Annotated Bibliography: Selected Readings on Transvestism, Transsexualism and Related Subjects (2000)
The bibliography presented is divided into two major categories: professional and popular publications. The professional category contains objective scientific research literature, whereas the popular category contains works of a more general nature, some of them very subjective. Because transsexuals and transvestites cross the line between gender roles, works discussing femininity and masculinity are also included. Not all of the works listed here present transvestism or transsexualism in a positive manner.
Read MoreRemembering JoAnn Roberts (2013)
I knew and admired JoAnn Roberts. I wrote this piece a week or so after her death on June 7, 2013.
Read MoreTwenty Years On (2011)
Twenty years on, the fact of my transsexualism escapes me for the most part, even when I’m writing or talking about transgender issues. Every once in a while I think, “Oh, yeah, I am, aren’t I?” Life is comfortable and rewarding and easy, and I feel grateful beyond belief to be living it congruently, as a woman.
Read MoreVirtual Personae: Part I (2011)
In a paper written in 1993, Allucquere Rosanne (Sandy) Stone described an incident that took place in 1982 on the text-only CompuServe CB chat simulator: Sanford Lewin, an American psychiatrist and a male, created an account using the name Joan Green and contrived an elaborate masquerade as a physically disabled female neuropsychiatrist.
Read MoreVirtual Personae: Part II (2011)
In the anonymous and often highly sexually charged world of Second Life, gender is of primary import. Most avatars are human, and almost all are decidedly male or female. Most, like me, are young and thin and beautiful and extravagantly dressed. It’s the avatarian norm.
Read MoreTechnologies of Transformation (2011)
The last half of the nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth saw advances in medical procedures that made it possible for men and women to more effectively alter their bodies toward that of the non-natal sex. While none of these technologies were developed with sex reassignment in mind, they were easily adapted and modified by medical professionals and by transsexuals themselves and have come into common use to create somatic changes.
Read MoreThe Names We Call Ourselves (2011)
Jamison told the assembled physicians, psychologists, social workers, and other professionals that while we weren’t yet prepared to say what transgendered people wanted to be called, we could with some authority say what they DIDN’T want to be called
Read MoreDisaster, Deceit, and Betrayal at the International Foundation for Gender Education (2011)
I wrote this article after I was contacted by two members of the Winslow Street Fund. Both expressed concern about the fund; they feared it was being drained by its caretaker organization, the International Foundation for Gender Education. By the time I wrote my article the Winslow Street Fund, which had had more than $100,000 in its coffers, had almost certainly been drained by the very organization that was sworn to protect it.
Read MoreA Look at the WPATH Standards of Care (2011)
The WPATH Standards of care, born at a time when transsexuals were almost universally considered mentally ill, were devised as a path out of ignorance and subjectivism, and as such have been of immense value by marking a clear path to transition. I enthusiastically support them and I hope you will too.
Read MoreSome Words on Parenting a Trans Kid (2011)
What should you do if you have a child who is gender nonconforming — or one who does conform to a gender role, just not the biological one? What if the doctor recently told you your child is intersexed? What if your child is telling you she wants a sex change?
Read MoreTransgender Archives: The First Pilgrimage (2011)
Yesterday I walked out the door of my girlfriend’s apartment in the Hudson Valley, crossed the street, and caught a bus to New York City. I was embarking on the first of what I hope to be a dozen or so pilgrimages to visit the world’s known repositories of transgender and transsexual historical materials.
Read MoreReflections as 2011 Comes to a Close (2011)
As 2011 draws to a close, I’m gratified to know our killers no longer automatically go free, and horrified to know we are still getting abused, killed, and discriminated against with astonishing regularity.
Read MoreThe Silicone Wars (2012)
Deaths from silicone injections had been happening with depressing regularity since the 1950s, especially for transgendered women.
Read MoreForced Sterilization in Sweden—An Outrage (2012)
The Scandinavian countries in general and Sweden in particular are generally considered the most liberal on the planet, second only to the adjacent Netherlands. Sweden, however, has a long history of forced sterilization; from the time the Sterilization Act of 1934 was passed until its repeal in 1975, more than 62,000 people were sterilized. Of those, some 30,000 were coerced or forced to submit to medical procedures. Most were women.
Read MoreWhy We Should Question the Work of George Rekers (2012)
Rekers is a fake–and I suspect his “science” is too.
Read MoreRick Santorum, Boy Gender Fascist (2012)
Republicans are attempting to roll back a half-century of social progress by women, gay men and lesbians, and transgendered and transsexual Americans.
Read MoreHaters Have… Issues (2012)
Haters. Look behind the curtain and you find they have… issues.
Read MoreCrushes On the Wrong People: A Review (2012)
Meet Billy Abbott. At age thirteen he finds himself in the public library of the little Vermont logging town of First Sister, smitten by the tall, broad-shouldered librarian. “In less than a minute of excited, secretive longing I decided to become a writer and to have sex with Miss Frost–not necessarily in that order.”
