The Beastie Boys and My Genderqueer Identity
On reconciling sexist lyrics with my feminist and Genderqueer awakenings
As a young tomboy growing up in a lefty commune in the mid-’80s, I sat in a wood-paneled TV room with my older brothers repeatedly watching the “Fight For Your Right to Party” music video from the Beastie Boys’ first album. I did not realize then that, just a decade or so later, I would openly identify as Queer. Watching the Beastie Boys rap in the foreground of the video, while their hairsprayed, mini-skirted backup dancers shimmied in the background, I had little inkling that decades later, I would fully understand my gender identity as Genderqueer, or that I would eventually use they/them pronouns.
What I did know was that I did not recognize any aspect of myself in the backup dancers on screen. Instead, I was drawn to the trouble-making, swaggering, East Coast-accented rappers, who were Jewish and mischievous and tomboyish like me.
The Beastie Boys reminded me of my teenage brothers’ friends who let me tag along with them through…