On ‘Cistem Failure’ by Marquis Bey

Book #1 in my 2023 Trans Rights Readathon week

Tucker Lieberman

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white and purple stripes of electricity visible against a black background
Tesla coil by Christian O. from Pixabay

For the #TransRightsReadathon, I want to tell you about Marquis Bey’s 2022 book Cistem Failure: Essays on Blackness and Cisgender.

What Is Cis? What Is Trans?

On one definition, cisgender simply means not transgender. But as with all words, inevitably the meaning is broadened. A typical understanding of cisgender, as Bey writes, is that it implies “untroubled ways of being a gendered subject.” It implies that a cis person has “no need to question or examine your gender because you have departed from nothing, your home’s furnishings all remain tidy and unmoved.”

And yet, of course, being transgender isn’t the only way to profoundly question one’s own gender.

A word like nontransgender — emphasis on the non-prefix — might suggest that it’s a default state. The nontrans is whatever you haven’t changed (transed). But the word cisgender was created specifically to enable us to question the naturalness and normalcy of gender that isn’t trans. If cisgender — whatever exactly that is — were really natural and normal, people wouldn’t spend so much time teaching and enforcing how to be a man or a woman. How cisgenderness works upon people in the world is through “performative behaviors that are…

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