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Asexy Trans Folks: A Discussion About the Intersection of Trans and Asexual Identities

neutrois:

What a pleasant surprise to find this workshop in the lineup for the Philadelphia Trans Health Conference.

It’s free, and it’s coming up soon. You should all register now and attend! (And don’t forget to stop by my workshop, Non Binary Transition).

(via transqueery)

Source: neutrois

    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #asexuality
    • #workshops
  • 14 hours ago > neutrois
  • 35
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Transgender Playlist Courtesy of Bitch Magazine

transradical:

[TW: T-word]

In reaction to the recent coming out of Against Me!’s Laura Jane Grace, the always wonderful Bitch magazine has released a “Genderpocalyptic Playlist” of 11 transgender and gender non-conforming themed songs for you to enjoy:

  • “Fagette” by Athens Boys Choir
  • “In the End” by Justin Vivian Bond
  • “Bluesman” by Novice Theory
  • “TN Tranny Two-Step” by Actor Slash Model
  • “A Guy Named Joe” by Coyote Grace
  • “Got Monsters” by Mina Caputo
  • “Third Gender” by Good Asian Drivers
  • “Revolution” by All the Pretty Horses
  • “I Ain’t Taking No Shit” by Big Freedia
  • “Shark Attack” by Schmekel
  • “She Walks Away” by Lipstick Conspiracy

(via transawareness)

Source: transradical

    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #music
    • #entertainment
    • #bitch magazine
    • #tw
    • #trigger warning
  • 17 hours ago > transradical
  • 182
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Now Available: Transgender Family Law Book by GLAD

(via transawareness)

Source: oqueerwc

    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #GLAD
    • #family law
    • #books
  • 2 days ago > oqueerwc
  • 59
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Why I Dislike The “Take A Picture of a Transgender Person who Passes and Post it To urge Equality” Thing

transpectrum:

thelifeofaqueerfeminist:

There seems to be more and more people posting pictures of transgender people who “pass.” But to me this doesn’t seem to help. It’s almost like “see, we conform to your gender standards too, so can we be equal now?” Gender is a spectrum and we shouldn’t be teaching people that we can conform, we should be teaching people not to judge based off of what they see.

Yes.

(via loversintransition)

Source: thelifeofaqueerfeminist

    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #passing
    • #normativity
  • 2 days ago > thelifeofaqueerfeminist
  • 216
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Newark Man Acquitted in Murder of Transgender Model

TW: cissexism, hate crimes, murder
Alrashim Chambers was acquitted Friday of the murder of transgender model Victoria Carmen White (pictured).

BY Trudy Ring

Victoria Carmen White

A New Jersey man was acquitted Friday of the 2010 murder of transgender lingerie model Victoria Carmen White.

A jury in Essex County, N.J., found Alrashim Chambers, 25, of Newark, not guilty of murder, bias intimidation, and two weapons charges, New Jersey’s Star-Ledger newspaper reports. Chambers, who took the stand in his own defense, denied having anything to do with the killing and painted another man, Marquise Foster, who took a plea deal in exchange for testimony against Chambers, as the perpetrator.

Click the link above to read the full article.

    • #new jersey
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #cissexism
    • #discrimination
    • #trans* hate
    • #hate crimes
    • #trigger warning
    • #TW
  • 2 days ago
  • 5
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TW: cissexism, suicide

Project Queer readers may remember an article posted a couple weeks ago involving a trans* student named Jennifer Braly who has fought for her right to help teach psychology and sociology classes at the University of Arkansas. Aside from fighting for her right to be a guest speaker/teacher’s aid, Braly has also fought for her right to use the school’s public restroom.
Jennifer Braly (pictured above) has been subject to many criticisms in and outside the trans* community. From outside, many have attempted to push their cissexist ideas on her. From within trans* and queer circles, many folks have criticised her teaching methods - including her reference of GID (gender-identity disorder) and the fact that she has used what it is considered offensive, outdated language in reference to the trans* community.
Jennifer Braly reportedly attempted suicide this morning - according to her personal facebook account. No new details of her whereabouts or condition are available at this time. If anyone has any information regarding this story, please reply with it - and send well-wishes and positive thoughts Jennifer’s way.
If anything new surfaces, I will make sure to update here.
View Separately

TW: cissexism, suicide

Project Queer readers may remember an article posted a couple weeks ago involving a trans* student named Jennifer Braly who has fought for her right to help teach psychology and sociology classes at the University of Arkansas. Aside from fighting for her right to be a guest speaker/teacher’s aid, Braly has also fought for her right to use the school’s public restroom.

Jennifer Braly (pictured above) has been subject to many criticisms in and outside the trans* community. From outside, many have attempted to push their cissexist ideas on her. From within trans* and queer circles, many folks have criticised her teaching methods - including her reference of GID (gender-identity disorder) and the fact that she has used what it is considered offensive, outdated language in reference to the trans* community.

