How to Read Dr Betty Paërl's Whip: Intersectional Visions of Trans/Gender, Sex Worker, and Decolonial Activism in the Archive

W.J. Isenia*, E. Steinbock

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

In this article, the authors take up the historical figure of Dr Betty Paerl, who has surprisingly turned up in very different kinds of specialised archives. The white mathematics professor was located in IHLIA LGBT+ Heritage, the largest queer heritage collection in Europe, as a notable SM sexpert and spokesperson on transgender politics, and also found during archival research into the anti-(neo)colonial struggles of Suriname against the Dutch. Upon closer inspection of the materials, the authors find the recurrent image/item of the whip that presses them to carefully think through how the archive of Dr Paerl casts light on a history that Katherine McKittrick calls being 'in the shadow of the whip'. The article aims to combine an analysis of these versions of the whip in different visual and discursive registers to detect the liberatory politics underlying her activisms. To do so, the authors develop the intersectional model of the kaleidoscope employed by Dutch Black, migrant and refugee (BMR) feminist theorists to grasp the shifting patterns of power that Paerl battled and embodied as an activist of the anticolonial struggle, for sex workers' rights, for kinky sex and for transgender people. This is all the more important in the historical study of transgender visual materials that most often arrive in archives via medical and police photography or pornographic materials. The historical researcher, the article argues, should be wary of (re)producing a static vision that would reduce transgender figures to sex and gender politics, or eclipse a vision of trans politics that dilates beyond sexuality.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)24-45
Number of pages22
JournalFeminist Review
Volume132
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022

Keywords

  • Black migrant refugee movement
  • BDSM
  • Suriname's neocolonial history and independence
  • transgender archives
  • intersectional historiography

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