lynx   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

This category needs an editor. We encourage you to help if you are qualified.
Volunteer, or read more about what this involves.
Related

Contents
289 found
Order:
1 — 50 / 289
Material to categorize
  1. “Queer Identities in Political Contexts”.Matthew J. Cull - 2024 - In Julie A. Gedro & Tonette S. Rocco, The Routledge Companion to LGBTQ Identity in Global, Social, Political, and Work Contexts. pp. 365-376.
    Recent work in analytic feminist metaphysics seeking to engage with queer and especially trans identities has led to the development of contextualist accounts of social identities. These accounts claim that what it is to be a trans woman, or demigender, or gay, is dependent on context. This chapter looks at the history of contextualist accounts of social identity, before offering a survey of contemporary scholarship in the field, developing work on the semantics and social ontology of social identities by Jennifer (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  2. Beyond Personhood: An Essay in Trans Philosophy. [REVIEW]Nick Clanchy - forthcoming - Philosophical Quarterly.
  3. The Impact of Deadnaming.Elek Lane - 2025 - Philosophical Quarterly:1-17.
    To deadname is to call a trans person by a name they have rejected. Deadnaming has a visceral impact. Why? This paper canvasses several possible answers. While deadnaming may sometimes evoke painful memories or communicate that the speaker is transphobic, I suggest that deadnaming is hurtful for fundamentally prohibitionist reasons. When a deadname is used, it violates a prohibition that has been enacted by a trans person’s exercise of linguistic authority; violating this prohibition is impactful. I sketch how this explanation (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  4. Biopolitics and Reproductive Injustice: The Medicalization of Reproduction and Transition.Margaret McLaren & Sanjula Rajat - 2025 - Revista Ideação 51:59-81.
    Sexuality plays a central role in Foucault’s philosophy, from his four volume series on the topic to his ideas about medicalization, biopower, and the abnormal. Many of Foucault’s concepts, such as governmentality, biopower, and biopolitics, are useful for analyzing the effects of laws and policies regulating reproduction and sexuality. This article brings Foucault’s ideas to bear on two aspects of sexuality, reproduction and trans health care, to show how the operations of biopower result in reproductive oppression. We briefly trace the (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  5. Lives in Limbo: Trans Temporalities and the Phenomenology of Waiting.Sanjula Rajat - 2025 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 39 (3):296-309.
    Dominant narratives of gender transition are often couched in ameliorative, futural frameworks that understand it as a linear process of becoming. However, trans writers and scholars have problematized this narrative, writing about the temporality of transition in terms of the complicated affective milieu of waiting. This article draws on this literature to theorize that waiting operates not just temporally, but also as an affective structure with multiple, changing modalities. This article maps experiences of waiting as they crystallize as anticipation or (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  6. Verbal Disputes, Social Totality, and Trans Politics.Katie Zhou - forthcoming - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research.
    Is the dispute about whether trans women are women a merely verbal affair? I argue that it isn't. But I also argue that this is much harder to show than philosophers have previously thought. In fact, vindicating the substantiveness of the dispute requires us to recognize the social totality of gender concepts.
    Remove from this list   Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  7. The Cisgender Tipping Point.Ding . - forthcoming - Apa Studies on Lgbtq Philosophy.
    A generation of feminist theory following Time magazine’s 2014 proclamation of a “Transgender Tipping Point” has tried and failed to defend trans people’s “inclusion” in existing social institutions and philosophical conceptions of gender embodiment. This half-comic, fully-serious essay takes a sideways crack at centering trans people by centering cis people in the metaphysics of gender, by turning cis people into the object of our intellectual debate and scrutiny. Instead of granting cis people’s genders simply as a matter of course, I (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  8. Support group or transgender lobby? Representing Mermaids in the British press.Aimee Bailey & Jai Mackenzie - 2025 - Critical Discourse Studies 22 (3):243-261.
    This article examines representations of Mermaids, a charity that supports trans young people and their families, in the British press. Using corpus-assisted critical discourse analysis, we identify and chart patterns in reporting between Mermaids’ inception as a charity in 2015, and 2022, a turbulent year for both the charity and trans people in the UK more generally. The findings show that, in the early years, there is relatively little attention to Mermaids in the press. Where they are mentioned, the charity (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  9. Gender Incongruence and Fit.Rach Cosker-Rowland - 2023 - Australasian Philosophical Review 7 (3):286-292.