Jennifer Braly reportedly attempted suicide this morning - according to her personal facebook account. No new details of her whereabouts or condition are available at this time. If anyone has any information regarding this story, please reply with it - and send well-wishes and positive thoughts Jennifer’s way.

If anything new surfaces, I will make sure to update here.

    • #jennifer braly
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #cissexism
    • #TW
    • #trigger warning
    • #suicide
  • 3 days ago
  • 59
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Chrissy Polis, transgender beating victim, still scarred from McDonald's attack

(via mattachinereview)

Source: transfeminism

    • #chrissy polis
    • #hate crimes
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #cissexism
    • #discrimination
  • 3 days ago > transfeminism
  • 15
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Nepal to Allow 'Other' Gender on Official IDs

BY Trudy Ring

The government of Nepal announced this week that it will allow citizens to choose “other” as the gender option, rather than male or female, on official ID cards.

LGBT activists in the nation welcomed the decision, which implements a ruling made by Nepal’s Supreme Court in 2007, reports wire service Deutsche Presse-Agentur. It will help transgender people as well as others who suffer discrimination because their appearance does not match the gender listed on their citizenship cards, they said.

“Our community feels we are finally being granted an identity by the state, and my friends have told me they feel proud about it,” said Sunil Babu Pant, Nepal’s first openly gay legislator.

The change will take effect in a few weeks, said officials with Nepal’s Home Ministry.

    • #nepal
    • #human rights
    • #gender
    • #gender identity
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #lgbtq
    • #queer
  • 3 days ago
  • 120
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But transitioning is definitely not one-size-fits all. … Take my path as an example, but not the rule — and find what works for you.

- From “Tips for Transmen: Part 1: Consider Your Goals” (but it really applies to all transpeople).

This is one of the main points I will be emphasizing in my Non-Binary Transition Workshop. Glad to see it is echoed elsewhere. 

(via neutrois)

(via neutrois)

Source: tipsfortransmen.com

    • #transition
    • #transitioning
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
  • 3 days ago > neutrois
  • 23
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Against Me!'s Tom Gabel Makes Live Debut as Laura Jane Grace in San Diego

By Peter Holslin
Against Me! singer-guitarist Tommy Gabel made her live debut as Laura Jane Grace on Friday, performing with the band under her new name for the first time since coming out as transgender. 

    • #against me!
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #coming out
    • #music
    • #entertainment
    • #laura jane grace
  • 4 days ago
  • 99
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NY Times Does Not Retract Dehumanizing Coverage of Trans Woman Who Died in Fire

In response to criticism from the LGBT community and allies over its coverage of a fire that killed a transgender woman this weekend, the New York Times released a statement that reveals a lack of understanding of how serious this problem is.

New York Times Metro Editor Carolyn Ryan stated: “We typically try to capture the personal stories of those whose lives are lost in a fire, and we sought to do so in this case. We certainly did not mean any disrespect to the victim or those who knew her. But, in retrospect, we should have shown more care in our choice of words.”

Unfortunately, the problem with the Times’ article on the death of Lorena Escalera, a transgender woman of color, is bigger than their “choice of words” or with their attempt to “capture” her story. It’s their failure to recognize trans women as women.  

The decision by writers Al Baker and Nate Schweber to call her “curvaceous” in the first sentence was not a poor choice of words. It was a poor choice of focus. The way this entire article is framed comes directly from an idea that transgender women are curiosities. That they’re other. That they should be treated differently than other people.  Saying that Lorena was “called” Lorena, even though that is exactly how police identified her, was not a poor choice of words. It was a disrespectful jab at her identity as a trans woman, by implying that she wasn’t really Lorena.

Lorena was a daughter. She was a friend. She was a beloved member of a community. But the only elements of her story that writers Al Baker and Nate Schweber seemed concerned with were; what she looked like, what her neighbors thought she looked like, and whether any items that would typically belong to a woman were in her apartment when it burned. Very little of this is relevant to the actual personal story of Lorena Escalera’s life. It seems very clear that this personal information was included in order to “spice up” the story by exploiting Lorena’s status as a transgender woman – not to actually inform readers about her life.

“As my city’s and our nation’s paper of record, I would expect the New York Times to treat any subject, regardless of their path in life, with dignity,” said trans advocate and journalist Janet Mock. “In Lorena Escalera’s life she was so much more than the demeaning, sexist portrait they painted of girls like us. It goes beyond a ‘choice of words.’ According to the Times’ limiting, harmful portrait of Lorena, she was nothing more than a ‘curvaceous’ bombshell for men to gawk at. That is not the ‘personal’ story of any woman, and until we treat trans women like human beings - in life and death - with dignity, families and struggles, our society will never see us beyond pariahs in our communities.

