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black trans feminism

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Journal Article
TSQ (2017) 4 (2): 226–242.
Published: 01 May 2017
... Black women can enact transmisogyny is not an argument against the idea that all Black women and men face transmisogyny because trans people can enact transphobia and transmisogyny on themselves. The standard framing of the genealogy of trans feminism has prioritized the academy as the site of trans...
Journal Article
TSQ (2019) 6 (4): 521–538.
Published: 01 November 2019
...V Varun Chaudhry Abstract This essay works at the intersection of black feminism and trans studies to reflect on the radical possibilities for the futures of transgender studies and politics. Drawing on ethnographic data with a large-scale LGBTQ service organization, and focusing specifically...
Journal Article
TSQ (2020) 7 (3): 427–444.
Published: 01 August 2020
... a vision of a black trans* studies that acknowledges twentieth-century black feminist thought as its primary genealogy. For Ellison et al., the move to make black feminism the intellectual center of black trans* studies not only resists black women's persistent erasure from institutional narratives...
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (1): 101–118.
Published: 01 February 2022
... are bound up with those of trans people, and what responsibilities follow from that proximity. vjohsu@austin.utexas.edu Copyright © 2022 by Duke University Press 2022 Black feminism intersectionality t4t storytelling TransGriot We Black trans women are walking examples...
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (2): 266–288.
Published: 01 May 2022
... a pattern with the abstraction of the Google Earth imaging of the murder location, and black trans dance artist Aísha Noir's performance in the honorary dress as a collaborator with Vaughan for Project 42 installations. What follows is a political reflection at the intersection of black feminism, economic...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (4): 540–562.
Published: 01 November 2022
... Blackness, transness, and feminism, motioning a South and North encounter through a subjectless critique that “refuses to posit a or the subject of black trans feminism, rejecting a ‘proper’ object of both study and knowledge production in service of an ‘eccentricity.’” I contend...
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Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (2): 93–99.
Published: 01 May 2023
... ), we understand trans feminism as an epistemological formation that does not simply view feminism through a transgender lens or add transness to feminism. Rather, trans feminism “is an assault on the genre of the [hierarchized] binary, that ontological caste that universalizes itself and structures how...
Journal Article
TSQ (2020) 7 (1): 121–125.
Published: 01 February 2020
.... If it was revelatory for my students to read a Black trans woman in love, it was striking for me to listen to this story of a Black trans woman as the perpetrator, rather than the victim, of deadly violence and hear no attempts to frame her acts as results of her transness. Indeed, I suspect that, if Allen had not had...
Journal Article
TSQ (2019) 6 (3): 283–296.
Published: 01 August 2019
... shaped legal debates over trans bodies. A final note on the potential importance of the transing of theology: Eva Hayward has argued, citing Laverne Cox, that antiblack tranmisogynist violence has created an imperative for trans black women: “Don't exist.” In the face of that murderous imperative...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 15–21.
Published: 01 May 2016
...Miriam J. Abelson Abstract A number of trans-masculine people have written about their efforts to integrate feminism with masculine and trans identities, yet there are fewer stories of those who have more ambiguous relationships or actually resist feminism. This article illustrates the multiple...
Journal Article
TSQ (2017) 4 (2): 162–169.
Published: 01 May 2017
..., promotes a way of viewing blackness as a belated arrival or addendum to trans studies. Thus, what we coeditors have sought to do is describe the logics of the issuance of blackness as a problem, and to present an invitation to think about how the transversality of blackness and transness might come...
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (3): 311–333.
Published: 01 August 2022
... to initiate something that, we propose, should be understood as a distinctively postfascist feminism. In this introduction, we firstly situate contemporary trans exclusion in our particular political juncture—one in which fascist movements, ideologies, and imaginaries that had been hastily declared defunct...
Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (2): 189–194.
Published: 01 May 2023
... or Death , a translation by Ruth Hottell of Françoise d'Eaubonne's 1974 manifesto, Le féminisme ou la mort . The left-wing publisher heralded the release as a major event. D'Eaubonne is widely credited for the term ecofeminism and, far less credibly from Black and Indigenous vantage points, for the very...
Journal Article
TSQ (2021) 8 (2): 238–256.
Published: 01 May 2021
... Gossett ( 2017 : 18) read Hortense Spillers as an account on “how blackness is trans/gender trouble.” With this in mind, it becomes evident that to trans gender, to go beyond gender, if you already have a gender or are a gender, is different than transing gender from a position of contested gender, un...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 146–149.
Published: 01 May 2016
... had taken shape that enjoyed a lot of support—support won through hard work, despite a lot of hate. This issue of TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly , in seeking to escape the dichotomy of trans*-inclusive versus trans*-exclusionary feminisms, addresses the complexity of transfeminism(s), both...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 137–145.
Published: 01 May 2016
... the arguments for trans exclusion into their contemporary iterations and proposes the archive of trans women's feminist work as a theoretical and political resource for countering trans misogyny. Copyright © 2016 by Duke University Press 2016 lesbian feminism feminists of trans experience women's...
Journal Article
TSQ (2023) 10 (1): 16–22.
Published: 01 February 2023
... formulation flattens these histories. Black feminists' pivotal interrogations of the explicitly racial limitations of the category womanhood instruct why trans studies has refused to reckon with the untranslatability of femme queen as a category of analysis. Black feminisms theoretically reformulate...
FIGURES
Journal Article
TSQ (2018) 5 (1): 9–29.
Published: 01 February 2018
...-at-birth assignment thus could bolster trans-hating feminists as they developed mastery of their own embodiment and a narrower feminism that refused to be transed. Some years after the conference, Robin Morgan nearly admitted that she had gone on the attack because she was insecure to give a keynote...
FIGURES
Journal Article
TSQ (2022) 9 (3): 463–479.
Published: 01 August 2022
...://badgayspod.com/ . Leveille Lee . 2021 . “ The Mechanisms of TAnon: What Is ‘TAnon’? ” Health Liberation Now , April 12 . https://healthliberationnow.com/2021/04/12/the-mechanisms-of-tanon-what-is-tanon . Lewis Sophie . 2019 . “ How British Feminism Became Anti-trans .” New York Times...
Journal Article
TSQ (2016) 3 (1-2): 5–14.
Published: 01 May 2016
.... Clear, too, is the recognition that transfeminist perspectives have a decades-long history within intersectional feminisms and were crucial to early formulations of transgender studies. As one contribution to this issue of TSQ notes, trans issues played a role in the life of Dr. Pauli Murray, a black...