    According to the ICD-11 and DSM-5, transgender people’s experienced gender is incongruent with their natal sex or gender and the purpose of gender affirming-healthcare (GAH) interventions is to reduce this incongruence. Vincent argues that this view is conceptually incoherent—the incoherence thesis—and proposes that the ICD and DSM should be revised to understand transgender people as experiencing a merely felt incongruence between their gender and their natal sex or gender—the feelings revision. I argue that (i) Vincent in fact gives us no (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  10. Trans Perspectives in Philosophy of Mind.Gen Eickers - forthcoming - Apa Studies on Feminism and Philosophy.
    This paper explores the intersection between trans philosophy and philosophy of mind—two areas that have traditionally been treated as addressing fundamentally different questions. While philosophy of mind typically investigates the nature and workings of the mind, trans philosophy interrogates the nature of trans realities. As these realities include investigations into embodiment, mind-body relationships, and emotion, I suggest taking trans perspectives seriously in philosophy of mind. Drawing on recent developments in feminist philosophy of mind and critical approaches to philosophy of mind, (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  11. Moral Rackets.Nicole Dular - forthcoming - Philosophical Quarterly.
    Protection rackets are used by criminal organizations to secure power, wherein “protection” is offered to individuals for threats coming from the criminal organization itself. In this paper, I put forth the concept of a moral racket as a type of structural racket wherein social dominants exploit moral reputation to perpetuate systems of domination. A moral racket occurs when individuals forcefully position themselves as moral saints for moral issues that either don’t exist, or do, but were created by the wrongful actions (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  12. What's Wrong with Stereotyping?Erin Beeghly - 2025 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    What's Wrong with Stereotyping? offers a refreshing and accessibly written philosophical take on the ethics of stereotyping. Stereotyping is woven into every aspect of human experience: conversation, psychology, algorithmic systems, and culture. It relates to generalization and induction, core aspects of rationality. But when and why it is morally wrong to stereotype? This book tackles this deep and enduring puzzle. To solve it, philosopher Erin Beeghly delves into the relationship between stereotyping and another phenomenon, discrimination. Not only does stereotyping cause (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  13. Putting Gender Back into Transgender Equality: On Iglesias v. Federal Bureau of Prisons.Ding . - 2023 - Blog of the American Philosophical Association.
  14. Infrapolitical Strategies for Preventing Hermeneutical Injustices Amidst the Global Trans Panic.Nick Clanchy - forthcoming - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy.
    Previously proposed strategies for preventing hermeneutical injustices mostly take for granted the interests people have in various things about themselves being intelligible, and aim only to enable them to satisfy these interests. Historically, the pursuit of such strategies has been somewhat successful in preventing trans people from suffering hermeneutical injustices in their interactions with cis people. Yet the widespread anti-trans backlash of recent years has brought to the fore a number of limitations and previously unacknowledged downsides to trans people’s pursuit (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  15. Prof. Balibar’s X-Mutant Transindividuals: Civic Disobedience in the Birmingham Philosophy Guild.Joshua M. Hall - forthcoming - Culture and Dialogue.
    As I have explored elsewhere, the Birmingham Philosophy Guild, which my former students and I re-founded in 2012, is a team of community members who engage in theoretical discussion, support group self-cultivation, and community activism. To further promote the guild as a catalyst for progressive social change, the present article connects it to both the popular cultural phenomenon of the “X-Men” – to make the guild more appealing to students and laypeople – and to the cutting-edge contemporary French philosophy of (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  16. Sexism.Erin Beeghly - forthcoming - Oxford Research Encyclopedia for Politics.
    This essay offers an in-depth view of sexism as a psychological, social, and political phenomenon and, in the process, highlights the resiliency of feminism as a social movement. Section 1 focuses on linguistic history: what the term “sexism” means and how it has changed over time. Section 2 analyzes the things in the world to which the label “sexism” refers, providing an overview of the multifaceted phenomenon from a social-scientific perspective. Section 3 considers an ameliorative framework for analyzing sexism. According (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  17. Gender and the Biopolitics of Public Order: Notes from Spain.Pablo Pérez Navarro - 2023 - Hypatia:1-18.
    This paper critically addresses the logics of exceptionality inherent to emerging regulations of the gender field, with a focus on Spain’s recent self-determination-based regulation of gender. To achieve this, it offers a biopolitical analysis of the concept of “public order” and its influence on gender governance, drawing parallels to Agamben’s concept of the state of exception and exploring the connections between contemporary regulations and the gendered public order of nineteenth-century France. Finally, it analyzes the exclusions and restrictions that the Spanish (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  18. Trans Needs Now.Jules Wong - 2023 - Blog of the American Philosophical Association (Apa).
