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Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Aug. 19, 2004
issue of Workers World newspaper
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LESBIAN, GAY, BI AND TRANS PRIDE SERIES, PART 12

1920s Soviet Union: Rights for lesbians, transgenders, transsexuals


By Leslie Feinberg

According to historian Dan Healey, "Unlike their male counterparts,
Russian women who had erotic relations with members of their own sex had
less access to the public sphere and so were less able to construct for
themselves a coherent subculture with the attributes of the male
homosexual world. This is not to suggest that no female homosexual
subculture existed in revolutionary Russia."

Healey has made a great contribution towards digging up some of the
records of the lives of lesbians, masculine females and transsexual men
in revolutionary Russia during the 1920s. Much of this research can be
found in his book "Sexual Desire in Revolutionary Russia." (Univer sity
of Chicago Press, 2001)

He offers this caveat: "Adequate sources about this love between lower-
class women have yet to emerge, and its character must be judged through
the distortions of a single ubiquitous occupation, prostitution."

In the business of prostitution during the capitalist era, "same-sex
relations could be sheltered and even tolerated, particularly in
licensed brothels, and the freedom (or opportunity) to express same-sex
love in this environment was evidently sought by some women as
prostitutes and as clients." Brothels, he writes, "constituted a social
sphere that undoubtedly sheltered some same-sex relationships," but
"this harsh environment offered sex workers rather limited prospects for
agency and self-expression."

But the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution both abolished licensed brothels and
took over privately owned hotels and other businesses. This had an
impact on prostitution. "The abolition of licensed brothels," Healey
says, "turned prostitution into a very unstable and dangerous livelihood
for female sex workers."

During the 1920s, "The housing shortage and the decline in private
control over sheltered urban spaces appeared to drive illicit
heterosexual sex into the streets, railway stations and carriages,
restaurants, bathhouses, and taxicabs.

"Russian historians have argued that more urban women and more declassed
women from the former elite supposedly turned to casual or occasional
heterosexual prostitution in the 1920s as urban unemployment hit them
hardest."

The Bolsheviks tried to abolish sexual exploitation, but they did not
prosecute the women. "The revolutionary regime repeatedly declared that
women who sold their bodies were victims of economic exploitation, not
to be criminalized, and campaigns to discourage them from taking up sex
work were launched."

However, ending the economic need that drove people into prostitution
required raising the living standard for all. The constant imperialist
sabotage of the Soviet economy from within and without, and the
devastation that was the legacy of the world war, made that essential
economic task difficult.

DEMANDED RIGHT TO SAME-SEX MARRIAGE

In both Europe and the U.S. at that time, very rigid social codes
enforced what was deemed appropriate behavior and dress for males and
females. In Soviet Russia, however, "masculine" females were finding a
prominent place in the early revolutionary society. They included many
"out lesbians." Masculine, cross-dressing females could be found in
academic and cultural institutions as well as in the military--even high
up in the Red Army command.

This acceptance sheds light on the vulgar anti-communist typecasting of
Soviet women as so "mannish" that they might really be males in drag.

"If there was any sign of a lesbian subculture moving into the public
realm of urban streetscapes, the workplace, or halls of study," Healey
elaborates, "it was in the 'almost masculine' styles cultivated by some
women entering public life. Medical and lay sources confirm that, at
least in towns, the woman regarded as 'masculine' was a fixture of early
Soviet society."

Healey says: "Their image as energetic and enterprising participants in
the new society's political, economic and military life earned the so-
called 'active' (that is, imitative of 'masculine' traits) female
homosexual admiration from some sexological authorities."

In an earlier essay Healey notes, "In a 1929 discussion about
'transvestites' and the 'intermediate sex' conducted by the Expert Medi
cal Council of the Com mis sariat of Health, women of the 'masculinized
type' (cross-dressing army commanders, for example) were considered with
fascination and indulgence."

And some of these cross-dressing females demanded the right to same-sex
marriage. ("Russian Queen")

But while there was an "out" social current of masculine females who
were identified with same-sex love, other female-bodied individuals
sought to live as males.

Was the motivation of all these female-bodied individuals to express
their masculinity and/or cross-dress driven solely by sexuality? In
other words, in today's U.S. terms, were they all "lesbians"? Or would
some of them be more accurately identified as "transgender" or
"transsexual"?

TRANSGENDER AND TRANSSEXUAL LIVES EMERGE

The Bolsheviks tried to replace mysticism and idealism with a scientific
approach to all social and economic questions, including gender
expression and sexuality and what in modern terms would be called
"transsexuality."

