BOLD=cross reference, see item when appropriate letter posted
Radical Drag
a) The drag performers who
emerged from the RadFems of London Gay Liberation Front, who combined
gender-mix drag with radical left politics.
Bloolips became the major performing troupe, taking inspiration
from the New York troupe Hot Peaches, and Bette Borne the best known performer.
b) More generally, drag that
mixes male and female clothing, and is often acquired in charity shops. See also Gender
Fuck.
Radical Faeries
A movement founded in
1979 by Harry Hay and Don Kilhefner. A
major concept was the rejection of Hetero-imitation, supplemented by the
values of the 1960s counterculture and creative spiritualism. Inspiration was taken from indigenous
cultures. It remained gay-centred. Trans persons were accepted in, but the
movement was not a trans movement. A
type of Men’s Liberation.
Radical Feminists
a) RadFems. A term for the
more gender variant of males involved with London Gay Liberation Front
in the early 1970s. Drag became the
thing at Gay Lib dances and meetings, and then evolved into street theatre:
most notable in support at the trial of women for disrupting the Miss World
contest, and the disruption of the 1971 Christian Festival of Light. These Radical Feminists lived in communal
squats in Brixton and Notting Hill, and wore drag all day. They aligned themselves with the lesbians in
GLF, and after the women split, they came to dominate the all-London
meetings. However, the movement had run
its course by late 1973. As far as it
is known, no Radfem from this movement ever completed a transgender Transition. See also Bethnal
Rouge.
b) A branch of feminism, that
arose from the second-wave feminism of the 1960s, that concentrates on the role
of the Patriarchy and its rules,
that Gender is a Social Construct that enables the
patriarchy. Gender equality can be
achieved only by toppling this Social Construct.
c) A subset of (b). The Trans
Exclusionary Radical Feminists (TERFs) who faced with trans people, some of
whom are actually deconstructing the Gender Binary in their own lives, decided
that that was not what they meant by destroying the Gender Social Construction.
Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria (ROGD)
The supposed
phenomena of teenagers suddenly self-identifying as Trans, probably at the same
times as others in their peer group.
Some regard this as a social coping mechanism for a non-discussed
disorder of another kind. The paper initially proposing
the concept was based on surveys of parents of transgender youth recruited from
three anti-trans websites, and is not recognized as a valid mental health
diagnosis by any major professional association. See Transtrender.
Reclaimed, Redeemed
Some words,
previously used as slurs, have been reclaimed by the group that they refer to,
and thus used as words of pride.
Examples include the words Queer,
Virago, Decadence, Sissy, Travesti, Baeddel, Bakla.
Read
a) To realise that someone's sex
or gender is other than as presented, or was so at some time in the past. See also Parviscience.
b) To insult imaginatively -
NY ball scene usage.
Read to filth, read for filth
A stronger form of Read (b).
To scold, to call out, to correct.
Real, Realness
A term used by the
New York Voguing Houses for those able to pass in sunshine or under
bright lights.
Real Disguise
A term proposed by
Roger Baker with reference to Cross-Acting on stage or film
performance. A performance such that the
audience accepts it as portrayed even if the off-stage gender of the actor is
known to be other. Baker nominates the Boy
Actresses of the Renaissance stage as a prime example. See False Disguise.
Real girl
A term for a cis
woman, used by trans women in previous decades. This is an example of False Consciousness in that the trans
women are downgrading their own realness,
Real-life Experience/ Test (RLE)
The requirement by
gender clinics that a trans person should have lived a year or more in the
target gender before Completion Surgery.
Some clinics even require it before prescribing Hormones. There is merit
in the practice, as opposed to the requirement, in that if the person does
change their mind, Detransition is
more achievable if there is no surgery to be reversed. However, for those who are quite certain of
their path, this is an extra frustration.
The refusal of some clinics to acknowledge Real-Life Experience before
registering with the clinic is particularly exasperating. The requirement for RLE before being
prescribed Hormones is counter productive is that the person may not therefore
pass and thus be subjected to abuse.
While many GICs require a one-year RLE before surgery, there is
much evidence of trans persons who have avoided this and thrived well
afterwards.
Real name
There is a persistent
fallacy that one’s initial name (pre-Transition) is one’s real
name. Unsympathetic interlocutors will
demand of a trans person: what was your real name? This is both rude and illogical. A trans person has gone through an Ycleptance.
A taking of a new name that is as psychologically intense as an Ycleptance for
a woman who takes a new name at marriage, or a person who takes a new name as
part of acceptance into a religion. A
person’s real name is the one that he/she answers to. A new name fully taken is
one’s Real Name. Also see Heteronym,.
Realignment
An ironic redrafting
of Sex Reassignment Surgery is Sex
Realignment Surgery. This avoids the
problematic assumption that doctors and surgeons assign and reassign
sex/gender.
Real Self
It is an irony of
Transgender change that one must alter one’s body to manifest one’s Real Self.
Recognize Alan Hart, Ad Hoc Committee
to
Portland’s The Right
to Privacy Political Action Committee held a big fund-raiser each year in the
1990s using Alan Hart’s pre-Transition name. Local trans persons objected, but it took
direct action interrupting the proceedings before the name was changed. In this they were supported by the Lesbian
Avengers.
Rectosigmoid vaginoplasty
The construction of a
Neo-Vagina using a section taken from the rectosigmoid colon of the patient. This was first done for a cis woman with Vaginal
Agenesis in 1892 in Paris by Dr WF
Sneguireff. Such surgery for trans
women was pioneered by Dr Donald Laub at the Stanford School of Medicine in the
mid 1970s.
