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Relationships - Romantic

Therapeutic considerations in working with the famiy, friends, and partners of transgendered individuals

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Authors:

Zamboni, B.D.

Source:

The Family Journal: Counseling and Therapy for Couples and Families, Volume 14, p.174-179 (2006)

Intimate Transitions: Transgender Practices of Partnering and Parenting

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Authors:

Sally, H.

Source:

Sociology : the Journal of the British Sociological Association, Volume 40, Number 2, p.353 (2006)

Abstract:

This article begins by examining sociological studies of intimacy and suggests that, despite a rise of interest in non-normative practices of sociality, transgender lives and experiences are absent from analyses of changing social relationships. Drawing on research data in the form of three case studies, I explore the experiences of intimacy within the context of gender transition: first to consider the impact of gender transition upon partnering relationships, and second to reflect upon how gender transition is negotiated within parenting relationships. I conclude by suggesting that the incorporation of transgender experiences into analyses of contemporary practices of intimacy enables a richer understanding of wider social changes in patterns of sociality.

Notes:

00380385

Make Me Feel Mighty Real: Gay Female-to-Male Transgenderists Negotiating Sex, Gender, and Sexuality

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Authors:

Schleifer, D.

Source:

Sexualities, Volume 9, Number 1, p.57 (2006)

ISBN:

1363-4607

Accession Number:

19702087

Abstract:

Gay female-to-male transgenderists (gay FTMs) are women who become men, and who then form erotic relationships with other men. Analysis of interviews with five gay FTMs depicts how they rely upon and reproduce distinctions between sex, gender, and sexuality in order to make sense of their bodies, their feelings and their interactions. Sex, gender and sexuality are produced as distinct and real through a range of interlocking material, discursive, and interactional practices. These categories of intelligibility function in relation to each other and serve to mutually constitute and reinforce each other. Although the distinctions drawn between sex, gender, and sexuality are real, the veracity of these distinctions is limited given their inextricability in the contiguous terrain of actual human lives.

Notes:

Vol. 9 Issue 1, p57-75 19p
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