Titre : | The Transgender Studies Reader 2 | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Auteurs et autres personnes : | Susan Stryker, Editeur scientifique ; Aren Aizura, Editeur scientifique | Edition : | 2013 | Editeur : | Londres/New York [UK/USA] : Routledge | Année : | 2013 | Importance : | 695 pages | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-415-51773-7 | Langues : | Anglais (eng) | Catégories : | Sciences humaines:Sociologie, anthropologie
| Index. décimale : | Pastille bleue (en anglais) Armoires Sciences Humaines. Langue = anglais. | Résumé : | Over the past twenty years, transgender studies has emerged as a vibrant field of interdisciplinary scholarship. In 2006, Routledge’s The Transgender Studies Reader brought together the first definitive collection of the field. Since its publication, the field has seen an explosion of new work that has expanded the boundaries of inquiry in many directions. The Transgender Studies Reader 2 gathers these disparate strands of scholarship, and collects them into a format that makes sense for teaching and research.
Complementing the first volume, rather than competing with it, The Transgender Studies Reader 2 consists of fifty articles, with a general introduction by the editors, explanatory head notes for each essay, and bibliographical suggestions for further research. Unlike the first volume, which was historically based, tracing the lineage of the field, this volume focuses on recent work and emerging trends. To keep pace with this rapidly changing area, the second reader has a companion website, with images, links to blogs, video, and other material to help supplement the book. | Note de contenu : | I. Transgender Perspectives In (and On) Radical Political Economy
1. Normalized Transgressions: Legitimizing the Transsexual Body as Productive
Dan Irving
2. Retelling Racialized Violence, Remaking White Innocence: The Politics of Interlocking Oppressions in Transgender Day of Remembrance
Sarah Lamble
3. Artful Concealment and Strategic Visibility: Transgender Bodies and U.S. State Surveillance After 9/11
Toby Beauchamp
4. Tracing This Body: Transsexuality, Pharmaceuticals & Capitalism
Michelle O’Brien
5. Transsexual Necropolitics
Jin Haritaworn and C. Riley Snorton
II. Making Trans-Culture(s): Texts, Performances, Artifacts
6. “The White To Be Angry”: Vaginal Creme Davis’ Terrorist Drag
Jose Esteban Muñoz
7. Felt Matters
Jeanne Vaccaro
8. Groping Theory: Haptic Cinema and Trans-Curiosity in Hans Scheirl’s Dandy Dust
Eliza Steinbock
9. The Transgender Look
J. Halberstam
10. Embracing Transition, or Dancing in the Folds of Time
Julian Carter
III. Transsexing Humanimality
11. Selections from Evolution’s Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People
Joan Roughgarden
12. Animal Transsex
Myra Hird
13. Animals Without Genitals: Race and Transsubstantiation
Mel Chen
14. Lessons from a Starfish
Eva Hayward
15. Interdependent Ecological Transsex: Notes on Re/Production, “Transgender” Fish, and the Management of Populations, Species, and Resources
Bailey Keir
IV. Transfeminisms
16. Feminist Solidarity After Queer Theory: The Case of Transgender
Cressida Heyes
17. Inclusive Pedagogy in the Women’s Studies Classroom: Teaching the Kimberly Nixon Case
Viviane Namaste (with Georgia Sitara)
18. Skirt Chasers: Why the Media Depicts the Trans Revolution in Lipstick and Heels
Julia Serano
19. The Education of Little Cis: Cisgender and the Discipline of Opposing Bodies
A. Finn Enke
20. Our Bodies Are Not Ourselves: Tranny Guys and the Racialized Class Politics of Incoherence
Bobby Noble
V. Cross Talk: Contention and Complexity in Trans-Discourses
21. Body Shame, Body Pride: Lessons From the Disability Rights Movement
Eli Clare
22. The Pharmaco-Pornographic Regime: Sex, Gender, and Subjectivity in the Age of Punk Capitalism
Beatriz Preciado
23. Evil Deceivers and Make-Believers: On Transphobic Violence and the Politics of Illusion
Talia Mae Bettcher
24. “Still At the Back of the Bus”: Sylvia Rivera’s Struggle
Jessi Gan
25. Transgender Subjectivity and the Logic of Sexual Difference
Shanna Carlson
VI. Timely Matters: Temporality and Trans-historicity
26. Towards A Transgender Archaeology: A Queer Rampage Through Prehistory
Mary Weismantel
27. Selections from “Before the Tribade: Medieval Anatomies of Female Masculinity and Pleasure”
Karma Lochrie
28. Extermination of the Joyas: Gendercide in Spanish California
Deborah A. Miranda
29. Before Transgender: Transvestia’s Gender Spectrum, 1960-1980
Robert Hill
30. Reading Transsexuality in “Gay” Tehran (Around 1979)
Afsaneh Najmabadi
VII. Being There: The (Im)material Locations of Trans-Phenomena
