“We are detective”: transvestigations, conspiracy and inauthenticity in ‘gender critical’ social media discourses
“We are detective”: transvestigations, conspiracy and inauthenticity in ‘gender critical’ social media discourses
This article explores the socio-behavioral phenomenon of “transvestigations” in social media discourses. This phenomenon is most often characterized by users referring – erroneously – to apparent physiological cues of one's assigned sex at birth, which motivate their interpretation of one's transgender status, particularly among those who do not identify as transgender and focus primarily on cisgender celebrities. It is difficult to know whether these behaviors and interactions are symptomatic of an authentic “gender critical” ideology or inauthentic practices that only fan the flames of antagonism in an ongoing social struggle. In this paper, I explain how transvestigations are primarily based on transphobic “gender critical” discourses and are fundamentally underpinned by a conspiracy of transgender ubiquity. I also explain how transgender users and their allies troll transvestigators by mocking the same discourses and assumptions. To do so, I analyze social media data using methods from cultural political economy and social-cognitive discourse studies. I argue that the possibilities and uses of social media for misinformation, conspiracy, and mimetic antagonism facilitate a discursive landscape in which authentic "gender-critical" discourses are indistinguishable from potentially inauthentic conspiratorial discourses. By highlighting how social media and its users (re)construct a world without distinction between authenticity and inauthenticity, this article raises questions about the im/possibilities of change in contexts of ongoing and ever-increasing antagonisms.
Webster, Lexi
73920a7c-4aac-4188-81fb-b604c1dac45c
1 May 2024
Webster, Lexi
73920a7c-4aac-4188-81fb-b604c1dac45c
Webster, Lexi
(2024)
“We are detective”: transvestigations, conspiracy and inauthenticity in ‘gender critical’ social media discourses.
ELAD-SILDA, 9.
(doi:10.35562/elad-silda.1511).
Abstract
This article explores the socio-behavioral phenomenon of “transvestigations” in social media discourses. This phenomenon is most often characterized by users referring – erroneously – to apparent physiological cues of one's assigned sex at birth, which motivate their interpretation of one's transgender status, particularly among those who do not identify as transgender and focus primarily on cisgender celebrities. It is difficult to know whether these behaviors and interactions are symptomatic of an authentic “gender critical” ideology or inauthentic practices that only fan the flames of antagonism in an ongoing social struggle. In this paper, I explain how transvestigations are primarily based on transphobic “gender critical” discourses and are fundamentally underpinned by a conspiracy of transgender ubiquity. I also explain how transgender users and their allies troll transvestigators by mocking the same discourses and assumptions. To do so, I analyze social media data using methods from cultural political economy and social-cognitive discourse studies. I argue that the possibilities and uses of social media for misinformation, conspiracy, and mimetic antagonism facilitate a discursive landscape in which authentic "gender-critical" discourses are indistinguishable from potentially inauthentic conspiratorial discourses. By highlighting how social media and its users (re)construct a world without distinction between authenticity and inauthenticity, this article raises questions about the im/possibilities of change in contexts of ongoing and ever-increasing antagonisms.
Text
elad-silda-1511
- Version of Record
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 May 2024
Published date: 1 May 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 490344
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490344
ISSN: 2609-6609
PURE UUID: da452978-0ed0-48a6-b171-a27fc2844a10
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 23 May 2024 16:58
Last modified: 20 Aug 2024 02:04
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Lexi Webster
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics