A Companion to American Women's History 2020
DOI: 10.1002/9781119522690.ch13
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Recovering a Gender‐Transgressive Past

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“…To take one example, judging by historiographical reviews of US transgender history there has been considerable discussion of the anachronism of the term transgender, and perhaps more productively, of the potential of transgender as an analytical framework for “trans‐ing” history (analogous to queering history). But the analytical problems posed by translation do not appear to have garnered much discussion (Beemyn, 2013; Cleves, 2014; Skidmore, 2021). In contrast, hijra histories point to the politics through which people and their practices become intelligible and translatable as gendered categories, as is evident in the research of Abbott, Arondekar, Gannon and myself examined above.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To take one example, judging by historiographical reviews of US transgender history there has been considerable discussion of the anachronism of the term transgender, and perhaps more productively, of the potential of transgender as an analytical framework for “trans‐ing” history (analogous to queering history). But the analytical problems posed by translation do not appear to have garnered much discussion (Beemyn, 2013; Cleves, 2014; Skidmore, 2021). In contrast, hijra histories point to the politics through which people and their practices become intelligible and translatable as gendered categories, as is evident in the research of Abbott, Arondekar, Gannon and myself examined above.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%