Read MoreAfter All These Years (2012)
I met her for the first time on a grassy hillside. She was building a fountain, using textures she had made from her mother’s stained glass. I flew close and said, from ten meters in the air, “I’m looking for land to buy. I hope I’m not intruding.”
Read MoreThe Real ID Act: A Catastrophe in the Making (2012)
I felt compelled to write this essay because of the effect of the Real ID Act upon a friend. She has had a driver’s license here in Georgia since the 1970s. When she went to the DMV last week she was turned away because she could not produce a birth certificate. Unless she can locate a copy and copies of two divorce decrees she no longer has to show changes to her name, she will most likely lose the right to drive a motor vehicle.
Read MoreObama: The Most Transgender-Friendly President Ever—Re-elect Him!
I wrote this during the lead-up to the 2012 Presidential Election.
Read MoreA Comprehensive List of Trans Autobiographies (2012)
If you know of any autobiographies I’ve left out, please let me know. It’s possible I missed some while compiling the list from my larger file of books, and it’s possible it’s just a work I never stumbled across.
Read MoreOn Trans Autobiographies (2012)
The autobiographies that bother me are the ones by writers who, two pages from the end, clearly haven’t resolved any of their life’s troubles. Often they’ve had SRS, and they would like us to believe it has magically fixed everything, when clearly it hasn’t. Quite frankly, it’s difficult to maintain the suspension of disbelief when the story ends weeks or at most months after surgery and the author is simultaneously proclaiming how wonderful everything is and yet sending a clear covert message that things are not at all well. I
Read MoreDiffering Opinions Over “Orca Shrugged” Episode of FX TV Show Sons of Anarchy (NSFW)
Walter Goggins, wearing realistic breast prostheses was clearly having fun as van Damme. So, too, were the rest of the cast members. Throughout the scene club member Tig Trager (Kim Coates) is clearly sexually interested in van Damme. “Really?” says club member Juice (Theo Rossi) as he raises an eyebrow at Tig.
Read MoreCrossdressers Across the Decades (2012)
Due perhaps, to businesses that sell products to help them with their appearance; to the Internet, which is full of sources to help them learn their craft; and to a breakdown of the categories crossdresser and transsexual (which allows them increased access to electrolysis, hormones, and plastic surgery), today’s crossdressers are more likely to have more sophisticated presentations than the crossdressers of yore.
Read MoreTranssexualism at Sixty, Part I (2013)
Twenty years ago I took a look at transsexualism on its fortieth birthday, as arbitrarily determined by Christine Jorgensen’s return from Denmark. News of her sex reassignment resulted in international headlines in December, 1952, knocking news of the first hydrogen bomb test from the front page of the New York Times. Take that, all you one-name celebrities!
Read MoreTranssexualism at Sixty, Part II (2013)
I’ve been taking a look at a paper I wrote twenty years ago. Forty years had passed since Christine Jorgensen’s return to the U.S. after sex reassignment in Denmark and the world went crazy for five minutes, so I called the piece Transsexualism at Forty. Now my paper is twenty years old and transsexualism is sixty.
Read MoreI Was a Trans Student (2013)
If I had turned 13 in 2013 instead of 1963, my story might have been a different one. I’m sure I would have had to work through the same shame and guilt and fright, but there would have been sources of support. There would have been ready information. And perhaps, just perhaps, my parents would have tried to understand, had I found the courage to come out to them.
Read MorePreserve Our (And Your) History (2013)
Twenty or so years ago I was on the phone with Ms. Bob Davis in San Francisco. We were talking about our collections of transgender historical material and wondering how much material was out there and what it might be worth. “In ten years we’ll know,” said Ms. Bob. “The Internet will sort it out.”
Read MoreThese Eyes (2013)
My pain was ever present, but was more, as I’ve said before, like a rock in my shoe than a knife in my breast. Still, I think you’ll agree after viewing the photos, it showed in my eyes.
Read MoreLaugh a Little (2013)
Keep your sense of humor (and if you don’t have one, cultivate one). You will only be as unhappy as you allow yourself to be. You can plod miserably along, or you can enjoy yourself. You can find humor in the ludicrous situations you will find yourself in and the things people will say which have a whole different meaning because of your gender status. Those you meet along the route will prove amusing, if you allow them to be. They will be your comrades in arms, and some of them will become your friends.
Read MoreStealth is Soul-Destroying (2013)
Those who live in stealth keep their trans status secret. Those who interact with them–sometimes even their spouses–have no clue about their past. That’s how thoroughly they deny their transsexualism.
Read MoreCUGA Newsletter (1990-1992)
By the time I moved to Atlanta in 1989 the home computer craze was on the wane. I nonetheless looked up a Commodore users group in DeKalb, my home county: The Commodore Users Group of Atlanta. I remained a member and sometimes board member as we all slowly moved (most of us reluctantly) from our beloved C-64s to Macintoshes and PCs.
Read MoreFantasia Fair ’94: An Event to Remember
The week-long annual transgender event Fantasia Fair is unfailingly remarkable. I go there every October for rest and relaxation and to visit with friends. This is one of several articles I’ve written about the Fair.
