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icymist

(15,888 posts)
Sat Apr 22, 2023, 10:30 PM Apr 2023

How historians are documenting the lives of transgender people

PUBLISHED JUNE 24, 2022
• 11 MIN READ

In 1952, a young woman sat down to write a letter to her family. The act itself was nothing remarkable—Christine Jorgensen was 26 and preparing to return to the United States after undergoing some medical procedures in Denmark. But the contents of Jorgensen’s letter were entirely unique.

“I have changed very much,” she told her family, enclosing a few photos. “But I want you to know that I am an extremely happy person...Nature made a mistake, which I have had corrected, and I am now your daughter.”

As the first American to undergo gender-confirmation surgery, Jorgensen would arguably become the world’s most famous transgender woman of her era. Her remarkable transition from a male-presenting soldier to a polished, feminine public figure would be a watershed in trans visibility.

The word “transgender” didn’t exist at the time—it wouldn’t be coined for another decade or become widespread until the 1990s—but transgender history began long before Jorgensen brought it into broader public awareness. Documenting that history isn’t always straightforward—but Jules Gill-Peterson, an associate professor of history at Johns Hopkins University, says it’s much more extensive—and joyful—than you might think.

Though stigma, violence, and oppression are parts of trans history, Gill-Peterson says, trans people “still lived really interesting, rich, happy, flourishing trans lives.” And they left plenty of evidence behind, she says. “They generally are hiding in plain sight.”


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How historians are documenting the lives of transgender people (Original Post) icymist Apr 2023 OP
Great article! LostOne4Ever Apr 2023 #1
Link wouldn't work Not Heidi Apr 2023 #2
It just worked for me. icymist Apr 2023 #3

icymist

(15,888 posts)
3. It just worked for me.
Mon Apr 24, 2023, 07:30 PM
Apr 2023

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