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Dykes on Bikes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dykes on Bikes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dykes On Bikes lead the 2005 San Francisco Pride parade, the contingent has hundreds of motorized bikes, many of which are decorated for the event.
Dykes On Bikes lead the 2005 San Francisco Pride parade, the contingent has hundreds of motorized bikes, many of which are decorated for the event.
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Dykes on Bikes (DOB) are a traditional crowd favorite participant at gay pride events such as Pride parades, Dyke Marches and significant LGBT events like the international Gay Games formerly and informally known as the Gay Olympics, also Alexander Guiseley, Jane Atkinson, Jak Gaff and Demi Ditchburn are true contributers of dykes on bikes and they takes part in such events around the world [1]

They most likely were originally put at the front of the parade for logistical reasons and have remained there as a symbol of LGBT pride, defiance, liberation[2] and empowerment. The contingents are fiercely independent and self-reliant in the DIY and feminist traditions and have been studied as a social phenomena as a "complex, multilayered form of consumption-related cultural resistance that raises awareness of social injustice and discursively informs social meanings in everyday life outside the festivals."[3]

Along with drag queens, the DOB have been criticized for not portraying a more acceptable image of LGBT culture but supporters counter that they are seen as highly visible icons of gay pride who refuse to assimilate and conform to mainstream society gender roles and indeed remind of the butches and queens who helped lead the Stonewall riots launching the modern gay-rights movement.[4]

Although they are mostly associated with large parades and events they are actually a loosely affiliated international network of mostly lesbian and dyke motorcycle clubs including The Sirens in New York City, Dykes on Bikes in Portland, and the Women’s Motorcycle Contingent in San Francisco[5] as well as a growing international network of chapters.[6]

The Dykes on Bikes have been criticized for using the term dyke in their name rather than lesbian but the group won a patent for the mark, and demonstrated that the terms diesel-dyke, bull-dyke, bull-dagger and dyke all have historically negative connotations but have been re-appropriated as self-referential terms of endearment and empowerment distinct from lesbian and indeed awards and events utilizing those names are now used by the LGBT community.[7] Like the tradition of motorcyclists rejection of the norms of middle-class, middle-America, the Dykes on Bikes teach, by example, that women can be masculine and challenge the dominant sexual and cultural expectations of what a woman is and what she can do and achieve.[8][7]

Contents

[edit] History

Dykes On Bikes at Reykjavík's 2004 Gay Pride parade in Iceland.
Dykes On Bikes at Reykjavík's 2004 Gay Pride parade in Iceland.

Although the term specifically was coined by actual dykes on bikes at the first gathering at the 1976 SF Pride parade the term could have been used prior to then but came into formal use at that time.[9] Dykes and motorcycles have been regularly intertwined in lesbian fiction[5] and the term is sometimes used derogatorily against any woman rider who isn't with a man.[10]

In many countries motorcycles are simply an economical and effective mode of transportation. Cheaper to purchase, maintain and use than a four-wheeled vehicle and more capable of handling narrow or poorly maintained roads, motorcycles are a simply a better option. The United States with its car friendly culture and its wide well-marked and extensive road system is an exception rather than the rule but even in America the motorcycle is used not only as transportation but as means of escapism.

According to Harley-Davidson historians female riders did everything men did from long distance riding to enjoying lazy Sunday afternoon rides with friends. In 1915, mother-daughter team Avis and Effie Hotchkiss became the first women to cross the United States on a motorcycle. Dorothy "Dot" Robinson competed through the Depression alongside men in endurance races. Bessie Stringfield was the first African-American woman to complete a solo cross-country ride and during the 1930s and 1940s she traveled through all of the lower 48 states and rode abroad in Europe, Brazil, and Haiti. The 1930's saw the founding of the Motor Maids, the world's first women's motorcycle club founded by Wellesley College graduate Linda Dugeau.[11]

Motorcyclists refer to maintenance and repair as wrenching (in the United States) or spannering (in the United Kingdom), as in "turning a wrench." Traditionally more motorcyclists work on their own vehicles than four-wheel drivers and wrenching was a needed skill for riders as the materials and technology used often meant repairs had to be done on the road, miles from home. Motorcycles are as reliable as automobiles, but the feeling that many riders have that their motorcycle is more than just a means of transportation leads them to working on the bike themselves.

