Rather than studying ->-bleeped-<- scientifically, psychopathology assumes there is something wrong with being transgedered. How does this shape the way transgendered people are misconstrued? Citation: Wyndzen, M. H. (2004). The banality of insensitivity: portrayals of ->-bleeped-<- in psychopathology. All mixed up: A transgendered psychology professor's perspective on life, the psychology of gender, & "gender identity disorder".Portrayals of ->-bleeped-<- in PsychopathologyWhen I usually think of insensitivity, I think of: bullies in school stealing lunch money, whispered gossip on the hallways, exclusion from groups, and so forth. Shockingly, the insensitivity expressed in psychopathology towards ->-bleeped-<- is actually quite similar. It comes in the form of stereotypes, as the imposition of value judgements, as the assumption that ->-bleeped-<- is a problem, and in a 'paternal' way of assuming they 'know what's best' for us. In short, it's a insensitivity so pervasive in psycho-pathology that it starts to appear like a normal, natural thing to do. In what follows I hope I can highlight this insensitivity and, having done so, help all of us become more sensitive in the future.
Stereotyping: "You throw like a girl.""You throw like a girl!"
"You run like a girl!"
What could be worse???
Imposing Value Judgements: "Something is Wrong with You."One thing I have noticed is that researchers of GID today are, on the whole, much more careful about appearing to defend gender stereotypes. Still, psycho-pathology continues to label gender identity issues as a "disorder." Using value-laden labels like this is antithetical to science.
Name Calling: "You're 'really' a man."Psycho-pathologists with an interest in science seem, to me, to share a similar view. When they treat clients they primarily use their intuition even when they have knowledge about the research. There is nothing wrong about having non-scientific beliefs. I do. But what can be disconcerting is how sometimes the language of science, with it's implied objectivity, can be used to advance non-scientific beliefs. It is especially disconcerting to me, as a transsexual, when the belief that some male-to-female transsexuals are 'really' men is advocated as though objective science.
Cynicism: "What are your 'real' motives?"A widespread cynical belief among clinical psychologists who study "Gender Identity Disorder" and "Transvestic Fetishism" is that transgendered people are deceptive.
Sensitivity or Science: Must We Choose?...we have to choose between being scientific and being sensitive. This argument is often embedded in the words of scientists who like to promote themselves as "politically incorrect."
ConclusionIt's somewhat surprising to think about the mental health community as so insensitive to their transsexual clients and research participants. Afterall, by their choice of career, they have sought to help transsexuals. Many of them do and it would be a mistake to construe this essay as an attack on the mental health community. Yet, as the above examples illustrate, there is also a great deal of insensitivity embedded in this help. It's an insensitivity that is so commonplace, and so embedded in the way they think, that it is banal. Some GID researchers will describe us as fundamentally our biological sex. They talk about our gender atypicality as something that is wrong with us. In their research, they always seem to look for what is bad about us, never what is good. And when we don't fit the theories of GID researchers, they impugn our motives as a devious part of our 'pathology.' The root of the mental health community's sensitivity for transsexuals is their desire to help. The root of the mental health community's insensitivity for transsexuals is also in their desire to help. In particular, by classifying transsexuality and ->-bleeped-<- as mental illnesses, they make who we are something bad. This is very different from the way they help the gay and lesbian community.
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