"Soviet psychiatry of the 1920s took an interest in women who
convincingly occupied a male gender identity," Healey states, "and in
accordance with the evolving sexological categories of European science,
labeled them 'female homosexuals' or occasionally, 'transvestites.'"

Healey adds that "The reasons why some women decided to acquire manhood
by changing their identity documents, assuming male variants of their
names, and altering their dress, manners, and hairstyle, are hard to
reconstruct."

One of the most famous of these individuals was the soldier Evgenii
Federovich, born Evgeniia. While posted with a regiment, Federovich
married a woman postal employee in a provincial town in 1922. When
Federovich's birth sex was discovered, local authorities charged the
marriage was a "crime against nature." But the Commissariat of Justice
found that the marriage was "legal, because concluded by mutual
consent."

Evgenii Federovich wrote using concepts of the period in which
homosexuality and intermediate sex were intertwined. Federovich argued
for acceptance of "same sex love ... as a particular variation" of human
sexuality and stated with conviction that once individuals of the
"intermediate sex" were "no longer oppressed and smothered by their own
lack of consciousness and by petty-bourgeois disrespect," their lives
would become "socially worthwhile."

DEMAND FOR SEX REASSIGNMENT

As the Bolsheviks tried to examine social questions in a scientific
light, individuals came forward to press social demands on the
scientific community. That included the request for medical sex
reassignment.

A 23-year-old female-bodied respondent to a 1923 sex survey of students
at Sverdlov University in Moscow wrote, "I want to be a man, I
impatiently await scientific discoveries of castration and grafting of
male organs (glands)." The student expres sed optimism that science
would one day be able to achieve this desired goal.

Healey explains that this request was not exceptional or unusual.

However, "The medical techniques of gender reassignment in Soviet Russia
in the 1920s were as rudimentary and broadly unsuccessful as those then
available in the West."

Despite this limitation, individuals began seeking out "clinical
psychiatrists and biologists engaged in the emergent study of the
mechanisms of sex differentiation" to request sex reassignment.

'PASSING' IN THE COUNTRYSIDE?

It's not clear from the following description by Healey whether he is
talking about the pre- or post-revolutionary epochs, or both. "Outside
of Russia's great cities, some 'female homosexuals' turned to more
traditional methods of appropriating the privileges of masculinity,
effecting self-transformations with clothing and ges ture that allowed
them to 'pass' as men."

Healey ascribes sexuality as a primary reason why some would live as
another sex. "Some used their acquired masculinity as a pathway to
sexual relations with other women," he writes. "These total
transformations typified the survival of the 'passing woman' in Russian
culture."

Sexuality may, or may not, have been a driving factor for some
individuals, but it doesn't explain the entire phenomenon. Many of these
individuals must certainly have lived without a sexual partner for fear
of being "outed." Therefore, going "underground" with an identity would
not have easily facilitated finding sexual partners.

And it was no secret in any village or rural area that there were jobs--
and greater anonymity--in the cities.

At the time, of course, homosexuality was inextricably linked to the
"intermediate sex." However, in actuality, a feminine homosexual female
would have found it difficult to live as a male. Comfort with mas culine
gender expression and body type certainly also played an important role.

It would also be of great interest to know whether these individuals
were "in the closet" or whether some found social acceptance--unspoken
or not--among the peasantry. While peasants had been chained to the land
under medieval conditions in the tsarist era and force-fed superstition
and prejudice as a class, they were keen observers of variance in
nature. And Healey himself notes that the sexual patterns and practices
of the mass of Russians was marked by pagan survivals. The pre-class
beliefs about the sexes, gender expression and sexuality still held some
sway amongst the peasantry.

Healey found the research of a lexicographer who, gathering material in
the 1830s and 1850s in central Russia, discovered numerous terms for
masculine females, and none of them were insults. And the researcher
found that female-bodied peasants were defined as "resembling a man in
their appearance, movements, voice, et cetera," "by structure, by body
formation," or because they might "even approach the condition of a
'hermaphrodite-woman.'"

This fact from Healey's study of the peasantry is very illuminating:
"Rural and lower-class Russians possessed an array of terms to describe
individuals who appeared or behaved like members of the opposite sex.
They associated this gender marginality with hermaphroditism observed in
domesticated animals, linking social qualities with the familiar
phenomenon of physical sexual indeterminacy."

[Next: 1930s--Political reversals]

- END -

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