31. Between Surveillance and Liberation: The Lives of Cross-Dressed Male Sex Workers in Early Postwar Japan
Todd Henry
32. An Ethics of Transsexual Difference: Luce Irigaray and the Place of Sexual Undecideability
Gayle Salamon
33. Touching Gender: Abjection and the Hygienic Imagination
Sheila Cavanaugh
34. Perverse Citizenship: Divas, Marginality, and Participation in “Loca-Lization”
Marcia Ochoa
35. Thinking Figurations Otherwise: Reframing Dominant Knowledges of Sex and Gender Variance in Latin America
Vek Lewis
VIII. Going Somewhere: Transgender Movement(s)
36. Transgender Without Organs? Mobilizing a Geo-affective Theory of Gender Modification
Lucas Crawford
37. Longevity and Limits in Rae Bourbon’s Life in Motion
Don Romesberg
38. The Romance of the Amazing Scalpel: Race, Affect and Labor in Thai Gender Reassignment Clinics
Aren Z. Aizura
39. Trans/scriptions: Homing Desires, (Trans)sexual Citizenship and Racialized Bodies
Nael Bhanji
40. Transportation: Translating Filipino/Filipino-American Tomboy Masculinities Through Seafaring and Migration
Kale Fajardo
IX. Biopolitics and the Administration of Trans-Embodiment(s)
41. Kaming Mga Talyada (We Who Are Sexy): The Transsexual Whiteness of Christine Jorgensen in the (Post)Colonial Philippines
Susan Stryker
42. Electric Brilliancy: Cross-Dressing Law and Freak Show Displays in Nineteenth- Century San Francisco
Clare Sears
43. Shuttling Between Bodies and Borders: Transmigration and the Politics of Rightful Killing
Sima Shakhsari
44. Silhouettes of Defiance: the memorialization of historical sites of queer and transgender resistance in an age of neoliberal inclusivity
Che Gossett
45. Neutering the Transgendered: Human Rights and Japan’s Law No. 111
Laura Norton
X. Trans-oriented Practices, Policies, and Social Change
46. “We Won't Know Who You Are”: Contesting Sex Designations in New York City Birth Certificates
Paisley Currah and Lisa Jean Moore
47. Reinscribing Normality: The Politics of Transgender Marriage
Ruthann Robson
48. Performance as Intravention: Ballroom Culture and the Politics of HIV/AIDS in Detroit
Marlon Bailey
49. Transgender as Mental Illness: Nosology, Social Justice, and the Tarnished Golden Mean
Nick Gorton
50. Building an Abolitionist Trans & Queer Movement with Everything We’ve Got
Dean Spade, Morgan Bassichis and Alex Lee | En ligne : | www.routledge.com/cw/stryker |
The Transgender Studies Reader 2 [texte imprimé] / Susan Stryker, Editeur scientifique ; Aren Aizura, Editeur scientifique . - 2013 . - Londres/New York (UK/USA) : Routledge, 2013 . - 695 pages. ISBN : 978-0-415-51773-7 Langues : Anglais ( eng) Catégories : | Sciences humaines:Sociologie, anthropologie
| Index. décimale : | Pastille bleue (en anglais) Armoires Sciences Humaines. Langue = anglais. | Résumé : | Over the past twenty years, transgender studies has emerged as a vibrant field of interdisciplinary scholarship. In 2006, Routledge’s The Transgender Studies Reader brought together the first definitive collection of the field. Since its publication, the field has seen an explosion of new work that has expanded the boundaries of inquiry in many directions. The Transgender Studies Reader 2 gathers these disparate strands of scholarship, and collects them into a format that makes sense for teaching and research.
Complementing the first volume, rather than competing with it, The Transgender Studies Reader 2 consists of fifty articles, with a general introduction by the editors, explanatory head notes for each essay, and bibliographical suggestions for further research. Unlike the first volume, which was historically based, tracing the lineage of the field, this volume focuses on recent work and emerging trends. To keep pace with this rapidly changing area, the second reader has a companion website, with images, links to blogs, video, and other material to help supplement the book. | Note de contenu : | I. Transgender Perspectives In (and On) Radical Political Economy
1. Normalized Transgressions: Legitimizing the Transsexual Body as Productive
Dan Irving
2. Retelling Racialized Violence, Remaking White Innocence: The Politics of Interlocking Oppressions in Transgender Day of Remembrance
Sarah Lamble
3. Artful Concealment and Strategic Visibility: Transgender Bodies and U.S. State Surveillance After 9/11
Toby Beauchamp
4. Tracing This Body: Transsexuality, Pharmaceuticals & Capitalism
Michelle O’Brien
5. Transsexual Necropolitics
Jin Haritaworn and C. Riley Snorton
II. Making Trans-Culture(s): Texts, Performances, Artifacts
6. “The White To Be Angry”: Vaginal Creme Davis’ Terrorist Drag
Jose Esteban Muñoz
7. Felt Matters
Jeanne Vaccaro