Unfortunately, many Americans, including members of the media, do view transgender people – and trans women of color in particular – as curiosities at best, or not deserving of basic human dignity at worst. And very few Americans know any trans people in their day-to-day lives, so this viewpoint is never dispelled.  This is why extra care must be taken when reporting on a story that involves a transgender person, especially if that person is no longer able to speak for themselves, as is the case here. Writers and editors alike must be made aware of how common this underlying bias is, and make a conscious effort to remove it when they see it.

This is where the Times’ statement truly fails. Not only does it not show an understanding of what the problem with the original article was, it also makes no assurances to the community that it will educate its writers and editors about how to report on transgender people in the future. There’s nothing forward-looking in the Times statement.

GLAAD did ask the Times to detail what steps will be taken in the future to ensure this doesn’t happen again. We were told that this statement “will be all there is from us on this.”

But this statement is not good enough.  The New York Times has highlighted the personal and inspiring stories of transgender people in the recent past, including an article on Harmony Santana, Laverne Cox and other transgender actresses, a piece on triathlete Chris Mosier and one on classical pianist Sara Davis Buechner. We can be almost certain that the New York Times does understand the problems with its piece on Lorena, and is embarrassed that it ran. Now it’s time for them to say so publicly, and to tell its readers that steps are being taken to ensure that an article like this won’t be printed again.  We thank members of the LGBT community, including trans leaders like Janet Mock, Autumn Sandeen, Laverne Cox, and Jennifer Finney Boylan, trans author and New York Times contributing writer, as well as Colorlines and Feministing, for bringing attention to this story. We hope to continue putting pressure on the Times until they offer assurances that changes will be made.

Source: transfeminism

    • #the new york times
    • #cissexism
    • #discrimination
    • #TWOC
    • #TPOC
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
  • 4 days ago > transfeminism
  • 129
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NY Times Trans Exploitation Completely Unacceptable

This weekend, the New York Times published an extremely exploitative article about a transgender woman who had died in a fire. The article, about Lorena Escalera, only mentions that she was killed in a fire after telling readers that she was “curvaceous,” that she “drew admiring glances” in her “gritty Brooklyn neighborhood,” that she “was known to invite men for visits to her apartment,” that Lorena was “called Lorena” (as opposed to saying she was “named Lorena” or that she simply was Lorena) and that she “brought two men to her apartment” sometime between late Friday night and early Saturday morning.

The article by Al Baker and Nate Schweber treats Escalera completely disrespectfully, later describing a pile of debris outside the burned apartment which “contained many colorful items. Among them were wigs, women’s shoes, coins from around the world, makeup, hair spray, handbags, a shopping bag from Spandex House, a red feather boa and a pamphlet on how to quit smoking.”

Take the word “transgender” out of the equation.

Would the New York Times ever describe a woman who is not transgender, who had died in a fire, as “curvaceous” - in the first sentence, no less? Would it carefully note that her apartment contained makeup and “women’s shoes?” Would it say that she was “called” whatever her name was - especially if police later identified her by that name?

Janet Mock and other noted leaders in the trans advocacy movement have been speaking out about this article online. Thank you to all of you who submitted incident reports about this article, or alerted us to it through Twitter. We are reaching out to the Times to discuss the many incident reports we received, and to ensure that exploitative pieces like this don’t get printed in the future.

(via transqueery)

Source: transfeminism

    • #the new york times
    • #cissexism
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #exploitation
    • #discrimination
  • 4 days ago > transfeminism
  • 206
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Oh sweet and fluffy lord, I should have parked the URL:

ameliated:

Dear Trans People is back. THIS IS NOT, I repeat NOT, in ANY WAY, shape, or form, connected to Dear Cis People. I want to make that PERFECTLY clear.

(via dearcispeople)

Source: ameliated

    • #dear cis people
    • #dear trans people
    • #cissexism
    • #PSA
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
  • 4 days ago > ameliated
  • 15
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20 Questions for Kate Bornstein

Source: fuckyeahgenderstudies

    • #kate bornstein
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #gender
    • #writers
  • 5 days ago > fuckyeahgenderstudies
  • 23
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autumn-and-eve:

The queer community’s first fights were fought by trans women and AMAB gender non-conforming people and paid for by queer people of color, never forget that.

(via thatfeministdyke)

Source: autumn-and-eve

    • #AMAB
    • #trans*
    • #transgender*
    • #POC
    • #TPOC
    • #human rights
    • #activism
  • 5 days ago > autumn-and-eve
  • 435
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Project Queer posts action alerts, world news, human rights injustices, politics, photos, videos, quotes, resources, advice, entertainment, and art involving the: gay, lesbian, transgender*, genderqueer, intersex, multi-sexual, asexual, questioning, and otherwise queer and gender non-conforming communities.

This blog is both sex-positive and body-positive.

Project Queer's creator and editor-in-chief is Riley - a twenty-something year old, white queer trans* guy who lives in Central Illinois.
URL: wanderlustprince.tumblr.com


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