  19. Human Rights and Inclusion Policies for Transgender Women in Elite Sport: The Case of Australia ‘Rules’ Football (AFL).Catherine Ordway, Matt Nichol, Damien Parry & Joanna Wall Tweedie - 2023 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy:1-23.
    The discourse inside and outside of sport in Australia and abroad on the participation of transgender women in female sport focuses on the principles of fairness, equity and the safety of competitors. These concerns commonly materialise (with little evidence) labelling transgender women as ‘cheats’, dominating female sport, strategically being coached in collision sports to intentionally hurt opponents or fraudulently transitioning with the sole aim of competing in elite women’s sport. Our research examines the process by which the Australian Football League (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  20. Embodied experience, embodied advantage, and the inclusion of transgender athletes in competitive sport: expanded framework, criticisms, and policy recommendations.Francisco Javier Lopez Frias & Cesar R. Torres - 2024 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 18 (5):527-547.
    In a previous paper entitled ‘Beyond Physiology: Embodied Experience, Embodied Advantage, and the Inclusion of Transgender Athletes in Competitive Sport,’ we claim that analyses of the inclusion or exclusion of transgender athletes in competitive sport must go beyond physiological criteria and incorporate the notions of embodied experience and embodied advantage. Our stance has recently been challenged as impractical and excessively exclusionary. In this paper, we address these challenges and build upon them to expand on the policy implications of our original (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  21. Decolonial Trans Futurity: A Trans of Color Critique of Normative Assimilation.Sanjula Rajat & Billie Waller - 2024 - Apa Studies on Feminism and Philosophy 24 (1):29-38.
    Anchored in a decolonial framework, we understand race and gender as co-constructions of colonial modernity. Drawing on María Lugones’ concept of the colonial/modern gender system, we show that non-normative racialized trans subjects are pathologized through the imposition of a racial-colonial system of binary gender. We argue that coloniality, when adopted into the medical-psychiatric apparatus, takes shape as transnormativity: an individualized, medicalized form of trans identity which is rooted in a white, Western understanding of gender. Building on Jasbir Puar’s framework of (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  22. The Circulation of Trans Philosophy: A Philosophical Polemic.Amy Marvin - 2024 - Apa Studies on Feminism and Philosophy 24 (1):2-12.
    This essay argues that trans philosophy - and perhaps philosophy more broadly - should be understood according to the interplay of social, material, and emotional circulations. It opens by bridging insights from underemployed library work during the COVID-19 pandemic with Sara Ahmed’s analysis of the circulation of emotions in relation to texts and archives. The first major section diagnoses Martha Nussbaum’s confusing analysis of “the new trans scholarship” to establish that trans philosophy is differentially circulated across the discipline of philosophy. (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  23. Beyond Binary: Genderqueer as Critical Gender Kind [English].Robin Dembroff - 2020 - Philosopher’s Imprint 20 (9):1-23.
    We want to know what gender is. But metaphysical approaches to this question solely have focused on the binary gender kinds men and women. By overlooking those who identify outside of the binary–the group I call ‘genderqueer’–we are left without tools for understanding these new and quickly growing gender identifications. This metaphysical gap in turn creates a conceptual lacuna that contributes to systematic misunderstanding of genderqueer persons. In this paper, I argue that to better understand genderqueer identities, we must recognize (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   8 citations  
  24. Ambivalences of Trans Recognition.Jules Wong - 2025 - Hypatia 40 (2):269-289.
    The need for gender recognition is widespread, even when hypervisibility and other effects of trans antagonism make that need dangerous for trans people. This reason partially accounts for why, in trans critique, recognition is a dirty word. As a political aim, and to some extent as a moral norm, trans critiques encourage dropping recognition. On the other hand, social philosophers often view recognition as a solution to misrecognition and take recognition to be a remedy for injustice. In my view, recognition (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  25. Pregnant Persons as a Gender Category: A Trans Feminist Analysis of Pregnancy Discrimination.Ding . - 2025 - Signs 50 (3):733–57.
    How should we make sense of pregnancy discrimination as an issue of gender equality? In a striking 1974 decision, Geduldig v. Aiello, the U.S. Supreme Court has answered that we simply cannot. Pregnancy discrimination does not constitute a form of sex discrimination prohibited by law, the 6–3 decision claims, because differential treatment based on pregnancy draws only a gender-neutral line between “pregnant women” and “nonpregnant persons,” not the gender line between women and men. While courts have since invoked Geduldig to (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  26. Much Ado About Nothing: Unmotivating "Gender Identity".E. M. Hernandez & Rowan Bell - forthcoming - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy.
