and prefers to be referred to with gender neutral pronouns: “ze” in place of he or she and “zir” rather than him or her. Vasold has also created a Facebook account for a female identity, Kathy Middlesex.

Friends suggested that Vasold run for homecoming queen. Even though Vasold thought that there was a good chance at being elected, Vasold said the win was still surprising to hear.

“We figured it would be something different for the school to go through, something that hasn’t happened too often,” Vasold said. “I was kind of surprised that I won because I knew the other girls running. I know that they’re really friendly; they’re wonderful people, so I was unsure.”

This year marks the return of direct voting by students. Last year, there was no platform to host voting, so the homecoming kings and queens were chosen by class officers out of student-submitted nominations.

The alumni website was used this year to choose the homecoming court. The alumni office had no oversight over the nominations for the court, which was a purely student initiative.

“I thought it was much better done this year because students actually could vote for who they wanted instead of having five or six class officers select who they think should be the winner,” Junior Class President Mike Tsidulko said.

According to Tsidulko, there is no rule against men or women running for opposite roles. Students who made nominations were simply asked to describe how the candidate exemplified Tribe pride.

“In general, most descriptions were about what activities they were involved in on campus or spiritedness at sporting events or any other kind of campus activity,” Senior Class President Alyssa Wallace said.

Those students nominated with a description were put on the ballot.

“It basically came down to nominations,” Wallace said. “Jessee was nominated, Jessee’s peers voted and Jessee won. That’s really all there is to it.”

Around campus, the reaction has been positive.

“I’ve only had people congratulating me. I know that one of my friends was in a conversation with someone who didn’t think that it was fair that I was able to run, because I’m not female-bodied,” Vasold said. “But it generated a really good conversation, so they were able to talk about a lot of different things.”

For Vasold, the election of the College’s first transgender homecoming queen is a significant step forward for the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender community on campus.

“It’s definitely amazing that the students are in a really good position, in a really good spot on how they think about things,” Vasold said. “I think that it would be a good time to show student support on these issues.”

Vasold has played a significant role in the campus’s GLBT community.

Vasold is currently the Student Assembly Undersecretary of Diversity Initiatives for GLBT Affairs. Last year, Vasold served as co-president of the Lamba Alliance, the College’s GLBT advocacy group.

“I think students are really appreciative of just being able to have him at William and Mary,” Tsidulko said. “I think it’s a mark of how progressive our values are here … that’s certainly something that’s appreciated.”

Aside from the awkwardness in the writing because of the author's refusal to use Vasold's preferred gender-neutral pronouns and the usual comments fail, this is made of win.



(Post a new comment)


[info]sqbr
2009-10-25 08:48 am UTC (link)
*starts reading the first comment*
Nnng
*stops reading the comments*

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]yoritomo_reiko
2009-10-25 02:26 pm UTC (link)
Thankfully, by the time I got to the comments, they were pretty much in support of Jesse. So that's soemthing.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]catmoran
2009-10-25 04:50 pm UTC (link)
"I was kind of surprised that I won because I knew the other girls running."

Assuming this wasn't quote fail on the author's part -- didn't Jessee sort of break the whole gender neutral thing by saying "other"?

/genuinely clueless and asking

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]mastervex
2009-10-25 05:33 pm UTC (link)
The pronouns ze wants used to refer to zir are gender neutral in that they don't just say "this person is male" or "this person is female", not that they necessarily mean "this person is genderless". Ze probably identifies as "both/some combination" or "it varies between the two" or something along those lines, not "genderless/neutral"?

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]brennalarose
2009-10-26 02:01 am UTC (link)
And now, I really wish I had the guts to try and sneak in.

(Reply to this)


[info]jupiterpluvius
2009-10-26 08:10 pm UTC (link)
the author's refusal to use Vasold's preferred gender-neutral pronouns

The author works for a newspaper which has a style sheet, which may well say that that newspaper doesn't use gender-neutral pronouns, or those particular gender-neutral pronouns.

I don't use "ze" or whatever in my professional writing, because English already has perfectly good gender-neutral pronouns in "they" and "them".

Not using any given set of gender-neutral pronouns is not a sign of disrespect. Try mediating an argument between the "ze" and the "e" and the "ceo" people sometime.

People have the right to self-identify their gender. They don't have the right to insist that other people use any given words in describing them.

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]jupiterpluvius
2009-10-26 08:11 pm UTC (link)
I also don't see the "awkwardness" in using "Vasold" rather than "ze" in the article. Seriously, I think you're being a bit jerky about that.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


redwarrior
2009-10-28 10:17 pm UTC (link)
Freaking. Awesome.

(Reply to this)


 
   
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