The Trap: A New Era of Trans Representation

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Representation is everything, or so we’ve been told. Trans stories are more visible in media than ever, but too often they resist joy, telling hollowed-out, one-dimensional tales of trauma. Devan Díaz imagines a new era for trans representation, whose stories will be shimmering, sexy, and complex.

I think it started in 2017, or 2016, the year identity stuck to our ambitions. In a litany of newly profitable labels, I had a full deck: Latina, Woman, Poor, Trans. I was part of the think piece boom, and everyone had a story to sell. Plucked from Tumblr by a new crop of feminist media, I was assigned the futile task of representation. People called me “brave.” I wrote personal essays, bravely. I modeled for magazines, bravely. At first I was happy to share, even proud of my participation in this anti-Trumpian effort of branding. It felt urgent, because it was. We learn about ourselves through images, and the inclusion of marginalized people was a beginning.

I played along. It was a mad dash to online verification, as though we knew there were only a few years left to cash those diversity checks. The personal was political, and monetizable. “Doors” had been “opened”—we had no clue what we’d let out. A friend of mine referred to us as “manic dream girls” during this time. Pixies with their heads cut off, obsessed with becoming and no desire to stop. I didn’t intend to step before a camera, but it happens if you’re at enough parties. These were the decadent years, when everything required a “launch.” Every look, tweet, and interaction was an audition. Casting directors circled dance floors searching for their next “it” girl.

When you’ve ripped through all your magazines and stuck them to the wall, at some point you (I) want to try being the girl in the picture.

If you’ve come to know yourself through fashion, in an Eddie-Redmaynein-The-Danish-Girl kind of way, it is understandable to want to right some of its wrongs. Clothing can be a disguise, or lead to new guises. Millennials of a certain age are still recovering from the brain rot of the fashion era in which we came to be. We grew to call ourselves models, photographers, and stylists, all in opposition to a skinny white reality that didn’t fit. We posted online, and cultivated followings until we saw our ambitions through. Yes, we were seeing more trans people, but what else?

I want to do more than just see—which will demand a departure from certain narrative appetites and representations of the moment.

When we first meet Jules in Euphoria, her assault is our point of entry. It isn’t a false representation, but it isn’t a good one either. Her tragedy is the audience’s opportunity; an educational moment at her expense. This would be less tiresome if the public portrayal of trans girlhood was more varied—or if the growing number of real-life assaults didn’t loom all too large. On Pose, Candy’s open casket is displayed on screen, making us bear witness to another unsolved murder. It’s a reality for many, but are we ever allowed fantasy? In a realm we can control, in the realm of fiction, what’s the purpose of a bloody outcome? If the tone isn’t violent, it’s celebratory, which isn’t free from artifice. It’s those damn Calvin Klein campaigns during Pride, where each participant is asked to get on the mic to tell us what they’ve survived. Never anything else, and definitely not during any other time of year.

Trauma hasn’t made me brave. Instead I am angry, vengeful. For now, the culture industry has won, and it’s turned a community into a contest. I’ve begun to think of its gaze as something I am stealing. In my mind, it’s better to be a criminal than a victim. The flattery of participation has worn off, and now I am stuck. Do I continue to recount the minutiae of my deviant psychological history, like I am now, or opt out? The latter would make me feel less crazy, but I’d still scramble to make rent. I’m here to work. I keep taking the diversity jobs, either because I’m hopeful, foolish, or broke.

Glamour is hard to resist. It’s September in New York—when Fashion Week should be starting—and I receive a DM offering a spot in a photoshoot featuring an “LGBTQ+ cast” and 100 dollars for a day’s work. I don’t turn it down right away. I feel uneasy: What if this is who I am? I don’t want to exploit my image, but I could use the money. It might be worthwhile if the ask to bring my identity to set was in service of something that excited me. It hardly ever is.

The pay isn’t the problem. I know 100 dollars is a weekly MetroCard, pizza, and manicure. I’ve also worked around magazines long enough to know they’re dying, and most everyone on set hopes to revive them. It’s the “LGBTQ+ casting” for me (the T in LGBTQ should stand for “Transsexual,” vintage and chic. “Tranny” is more fun, but “Transgender” is what goes in the press release). Like, it’s always on these sets, where I’m “celebrated,” where I’ll be asked my pronouns repeatedly. That’s fine, I know it’s the right protocol— just not while my tits are out. Sure, I’ll tell you why I haven’t spoken to my dad in ten years—but do you promise to pay the invoice within 30 days?

But it’s fun to be put in drag, even when it sucks. That’s how the seduce you. The whir of blow-dryers, the hushed communication between photographer and stylist, the feeling of being part of it all. So I responded to the message.

I sent in my measurements and waited for three days. Yesterday, the client finally replied. When the client finally replied asking for my cell phone number for the callsheet, I asked for the address and time of the shoot, explaining that I haven’t had a working phone since lockdown began. Why pay when I’m connected to Wi-Fi all day? No response. Somehow rejection feels worse when you didn’t want it to begin with. I laugh, I write, and I wonder if they’ll read this.

I’m optimistic. I’m also bored. I’ve been sold authentically trans stories, but I still don’t see them on TV or in the movies or magazines. They’re out there, just not on our feeds. They’re uptown, and down South. In huddled bathroom stalls, where ideas are shared like key bumps. Group chats where people say the things they dare not tweet. I want to see trans women experience pleasure. Something that is unafraid to frame us boldly, even harshly. Give me liars, cheaters, and thieves. They deserve our attention, too. I want something sexy, rather than didactic. Glamour without a sense of mourning. If I must be trans—and it seems I must—then let it be dangerous! Or joyous, with better dialogue and beautiful lighting. I don’t care what it means to be trans, or a woman. I want to be told stories.


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createdAt:Mon, 08 Feb 2021 21:17:55 +0000
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