    Recently, the concept of "gender identity" has enjoyed a great deal of attention in gender metaphysics. This seems to be motivated by the goal of creating trans-inclusive theory, by explaining trans people's genders. In this paper, we aim to unmotivate this project. Notions of "gender identity" serve important pragmatic purposes for trans people, such as satisfying the curiosity of non-trans people, and, relatedly, securing our access to important goods like legal rights and medical care. However, we argue that this does (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   8 citations  
  27. Respecting the free will, authenticity and autonomy of transgender youth.Leonie Crosse - 2024 - Nursing Ethics 31 (2-3):331-341.
    Transgender and gender diverse (TGD) youth are currently being targeted by global anti-trans legislation that would prevent their access to gender-affirming care even by healthcare providers willing to deliver it and who understand the importance of this support. It has been suggested in some studies that transness in young people is a result of peer contagion. As such their free will, authenticity and autonomy could be brought into question when accessing gender-affirming care. It is important to explore the relevance of (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  28. Gender Dysphoria for Critical Theory.Penelope Haulotte - 2024 - Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 10 (1).
    Gender dysphoria is typically construed as a medical concept. This understanding of gender dysphoria reflects how cisgender people interpret trans experience. This essay proposes an alternative concept of gender dysphoria for critical theory: on this account, gender dysphoria is alienation from cisgender forms of life. If the medicalized concept of gender dysphoria tacitly takes for granted, identifies with, and thereby reinforces cisgender patriarchal society, a critical theory of gender dysphoria instead approaches the issue from the perspective of trans people, their (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  29. Cameron Awkward-Rich, The Terrible We: Thinking with Trans Maladjustment.Jules Wong - 2024 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 28.
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  30. How (Not) to Talk about, and to, Trans Women.Sophie-Grace Chappell - 2020 - In Bob Fischer, College Ethics A Reader on Moral Issues that Affect You (2nd Ed). Oxford University Press. pp. 238-245.
    Remove from this list  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  31. The Transgender Studies Reader Remix.Susan Stryker (ed.) - 2022
    "The Transgender Studies Reader Remix assembles 50 previously published articles to orient students and scholars alike to current directions in the fast-evolving interdisciplinary field of transgender studies. The volume is organized into ten thematic sections on trans studies' engagements with feminist theory, queer theory, Black studies, science studies, Indigeneity and coloniality, history, biopolitics, cultural production, the posthumanities, and intersectional approaches to embodied difference. It includes a selection of highly-cited works from the two-volume The Transgender Studies Reader, more recently published essays, (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  32. Trans Epistemology and Methodological Radicalism: Un Œuf, But Enough.Matthew J. Cull - 2024 - Hypatia 39 (1):44-60.
    There have now been a few attempts in trans theory to give an account of trans epistemology (see Radi 2019; Meadow 2016; and Dickson 2021). I will suggest that despite an admirable goal—that of giving an epistemology that provides a methodologically radical and distinctively trans break from other contemporary epistemological theory—thus far no account has been successful. Instead, I suggest that, in the absence of a more satisfactory radical account of trans epistemology, we can think of trans epistemology as a (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  33. The semantics of deadnames.Taylor Koles - 2024 - Philosophical Studies 181 (4):715-739.
    Longstanding philosophical debate over the semantics of proper names has yet to examine the distinctive behavior of deadnames, names that have been rejected by their former bearers. The use of these names to deadname individuals is derogatory, but deadnaming derogates differently than other kinds of derogatory speech. This paper examines different accounts of this behavior, illustrates what going views of names will have to say to account for it, and articulates a novel version of predicativism that can give a semantic (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  34. A Brief History of Trans Philosophy.Amy Marvin - 2019 - Contingent Magazine.
    Provides a brief account of trans philosophy organizing in the 2010s and argues for the importance of building spaces for trans philosophers.
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  35. Critical Précis for Katharine Jenkins’s “Amelioration and Inclusion: Gender Identity and the Concept of Woman,".Talia Mae Bettcher - 2016 - Pea Soup: A Blog Dedicated to Philosophy, Ethics, and Academia.
  36. When Tables Speak: On the Existence of Trans Philosophy.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2018 - Daily Nous.
  37. Recommended Models and Policies for LAPD Interactions with Trans Individuals.Talia Mae Bettcher, Sharon Brown, Shirin Buckman, Masen Davis & Francisco Dueñas - 2011 - Human Relations Commission.
