Invisible Lives: The Erasure of Transsexual and Transgendered People

by Viviane Namaste

Hardcover, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

HQ77.95 .C2 N35 2000

Publication

University Of Chicago Press (2000), Hardcover, 320 pages

Description

Invisible Lives is the first scholarly study of transgendered people—cross-dressers, drag queens and transsexuals—and their everyday lives. Through combined theoretical and empirical study, Viviane K. Namaste argues that transgendered people are not so much produced by medicine or psychiatry as they are erased, or made invisible, in a variety of institutional and cultural settings. Namaste begins her work by analyzing two theoretical perspectives on transgendered people—queer theory and the social sciences—displaying how neither of these has adequately addressed the issues most relevant to sex change: everything from employment to health care to identity papers. Namaste then examines some of the rhetorical and semiotic inscriptions of transgendered figures in culture, including studies of early punk and glam rock subcultures, to illustrate how the effacement of transgendered people is organized in different cultural sites. Invisible Lives concludes with new research on some of the day-to-day concerns of transgendered people, offering case studies in violence, health care, gender identity clinics, and the law.… (more)

Language

Original publication date

2000

Physical description

320 p.; 8.82 inches

ISBN

0226568091 / 9780226568096

Local notes

OCLC = 409
Google Books

Similar in this library

Page: 0.3372 seconds