Quote from: mementomori on July 09, 2012, 08:15:05 PM
i defiantly think transgender should be a umbrella term for varience including androgynes and gender queer people too
but including drag queens as transgender makes no sense to me , its just a show / performance for them they dont live that way
Unfortunately, whether it makes sense to you or not, the academic definition of transgender is that it is an umbrella term that includes all gender variant people including cross-dressers and drag kings and queens. Some definitions include "butch lesbians" as TG. The meaning of the word has changed over the years. Visit
http://www.thetaskforce.org/downloads/reports/reports/TransgenderEquality.pdfIt offers an interesting etymology of the word.
"Before the mid-1990s, the term 'transgender' had a narrower and more specific meaning.
As coined several decades ago by Dr. Virginia Prince, who has published numerous
books and articles on the subject,5 the term originally referred to biological men
who are satisfied with their male genitalia, but who wish to be seen
and to live in the world as women. In contrast to transsexual people,
'transgender' persons (in the older, more narrow sense of the term)
have come to terms with the contradiction between their bodies and
their gender identities and are not troubled by that contradiction, so
they have not shown up in doctors' offices to be diagnosed and documented.
Instead, they are more likely to show up in sociological or
anthropological studies, or to be writing their own stories in the form
of autobiographies, essays or books. As a group, their sexual orientation is predominantly
heterosexual (based on genitalia), but there are also bisexual, asexual, and
homosexual individuals. Sexual orientation or behavior is not the primary issue or primary
motivation for transgendered people; rather, the issue is wishing to live and to be
perceived as a gender that is different than one's biological sex. This is, of course, an
oversimplification because the relationship between gender identity and sexual desire
is highly complex and individual."