Red Pill
A reference to the
1999 film The Matrix, in which the protagonist is offered a choice
between a blue pill (and return to obliviousness) and a red pill (which reveals
what is really going on). The term has
been adopted by the alt-right for those who convert to their racist,
misogynous, homophobic, transphobic viewpoints.
The irony is that in the film, the pill is offered by a black man, and
the film was directed by two trans women, and taking the red pill is also taken
as an allegory for transgender hormonal therapy.
Regina v Tan, UK 1982
“It is an offence for
a man knowingly to live wholly or in part on the earnings of
prostitution”. By this wording only a
man can commit this offence.
In 1982 Gloria
Greaves of Belgravia, London and her tenant, Mrs Tan, were both arrested and
convicted of keeping a disorderly house under the Disorderly Houses Act of
1751. Furthermore, Mrs Greaves was
convicted under the Sexual Offences Act 1956 of living on the earnings of
prostitution in that she was Tan's landlady, and her husband of living on the
earnings of male prostitution (that is of his wife's). Mrs Greaves had completed surgical Transition
in the early 1960s, and was recognised as female for national insurance
purposes. She was sent to a women’s
prison.
Re-Identify
A person who declared that they were
trans, but before surgery, hormones or even cross-living, changes back and
Re-Identifies as their birth gender. Not
to be confused with De-Transition
where more serious steps were taken.
One type of Change-Back.
Rén yāo 人妖
A Chinese term for
person altered from nature, a freak or person fond of dressing up and make
up. Applied to trans persons in a
derogatory fashion. Rén=person;
yāo=want or request.
Reparative Therapy
A term proposed by
Elizabeth Moberly for Homosocial
Bonding to replace a failure of bonding with the same-sex parent. She sees this ‘failure’ as the primary cause
of homosexuality. Where the failure of
bonding is particularly severe, ‘a defensive detachment from the same sex
implies disidentification: not just an absence of identification but a reaction
against identification’. In other words, transsexuality is Extreme Homosexuality. Her
therapy has been condemned as ineffective, and her theory was revealed as based
on the reading of only three writers with no new research.
Replication
Any discovery in
science should be able to be replicated by other scientists using the published
description. Alleged Etiologies or causes of gender variance
often fail this requirement. See BSTc, H-Y Antigen, and also Heuristic.
Retro-disguise
A person in disguise
playing a role of his/her original persona. This trope was named by Victor
Freeburg in his writing on Renaissance theatre. As a dramaturgical device it
dates back to ancient Sanskrit drama and was quite popular in Italian and
English Renaissance drama. This is not necessarily a gender trope: it can be
done with racial impersonation, when characters who are technically black but
able to pass as white put on black-face for narrative reasons. A variant retro-disguise uses the gender of the
actor as the first gender-role. This was common in the British theatre until
the Restoration when Boy-actresses played females who disguised as male.
A modern version would be to cast a woman as a drag queen.
Retrojection
The use of a name
acquired or chosen later in life when discussing the early life of the
person. For example, the Wikipedia
article on the writer Fay Weldon retrojects her name inappropriately. Weldon was born Fay Birkinshaw,
and by a first marriage became Mrs Bateman. However, the Wikipedia
authors refer to her as 'Weldon' in childhood and again when she was Mrs
Bateman, that is before she married, or even met, her second husband Ron Weldon
in 1960. A similar practice is that of
referring to a person who Transitions, say at age 40, and using the
post-transition name for the person’s childhood.
Reverse Discourse
The employment of the
terminology of psychiatrists or other authority groups in such a way that the
meaning is quite different and even counter to the original. See e.g. Collusion with Delusion where
trans patients supply the contrary-to-fact expected data to psychiatrists.
Ridiculous Theatrical Company (RTC)
A Greenwich Village
theatre founded by Charles Ludlam in 1967 which was part of the Theater of
the Ridiculous movement. Over the
next twenty years the RTC was a major part of the counter-culture in New
York. The plays were often parodies or
re-workings of pop culture with much Camp, Drag, kitsch,
grotesque etc.
Rough Trade
A man, who affects to
be thuggish, and may be involved with criminal activity or even have membership
in a Mafia, who has an affair with a trans woman or a gay man. He may put the trans woman on the street to
sell herself, and live off her income.
It was a stereotype before Stonewall that a trans woman should have such
a lover, as is depicted in Jean Genet’s Notre Dame des Fleurs. See also Trade.
Royal Vauxhall Tavern (RVT)
London’s oldest
surviving gay venue. The building was
built 1860-2. It first attracted a gay
clientele after the Second World War. In
the 1960s drag performer Chris Shaw and business partner Peter King started the
drag shows that the Vauxhall became famous for.
They were performed along the bar after it was cleared of drinks and
glasses. Mrs Shufflewick, Hinge and
Brackett, Regina Fong and Lily Savage performed there and Freddie Mercury of
Queen was a frequent visitor.
Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle
Charles Armstrong,
endocrinologist, specialised in intersex patients and that included
transsexuals. He testified for the trans person in both the Forbes-Sempill
and the Corbett v. Corbett cases. Surgery on intersex and trans persons
ceased in late 1978 when the surgeon, Mr Edwards, retired and was not replaced.
Rupantarkami
A Bengali term for one who desires transformation of their form (roop). A term used of Transsexuals.

