Transgender Beauty Pageants

Crossing the line: A Miss Transvestite Aceh contestant takes a photo backstage prior to the announcement of the winner of the Aceh Cultural and Social Envoy 2010, in Banda. JP/Hotli Simanjuntak.

Crossing the line: A Miss Transvestite Aceh contestant takes a photo backstage prior to the announcement of the winner of the Aceh Cultural and Social Envoy 2010, in Banda. JP/Hotli Simanjuntak.

It’s not like women, every time they get together to crown someone Miss USA or Miss America or Miss Childish Bigot From California, have to defend their right to competition based on pretty faces and smoking bods. But of course every time there’s a transgender pageant, it turns into a big deal about trans rights!

At the recent Miss Transvestite Aceh in Indonesia, the organizing group Putro Sejati Aceh was both “selecting a representative for the national contest as well as campaigning on transgender issues.” (isn’t this what beauty pageants are, supposedly, about: campaigning on women’s issues!).

Sherly, the chairperson of Putro Sejati Aceh said in an interview with the Jakarta Post.

Transvestites are marginalized. We demand equal rights.

People in Aceh despised them and discriminated against them for their gender identity. This was a burden on transvestites who subsequently lost confidence in expressing themselves, especially in education.

Many people are antagonistic and call us ’sissies’. We are afraid to go to school or university to study.

That’s a very real problem.

But are beauty pageants the answer for normalizing a society’s view about a certain class of people?

In the case of Miss America or Miss Universe, it’s hard to make the believable argument that these pageants are “furthering” causes for women, or feminism, or making anyone take women more seriously. Isn’t it more about a group of mostly underfed beautiful people parading around in swimsuits for cash and scholarship prizes? It’s a farce to say the pageants are about encouraging education and philanthropy; they are about exploiting society’s disturbing relationship with beauty.

But for these transgender women are these pageants exploiting them?

Or actually doing what their organizers hope, and introducing transgender women into society as regular (beautiful) people? Probably a little bit of both. Of course, it takes two; the women (whether biological or transgender) agree to take part and put their bodies on parade as much as viewers agree to watch.

Source: queerty.com

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Julie Davis
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