2021
DOI: 10.1177/02685809211057669a
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Laurel Westbrook, Unlivable Lives: Violence and Identity in Transgender Activism

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Cited by 6 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Gender is always already racialized (Pascoe 2005), and sociologists are beginning to document the particular racialized nature of transness, from the increased barriers to education, healthcare, and employment faced by trans people of color, to the epidemic of physical violence aimed most virulently at Black transwomen (see, e.g., James et al 2016;Westbrook 2020). Scholars such as Riley Snorton and Jin haritaworn (2013) describe a bifurcated trans politics, one that focuses on idioms of freedom and chosenness in relation to White trans lives (see, e.g., Brubaker 2016), while articulating the value of trans lives of color mostly through reports of their deaths (see Westbrook 2020).…”
Section: Gender Classification Is An Achievement Not An Attributementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Gender is always already racialized (Pascoe 2005), and sociologists are beginning to document the particular racialized nature of transness, from the increased barriers to education, healthcare, and employment faced by trans people of color, to the epidemic of physical violence aimed most virulently at Black transwomen (see, e.g., James et al 2016;Westbrook 2020). Scholars such as Riley Snorton and Jin haritaworn (2013) describe a bifurcated trans politics, one that focuses on idioms of freedom and chosenness in relation to White trans lives (see, e.g., Brubaker 2016), while articulating the value of trans lives of color mostly through reports of their deaths (see Westbrook 2020).…”
Section: Gender Classification Is An Achievement Not An Attributementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gender is always already racialized (Pascoe 2005), and sociologists are beginning to document the particular racialized nature of transness, from the increased barriers to education, healthcare, and employment faced by trans people of color, to the epidemic of physical violence aimed most virulently at Black transwomen (see, e.g., James et al 2016;Westbrook 2020). Scholars such as Riley Snorton and Jin haritaworn (2013) describe a bifurcated trans politics, one that focuses on idioms of freedom and chosenness in relation to White trans lives (see, e.g., Brubaker 2016), while articulating the value of trans lives of color mostly through reports of their deaths (see Westbrook 2020). Indeed, gender attributions are themselves raced; social psychologists demonstrate, for example, that many people take longer to categorize the gender of people of color than they do White people (Lei, Leshin, and Rhodes 2020), and they exhibit biases toward viewing Black people as more masculine and Asians as more feminine than White people (Johnson, Freeman, and Pauker 2012).…”
Section: Gender Classification Is An Achievement Not An Attributementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As a result of these processes, the Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates that violent transgender deaths may be at least 40 times greater than those reported in official crime statistics (see Momen & Dilks, 2021). The most common major data sources for homicides in the United States, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform Crime Report data, do not include any information about whether the homicide victim was transgender (Westbrook, 2021;. Even the National Incident-Based Reporting System, which recently replaced the previous system as the primary source of national crime data (see Lantz, 2022a), offers very few opportunities for law enforcement agencies, and the personnel within them, to report a transgender identity outside of when a crime is explicitly motivated by bias (Stotzer, 2017).…”
Section: Transgender Homicide In the United Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Engaging with other people, or their traces, is not just a formal, rational, professional task but also literally an "engagement with the other"; a confrontation with and recognition of different ways of being, and a reflexive comparison between those ways and one's own (Scott, 2019;Strauss, 2017). In a society with highly regularized and "wounded" (Westbrook, 2020) forms of trans life, it is easy to find not only an abundance of others' data, but a lack in one's self.…”
Section: Accounting For Datamentioning
confidence: 99%