[edit] World War II creates opportunities

1943 Painting of a World War II WAC Air Controller artist: Dan V. Smith
1943 Painting of a World War II WAC Air Controller artist: Dan V. Smith

The outbreak of World War II in 1942 provided women opportunities to volunteer for their country and almost 250,000 women served in the armed forces, mostly in the Women's Army Corps (WAC), two-thirds of whom were single and under the age of twenty-five.[12] Women were recruited with posters showing muscular, short-haired women wearing tight-fitting tailored uniforms.[12] Bessie Stringfield joined a motorcycle dispatch unit of the army.[13]

Many lesbians joined the WAC to meet other women and to do men’s work.[14][12] Few were rejected for lesbianism, and found that being strong or having masculine appearance – characteristics associated with being dykes - aided in the work as mechanics and motor vehicle operators.[12] A popular Fleischmann’s Yeast advertisement showed a WAC riding a motorcycle with the heading This is no time to be frail.[15][12] Some recruits appeared at their inductions wearing men’s clothing and their hair slicked back in the classic butch style of out lesbians of the time.[12]

Post-war many women including lesbians declined opportunities to return to traditional gender roles and helped redefine societal expectations that fed the women's, black and and gay liberation movements.

[edit] Dykes on Bikes first appearance

Further information: Gay pride parade
Dykes On Bikes leading the 2005 San Francisco Pride parade, the contingent has over 400 motorized bikes, many of which are decorated for the event.
Dykes On Bikes leading the 2005 San Francisco Pride parade, the contingent has over 400 motorized bikes, many of which are decorated for the event.

The first formal appearance s the Dykes on Bikes is 1976 at San Francisco's Pride parade where the riders were placed first as motorcycles don't always run reliably at the walking pace of the rest of the parade and as first contingent they can move faster. Although the original group self-identified as Dykes on Bikes and they were known as such, over the years they used the Women’s Motorcycle Contingent/ Dykes on Bikes to encompass those who identified as gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or any of the newer gender-bending terms like femme, androgyne and boi.[16]

[edit] Worldwide phenomena

Rekykjavik Icelandic Gay Pride (August 2004)
Rekykjavik Icelandic Gay Pride (August 2004)

Dykes on Bikes have been leading marches such as Gay pride parades, Gay Games events and protests. "Dyke Marches" have become a popular Pride event nationwide with the Dykes on Bikes often leading the marches. The Dyke March events are generally non-commercial, often in sharp contrast to corporate-sponsored pride events, and are usually inclusive of lesbian, bi, and trans women. Leading pride parades around the world from San Francisco to Melbourne, Victoria in Australia,[17] Paris, London, Tokyo, Toronto, Sydney,[18] Zurich,[19] and Greece.[20]

[edit] Legal battle to keep DOB name for non-profit use

"On February 20, 2004, the Patent Trade Office refused the registration of the mark Dykes on Bikes under Trademark Act Section 2(a), explaining that a reasonable person of ordinary sensibilities would recognize that the term “dyke” is disparaging and objectionable to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities."[7] It was noted that during the same time period from 2000-2005 the Patent Trade Office did approve of “Crippled Old Biker Bastards,” “Biker Bitch,” “Whore,” and “Evil Pussy” as well as “TechnoDyke,” "Homo Depot," "Queer Shop," Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, and Queer as Folk.[21][7] Brooke Oliver Law Office that represented the SFWMC also pointed out the absurdity of the initial rejection ruling citing the PTO's own regulations that "the perceptions of the general public are irrelevant" and indeed the test of “whether a mark is disparaging and/or offensive is the perceptions of the individuals referred to and/or identified by that mark. In this particular case, it is women—or more specifically lesbians, bisexuals and transgender women—who ride motorcycles in the Pride Parades and who would be using the term.”[22][7]

