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Advances in Trans Studies: Moving Toward Gender Expansion and Trans Hope [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Kent State University, USA), Edited by (Georgia Southern University, USA), Edited by (Kenyon College, USA)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 248 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x18 mm, kaal: 467 g
  • Sari: Advances in Gender Research
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Nov-2021
  • Kirjastus: Emerald Publishing Limited
  • ISBN-10: 1802620303
  • ISBN-13: 9781802620306
  • Formaat: Hardback, 248 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x18 mm, kaal: 467 g
  • Sari: Advances in Gender Research
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Nov-2021
  • Kirjastus: Emerald Publishing Limited
  • ISBN-10: 1802620303
  • ISBN-13: 9781802620306
Sociologists answer the call for a Transgender Studies specialty within sociology by expanding the definition and knowledge about what it means to be trans and how trans people navigate their world. In sections on trans health; toward trans-inclusive institutions and societies; and trans resources, healing, and resilience, they explore such topics as maintaining cisnormative accountability: medical providers' negotiation of transgender healthcare, gendering the fat body: rhetoric and personhood in transition, doubly imprisoned: transgender and non-binary prisoners' experience in England and Wales, trans and gender nonconforming people healing through embodied activity, and the empirical turn in transgender studies. Distributed in North America by Turpin Distribution. Annotation ©2021 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

This volume of Advances in Gender Research gives space and voice to trans peoples’ experiences and interactions with various social institutions, including but not limited to, social media, healthcare and medicalization, the criminal justice system, and the family. The chapters in this volume utilize intersectional approaches, qualitative and quantitative methodologies, and many have clear implications for policy and advocacy for trans and gender diverse people.

The first part of the book covers a wide array of issues relating to health and healthcare for trans people, with authors examining health and aging for older trans people, the continued cisnormativity and transphobia that plagues the healthcare field, questions of body modification and how this relates to fertility, as well as access to mental health care. Part two explores trans inclusion in institutions and societies around the world, with authors exploring non-binary gender options on state sanctioned identification, prison experiences and policy recommendations in the U.S. and England, and positive changes to support trans students on college campuses. Part three covers trans resources, healing, and resilience.

The aim of this volume is greater than merely updating the research in trans studies, it stems from a desire to support the trans community in the continued fight for recognition and rights. The volume urges scholars to better understand gender expansion and to turn more attention towards trans hope. To encourage this, the volume ends with a section on resources, healing, and resilience, paving the way for the future of trans studies in sociology.



Advances in Trans Studies: Moving Toward Gender Expansion and Trans Hope explores transgender peoples’ experiences and interactions across various social contexts and institutions. With clear implications for policy and advocacy, this volume demonstrates the promise of an empirical turn in transgender studies.



This volume of Advances in Gender Research gives space and voice to trans peoples’ experiences and interactions with various social institutions, including but not limited to, social media, healthcare and medicalization, the criminal justice system, and the family. The chapters in this volume utilize intersectional approaches, qualitative and quantitative methodologies, and many have clear implications for policy and advocacy for trans and gender diverse people. The first part of the book covers a wide array of issues relating to health and healthcare for trans people, with authors examining health and aging for older trans people, the continued cisnormativity and transphobia that plagues the healthcare field, questions of body modification and how this relates to fertility, as well as access to mental health care. Part two explores trans inclusion in institutions and societies around the world, with authors exploring non-binary gender options on state sanctioned identification, prison experiences and policy recommendations in the U.S. and England, and positive changes to support trans students on college campuses. Part three covers trans resources, healing, and resilience. The aim of this volume is greater than merely updating the research in trans studies, it stems from a desire to support the trans community in the continued fight for recognition and rights. The volume urges scholars to better understand gender expansion and to turn more attention towards trans hope. To encourage this, the volume ends with a section on resources, healing, and resilience, paving the way for the future of trans studies in sociology.
About the Editors ix
About the Contributors xi
Series Editor Preface xiv
Introduction 1(8)
Baker A. Rogers
Austin H. Johnson
Tiffany Taylor
SECTION 1 TRANS HEALTH
Chapter 1 Health and Aging among Middle and Later Age Transgender Populations
9(20)
Alexandra C. H. Nowakowski
J. E. Sumerau
Lain A. B. Mathers
Chapter 2 Maintaining Cisnormative Accountability: Medical Providers' Negotiation of Transgender Healthcare
29(16)
William C. Stallings
Nik M. Lampe
Emily S. Mann
Chapter 3 "You're Going to Want to Freeze Your Eggs": Conversations Surrounding Fertility between Healthcare Professionals, Parents, and Transgender Adolescents
45(16)
Lindsay Toman
Chapter 4 Enhancing Selves by Gendering Bodies: Comparing Surgical Body Modifications among Transgender and Cisgender People
61(16)
Elroi J. Windsor
Chapter 5 Gendering the Fat Body: Rhetoric and Personhood in Transition
77(16)
Han Koehle
SECTION 2 TOWARD TRANS-INCLUSIVE INSTITUTIONS AND SOCIETIES
Chapter 6 Trans and Non-binary Identities and a Politics Beyond Recognition: On the Possibility of the X
93(16)
C. L. Quinan
Dagmar Oosthoek
Chapter 7 Policy Recommendations for Incarcerated Trans Men in the United States
109(16)
Sarah A. Rogers
Chapter 8 Doubly Imprisoned: Transgender and Non-binary Prisoners' Experiences in England and Wales
125(16)
Olga Suhomlinova
Saoirse O'Shea
Chapter 9 Shifting Understanding, Creating Inclusive Collegiate Culture
141(18)
Emily Fairchild
SECTION 3 TRANS RESOURCES, HEALING, AND RESILIENCE
Chapter 10 "I'm Technically Not Disowned": Familial Strain, Trans Resilience, and Bargaining for Belonging
159(18)
Bailey Troia
Chapter 11 "Being Able to Breathe Publicly": Trans and Gender Nonconforming People Healing through Embodied Activity
177(16)
Kai P. Blake-Leibowitz
Chapter 12 Managing Hopelessness: The Health-seeking Processes and Negotiations for Queer and/or Trans People
193(14)
Sameera V. Akella
Chapter 13 Social Support Networks within Transgender Facebook Groups: Facing a "Therapeutic Shield" in France
207(16)
Yael Armangau
Julien Figeac
Conclusion: The Empirical Turn in Transgender Studies 223(4)
Austin H. Johnson
Baker A. Rogers
Tiffany Taylor
Index 227
Austin H. Johnson is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Kenyon College (USA). He serves as Research Director at Campaign for Southern Equality and Senior Fellow at the Center for Applied Transgender Studies.



Baker A. Rogers is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Georgia Southern University (USA). Their research focuses on inequality, specifically examining the intersections of gender, sexuality, and religion in the U.S. South.



Tiffany Taylor is a Professor of Sociology at Kent State University at Kent (USA). Her research focuses on inequality and paid and unpaid work.