8. Groping Theory: Haptic Cinema and Trans-Curiosity in Hans Scheirl’s Dandy Dust
Eliza Steinbock
9. The Transgender Look
J. Halberstam
10. Embracing Transition, or Dancing in the Folds of Time
Julian Carter
III. Transsexing Humanimality
11. Selections from Evolution’s Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People
Joan Roughgarden
12. Animal Transsex
Myra Hird
13. Animals Without Genitals: Race and Transsubstantiation
Mel Chen
14. Lessons from a Starfish
Eva Hayward
15. Interdependent Ecological Transsex: Notes on Re/Production, “Transgender” Fish, and the Management of Populations, Species, and Resources
Bailey Keir
IV. Transfeminisms
16. Feminist Solidarity After Queer Theory: The Case of Transgender
Cressida Heyes
17. Inclusive Pedagogy in the Women’s Studies Classroom: Teaching the Kimberly Nixon Case
Viviane Namaste (with Georgia Sitara)
18. Skirt Chasers: Why the Media Depicts the Trans Revolution in Lipstick and Heels
Julia Serano
19. The Education of Little Cis: Cisgender and the Discipline of Opposing Bodies
A. Finn Enke
20. Our Bodies Are Not Ourselves: Tranny Guys and the Racialized Class Politics of Incoherence
Bobby Noble
V. Cross Talk: Contention and Complexity in Trans-Discourses
21. Body Shame, Body Pride: Lessons From the Disability Rights Movement
Eli Clare
22. The Pharmaco-Pornographic Regime: Sex, Gender, and Subjectivity in the Age of Punk Capitalism
Beatriz Preciado
23. Evil Deceivers and Make-Believers: On Transphobic Violence and the Politics of Illusion
Talia Mae Bettcher
24. “Still At the Back of the Bus”: Sylvia Rivera’s Struggle
Jessi Gan
25. Transgender Subjectivity and the Logic of Sexual Difference
Shanna Carlson
VI. Timely Matters: Temporality and Trans-historicity
26. Towards A Transgender Archaeology: A Queer Rampage Through Prehistory
Mary Weismantel
27. Selections from “Before the Tribade: Medieval Anatomies of Female Masculinity and Pleasure”
Karma Lochrie
28. Extermination of the Joyas: Gendercide in Spanish California
Deborah A. Miranda
29. Before Transgender: Transvestia’s Gender Spectrum, 1960-1980
Robert Hill
30. Reading Transsexuality in “Gay” Tehran (Around 1979)
Afsaneh Najmabadi
VII. Being There: The (Im)material Locations of Trans-Phenomena
31. Between Surveillance and Liberation: The Lives of Cross-Dressed Male Sex Workers in Early Postwar Japan
Todd Henry
32. An Ethics of Transsexual Difference: Luce Irigaray and the Place of Sexual Undecideability
Gayle Salamon
33. Touching Gender: Abjection and the Hygienic Imagination
Sheila Cavanaugh
34. Perverse Citizenship: Divas, Marginality, and Participation in “Loca-Lization”
Marcia Ochoa
35. Thinking Figurations Otherwise: Reframing Dominant Knowledges of Sex and Gender Variance in Latin America
Vek Lewis
VIII. Going Somewhere: Transgender Movement(s)
36. Transgender Without Organs? Mobilizing a Geo-affective Theory of Gender Modification
Lucas Crawford
37. Longevity and Limits in Rae Bourbon’s Life in Motion
Don Romesberg
38. The Romance of the Amazing Scalpel: Race, Affect and Labor in Thai Gender Reassignment Clinics
Aren Z. Aizura
39. Trans/scriptions: Homing Desires, (Trans)sexual Citizenship and Racialized Bodies
Nael Bhanji
40. Transportation: Translating Filipino/Filipino-American Tomboy Masculinities Through Seafaring and Migration
Kale Fajardo
IX. Biopolitics and the Administration of Trans-Embodiment(s)
41. Kaming Mga Talyada (We Who Are Sexy): The Transsexual Whiteness of Christine Jorgensen in the (Post)Colonial Philippines
Susan Stryker
42. Electric Brilliancy: Cross-Dressing Law and Freak Show Displays in Nineteenth- Century San Francisco
Clare Sears
43. Shuttling Between Bodies and Borders: Transmigration and the Politics of Rightful Killing
Sima Shakhsari
44. Silhouettes of Defiance: the memorialization of historical sites of queer and transgender resistance in an age of neoliberal inclusivity
Che Gossett
45. Neutering the Transgendered: Human Rights and Japan’s Law No. 111
Laura Norton
X. Trans-oriented Practices, Policies, and Social Change
46. “We Won't Know Who You Are”: Contesting Sex Designations in New York City Birth Certificates
Paisley Currah and Lisa Jean Moore
47. Reinscribing Normality: The Politics of Transgender Marriage
Ruthann Robson
48. Performance as Intravention: Ballroom Culture and the Politics of HIV/AIDS in Detroit
Marlon Bailey
49. Transgender as Mental Illness: Nosology, Social Justice, and the Tarnished Golden Mean
Nick Gorton
50. Building an Abolitionist Trans & Queer Movement with Everything We’ve Got
Dean Spade, Morgan Bassichis and Alex Lee | En ligne : | www.routledge.com/cw/stryker |
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