ABSTRACT

Transgender Migrations brings together a top-notch collection of emerging and established scholars to examine the way that the term "migration" can be used not only to look at the way trans bodies migrate from one gender to the (an?) other, but the way that trans people migrate in the larger geopolitical contexts of immigration reform, the war on terror, the war on drugs, and the increased policing of national borders.

The book centers trans-ing experiences, identities, and politics, and treats these identities as inextricably intertwined with other social identities, institutions, and discourses of sexuality, nationality, race and ethnicity, globalization, colonialism, and terrorism. The chapter authors explore not only the movement of bodies in, through, and across spaces and borders, but also chart the metamorphoses of these bodies in relation to migration and mobility.

Transgender Migrations takes the theory documented in The Transgender Studies Reader and blows it up to a global scale. It is the logical next step for scholarship in this dynamic, emerging field.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Migration and Morphing

part I|48 pages

Affective Alien(n)ations and Queer(Re)territorializations

chapter 1|21 pages

Colorful Bodies in the Multikulti Metropolis

Vitality, Victimology and Transgressive Citizenship in Berlin

chapter 2|25 pages

Forging “Moral Geographies”

Law, Sexual Minorities and Internal Tensions in Northern Mexico Border Towns

part II|48 pages

Trans Aesthetics, Counterpublics and Spatiality

chapter 3|17 pages

Transgender Movement(s) and Beating the Straight Flush

Building an Art of Trans Washrooms

chapter 4|16 pages

Queer Exteriors

Transgender Aesthetics in Early Gay and Lesbian Advertising

chapter 5|13 pages

Spiderwomen

Notes on Transpositions

part III|31 pages

Transectionalities

chapter 6|12 pages

“Passing for White, Passing for Man”

Johnson's The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man as Transgender Narrative

part IV|20 pages

Troubling Trans and Queer Theory

chapter 9|19 pages

Trans/Scriptions

Homing Desires, (Trans)sexual Citizenship and Racialized Bodies