    Remove from this list  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  38. Without a Net: Starting Points for Trans Stories.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2011 - American Philosophical Association Lgbt Newsletter 10 (2):2-5.
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  39. Editors’ Introduction to Trans/Feminisms.Susan Stryker & Talia Mae Bettcher - 2016 - Transgender Studies Quarterly 3 (1-2):5-14.
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  40. The Role of the Illusion in the Construction of Erotic Desire: Narratives from Heterosexual Men Who Have Occasional Sex with Transgender Women.Cathy J. Reback, Rachel L. Kaplan, Talia Mae Bettcher & Sherry Larkins - 2016 - Culture, Health, and Sexuality 18 (8):951-963.
  41. Pretenders to the Throne: A commentary on Alice Dreger's ‘The controversy surrounding The Man Who Would Be Queen: A case history of the politics of science, identity, and sex in the internet age’.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2008 - Archives of Sexual Behavior 7 (3):430-33.
    Remove from this list  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  42. Transphobia.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2014 - Transgender Studies Quarterly 1 (1):249-51.
    This section includes eighty-six short original essays commissioned for the inaugural issue of TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly. Written by emerging academics, community-based writers, and senior scholars, each essay in this special issue, “Postposttranssexual: Key Concepts for a Twenty-First-Century Transgender Studies,” revolves around a particular keyword or concept. Some contributions focus on a concept central to transgender studies; others describe a term of art from another discipline or interdisciplinary area and show how it might relate to transgender studies. While far from (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  43. Intersexuality, Transsexuality, Transgender,.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2016 - In Lisa Jane Disch & M. E. Hawkesworth, The Oxford handbook of feminist theory. New York: pp. 407-427.
  44. A Conversation with Jeanne Córdova.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2016 - Transgender Studies Quarterly 3 (1-2):285-293.
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  45. Through the Looking Glass: Transgender Theory Meets Feminist Philosophy.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2017 - In Ann Garry, Serene J. Khader & Alison Stone, Routledge Companion to Feminist Philosophy. London: Routledge. pp. 393-404.
  46. Getting ‘Naked’ in the Colonial/Modern Gender System: A Preliminary Trans Feminist Analysis of Pornography.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2017 - In Mari Mikkola, Beyond Speech: Pornography and Analytic Feminist Philosophy. New York, US: pp. 157-176.
  47. Feminist Philosophical Engagements with Trans Theory.Talia Mae Bettcher - 2021 - In Ásta . & Kim Q. Hall, The Oxford Handbook of Feminist Philosophy. New York: pp. 531-540.
  48. Right Versus Wrong: A Qualitative Appraisal With Respect to Pandemic Trajectories of Transgender Population in Kerala, India.Kesavan Rajasekharan Nayar, S. Vinu, Lekha D. Bhat & Surabhi Kandaswamy - 2023 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 20 (4):639-646.
    The transgender population generally faces rights violations and discrimination in their day-to-day lives, which was exacerbated during the recent pandemic. This necessitates close scrutiny from an ethics perspective. Following directives from a 2014 Supreme Court judgement, Kerala became the first Indian state to implement a comprehensive policy to enforce the constitutional rights of transgender people. Despite such positive actions, a basic social tendency not to respect gender diversity has led to discrimination and marginalization. This was very evident during the pandemic. (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  49. Logic and Trans Philosophy.Franci Mangraviti - manuscript
    The paper is structured as follows. First, I will single out three salient moments of trans philosophy, drawing on both my own experience as a trans person and the various attempts to theorize transness as laid out by Talia Mae Bettcher's "Trapped in the Wrong Theory". From there, I will extrapolate three ways to see the relationship between logic and trans philosophy, and provide for each some examples of both current and possible future work. Finally, in analogy with the literature (...)
    Remove from this list  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  50. Before Trans Studies.Cassius Adair, Cameron Awkward-Rich & Amy Marvin - 2020 - Transgender Studies Quarterly 7 (3):306-320.
    In conversation with Emmett Harsin Drager and Andrea Long Chu's “After Trans Studies,” this collaborative essay also turns to questions of field formation and the ethos of trans studies. Situating the growth of the field in the material conditions of precarity under which trans knowledge-workers work, the authors argue that trans studies can't be “over” because, in fact, it isn't yet here. Rather than viewing this as only a dismal proposition, however, they insist that the tenuousness of trans studies provides (...)
    Remove from this list   Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
1 — 50 / 289
Лучший частный хостинг