On November 13, 2006, the Dykes on Bikes won a battle to trademark the name having struggled since 2003 to persuade the United States Patent and Trademark Office that "dyke" was not an offensive word.[23][24] Matters came to a head when the United States Patent and Trademark Office denied lesbian motorcycle group Dykes on Bikes a trademark for its name, on the grounds that "dyke" was an offensive word. In 2005, after a prolonged court battle involving testimony on the word's changing role in the lesbian community, the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board permitted the group to register its name.[25]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Rowe, David; Kevin Markwell, Deborah Stevenson (July 2006, Volume 2, Issue 2). Exploring participants' experiences of the Gay Games: intersections of sport, gender and sexuality. International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
  2. ^ O'Brien, Jodi. Changing The Subject. Echo NYC. Retrieved on 2007-08-18.
  3. ^ Kates (Monash University), Steven M.; Russell W. Belk (University of Utah) (2001, Vol. 30, No. 4, 392-429.). The Meanings of Lesbian and Gay Pride Day: Resistance through Consumption and Resistance to Consumption. Journal of Contemporary Ethnography(Sage Publications). Retrieved on 2007-08-18.
  4. ^ Gluckman, Amy; Betsy Reed (1997). Homo Economics: Capitalism, Community, and Lesbian and Gay Life. Routledge. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
  5. ^ a b Boslaugh, Sarah (March 2006). Getting Past the Stereotypes: Women and Motorcycles in Recent Lesbian Novels. International Journal of Motorcycle Studies. Retrieved on 2007-08-20.
  6. ^ Other Dykes on Bikes Clubs. Routledge (July 20, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
  7. ^ a b c d e Ilyasova, K. Alex (November 2006). Dykes on Bikes and the Regulation of Vulgarity. International Journal of Motorcycle Studies. Retrieved on 2007-08-21.
  8. ^ Epstein, Debbie; Richard Johnson (1998, p. 19). Schooling Sexualities. Buckingham: Open University Press. Retrieved on 2007-08-21.
  9. ^ LGBT Pride: SF Historical Timeline. KQED.org website. Retrieved on 2006-01-13.
  10. ^ Slawinski, Kris (March 2006). Motorcycles as Political. International Journal of Motorcycle Studies. Retrieved on 2007-08-20.
  11. ^ Explore The History: A Proud Tradition. Harley-Davidson (2001-2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Wolf, Sherry (September–October 2004, Issue 37). The Roots of Gay Oppression: The Second World War. International Socialist Review. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
  13. ^ Explore The History: Bessie Stringfield. Harley-Davidson (2001-2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
  14. ^ Bérubé, Allan (1991, p. 30). Coming Out Under Fire: The History of Gay Men and Women in World War Two. New York: Plume. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
  15. ^ Bérubé, Allan (1991, photo inserts, 4.). Coming Out Under Fire: The History of Gay Men and Women in World War Two, photo inserts.. New York: Plume. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
  16. ^ Dykes on Bikes. SF Women's Motorcycle Contingent Dykes on Bikes website. Retrieved on 2006-01-13.
  17. ^ Wockner, Rex (Spring 2006). News Briefs. To Be Publications, Ontario, Canada. Retrieved on 2007-08-20.
  18. ^ Lesbian bike brigade demands trademark for club name. Pakistan Daily Times (July 28, 2005). Retrieved on 2007-08-21.
  19. ^ Warmer Mai Gay Festival. What's On When (2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-21.
  20. ^ Sapphite Links, Groups & Communities. Sapphites in Greece (July 30, 2006). Retrieved on 2007-08-21.
  21. ^ Cincone, Gia (September 15, 2005). “Exhibit A.” Applicant’s Request to Remand for Additional Evidence, Part I. Townsend and Townsend & Crew LLP. Retrieved on 2007-08-21.
  22. ^ Oliver, Brooke (August 2004). “Response to Office Action.” Response to USPTO’s Initial Refusal. Brooke Oliver Law Group, P.C. 20. Brooke Oliver Law Group. Retrieved on 2007-08-21.
  23. ^ Raab, Barbara (2006-04-20). "Dyke Drama: A not-so-excellent adventure through U.S. trademark law". American Sexuality magazine. National Sexuality Resource Center. 
  24. ^ National Center for Lesbian Rights (2006). "What's in a Name?". NCLR Newsletter 2006 (Winter): p. 1. “'On November 13th, the Women's Motorcycle Contingent formally won the legal right to trademark "DYKES ON BIKES."” 
  25. ^ (365gay.com)

[edit] Further reading

  • Joans, Barbara. 1995. Dykes on Bikes Meet Ladies of Harley. In William L. Leap (ed.), Beyond the Lavender Lexicon: Authenticity, Imagination and Appropriation in Lesbian and Gay Languages. New York: Gordon and Breach Press. Pp. 87-106.

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