Read MoreTrans Trading Cards: Reed Erickson (1999)
Reed Erickson’s story, although obscured by time and his history of protecting his privacy, is a fascinating one that was almost lost but is slowly emerging through the historical research of Dr. Aaron Devor, a sociologist at the University of Victoria in British Columbia.
Read MoreTrans Trading Cards: Lili Elbe (1999)
Niels Hoyer’s account of Lili’s transformation, originally published in 1933, is haunting, prose so beautifully written it seems like poetry. Man into Woman is out of print and hard to find, but the 1953 reprint editions isn’t unduly expensive.
Read MoreTrans Trading Cards: Harry Benjamin, M.D. (1999)
Harry Benjamin was of enormous importance for transsexuals, for it was he who named and described transsexualism as a medical syndrome.
Read MoreTrans Trading Cards (1999)
There are of course no trans trading cards, although there are sets of serial and spree killers, the Iran-Contra scandal, and freaks. But if there were….
Read MoreSsshhh! The Newsletter of the National Transgender Library & Archive (1995)
Shhhh! was the newsletter of the National Transgender Library & Archive, a subsidiary of the nonprofit American Educational Gender Information Service. This was the first issue—a one-pager that made the community aware of AEGIS’ interest in preserving transgender history.
Read MoreBibliography of HIV & AIDS in Transgendered Persons (1995)
Back in 1995 there were only a handful of scientific papers about HIV & AIDS in the trans population. Most researchers included male-to-female transsexuals and transgendered people in the Men Having Sex With Men group. I did find a few articles, and published a brief bibliography in the fourth edition of AEGIS News. AEGIS News was one of the newsletters of the nonprofit American Educational Gender Information Service.
Read MoreXenophobia: “Us” and “Them” (2011)
I wrote this piece in 1994; it was published seventeen years later in the online magazine Transgender Forum.
Read MoreCan a Man Become a Woman? (And Vice-Versa) (1992)
When transsexual people reach the point of “realness”—when they are integrated in society and cannot be “read” (or “clocked,” as we say in the South), then they have become what they have been trying to become. They don’t just walk like a duck and talk like a duck. They are ducks. They function entirely as men and women, with bodies which are consonant with their place in society as men and women.
Read MoreThe Paradigm Shift is Here! (1995)
In 1995, in the pages of AEGIS News, I noted the change of paradigm from the medical model of transsexualism to a healthy transgender model.
Read MoreWhite Hats, Black Hats: HRC vs. NGLTF (1999)
HRC is a big-bucks organization. It’s been around a long time. Its staff is well-paid and experienced in the cynical arena of national politics. HRC is accomplished in the manipulation of public opinion. It knows how to put spin on an issue. And it’s spinning hell out of transgender inclusion, making itself appear concerned about us by publicly holding forth an olive branch while behind the scenes it works desperately to cut us out of ENDA.
Read MoreThe Transsexual Script (1998)
Today there is a new transsexualism. Those new to the community, exposed to both the Benjamin and transgender models on the Internet and at support group meetings, tend to subscribe to the transgender model. Many of these folks self-identify as transsexual as well as trangendered, and certainly they avail themselves of the same medical treatments chosen by those who followed Benjamin’s model, including hormonal therapy, gender role change, and sex reassignment surgery.
Read MoreScent of a Transsexual Woman (1998)
Halston, like other perfumes, was forbidden to me. Although I found it no less attractive twenty-five years ago than I do today, its lingering qualities were a danger, something that could give away the horrible secret of my inner femininity hours or even days after I broke social convention by applying it to my skin. It was a time, after all, when men’s scents were pungent and woodsy.
Read MoreReed Erickson (1998)
Reed Erickson was an important in the history of transsexualism. It’s unfortunate he’s been almost forgotten, for he did more for transsexual people than anyone else, with the possible exception of Christine Jorgensen and Dr. Harry Benjamin. His story, although obscured by time and his history of protecting his privacy, is a fascinating one that was almost lost but is slowly emerging through the historical research of Dr. Aaron Devor, a Sociologist at the University of Victoria in British Columbia.
Read MoreMillennimania (2000)
We’re about to turn a corner. A year is ending. A decade is ending. A century is ending. A millennium is ending. We all know it, and we’re all excited and a bit frightened by it. We’re wound up like clockwork toys, ready to party like it’s 1999, ready to see the great comet come out of the sky and smash into the earth. We’re prepared to meet Jesus.
Read More“Tabletop” John Brown Gets His (1999)
An article by R.S. Spitz, published in Viva magazine in the mid-1970s, identified Brown as one of the worst plastic surgeons in the United States. Even then, Brown was doing male-to-female sex reassignment surgery— badly, I might add. He never lacked for customers, since his only criterion for surgery was whether the check cleared. He was famous for doing SRS in motel rooms and on kitchen tables, leaving his victim to wake up in the back seat of her car or on a couch in an abandoned house.
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