King Princess, Daniel Radcliffe, And More Rebuke J.K. Rowling's Transphobic Tweets
In the days right after
J.K. Rowling, the author in back of the hugely popular fantasy series
Harry Potter, published a slew of transphobic tweets, several celebrities and agencies have responded by doubling down on their support for the transgender community. And one particularly powerful response came by way of genderqueer pop vocalist
King Princess.
Previously, on Saturday (June 6), Rowling shared a
Devex article detailing the structural health care issues that people who have periods may face, and which have been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic. Responding to the story's headline, which referred to "people who menstruate" in inclusively non-gendered terms, the British writer
tweeted, "I'm sure there used to be a word for those people. Someone help me out. Wumben? Wimpund? Woomud?" Numerous people across social media were quick to point out her mistake: that it is not only girls who menstruate.
Other folks, including some trans males and nonbinary people, have periods; there really are also plenty of women who do not.
The following day, King Princess shared a enthusiastic response via
Instagram, warning that Rowling's comments could feel isolating to the queer audience of her franchise — which communicated the power of love, community, and diversity to topple oppressive power structures. She wrote, "First of all, I don’t think especially right now, that you realize the accidental queer haven you created in your books for so several kids in the [LGBTQ+] spectrum. Now you are telling numerous trans/femme kids that they basically didn’t deserve to be a piece of that Utopia."
Rowling's tweets
went on to incorrectly align sex and gender, and King Princess had thoughts on that, as well. "You feel like your womanhood is attacked by a movement towards trans equality?" She asked. "What does this AT ALL have to do with you and your womanhood and how come you feel so upset Rowling, who has
come under fire in the past for making equally insensitive comments, hasn't issued an apology.
Futhermore, several social media users were baffled by Rowling's choice to prepare this statement in the midst of a world pandemic, and as demonstrators around the globe gather to protest police brutality against the Black community and mourn the murders of unarmed Black citizens, including
Tony McDade and
Nina Pop, both of whom were trans. King Princess's statement reflected that confusion, concluding by urging Rowing to "please question yourself why you are talking, why you are disrupting this movement with your confusing words, and how, as a writer, you feel the need to attack a crowd of people who most likely sustained your agency for several years."
Yet King Princess wasn't the only public figure to speak out. Amidst the controversy,
Katie Leung, who played the Cho Chang in the adapted film series, addressed criticism associated with the Ravenclaw seeker's name. "So, you want my thoughts on Cho Chang? Okay, here goes...," She tweeted, followed by a
thread that included links to resources supporting Black trans people and other LGBTQ+ people of color. Leung concluded with a post that read, "#AsiansForBlackLives."
And
Daniel Radcliffe, who starred in the
Harry Potter movies as the titular Boy Who Lived, shared a heartfelt, written
statement with the
Trevor Project, a nonprofit really interested in suicide prevention among LGBTQ+ youth. "Transgender ladies are females he wrote on Monday (June 8). "Any statement to the contrary erases the identity and dignity of transgender people and goes against all suggestions given by professional health care associations who have far more expertise on this subject matter than either Jo [Rowling] or I."
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