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Crossing: A Transgender Memoir

Autor Deirdre Nansen McCloskey
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 sep 2019
A New York Times Book Review Notable Book of the Year
 
“I visited womanhood and stayed. It was not for the pleasures, though I discovered many I had not imagined, and many pains too. But calculating pleasures and pains was not the point. The point was who I am.”
 
Once a golden boy of conservative economics and a child of 1950s privilege, Deirdre McCloskey (formerly Donald) had wanted to change genders from the age of eleven. But it was a different time, one hostile to any sort of straying from the path—against gays, socialists, women with professions, men without hats, and so on—and certainly against gender transition. Finally, in 1995, at the age of fifty-three, it was time for McCloskey to cross the gender line.
 
Crossing is the story of McCloskey’s dramatic and poignant transformation from Donald to Dee to Deirdre. She chronicles the physical procedures and emotional evolution required and the legal and cultural roadblocks she faced in her journey to womanhood. By turns searing and humorous, this is the unflinching, unforgettable story of her transformation—what she lost, what she gained, and the women who lifted her up along the way.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226662565
ISBN-10: 022666256X
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 32 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:Mărită
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press

Notă biografică

Deirdre Nansen McCloskey is distinguished professor of economics, history, English, and communication at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Among her many books are The Bourgeois VirtuesBourgeois Dignity, Bourgeois EqualityEconomical Writing, The Secret Sins of Economics, and If You’re So Smart: The Narrative of Economic Expertise, all published by the University of Chicago Press.

Cuprins

Acknowledgments
Preface: Crossings

Part One: Donald

1. Boy to Man
2. Marriage
3. Internet
4. Professor Dressed
5. Clubs
6. In the Ladies’ Room
7. Boldness
8. Epiphany
9. Losing a Family
10. Academic Drag
11. A Day You Feel Pretty
12. Premarin
13. Sweet October

Part Two: Dee

14. Outed
15. “Welcome”
16. The Cuckoo’s Nest
17. Hearing?
18. Then Why Are You Doing This?
19. Chicago
20. Changing
21. Sister’s Last
22. Professional Girl Economist
23. Farewell Speech
24. Dutch Welcome
25. Dutch Winter
26. Passing
27. Yes, Ma’am

Part Three: Deirdre

28. Vriendinnetjes
29. Women’s World
30. To Make up for God’s Neglect
31. Merry May
32. Starting
33. Finishing
34. A Woman on Hormone Replacement Therapy
35. Facelift
36. This Is How We Live
37. Thou Winter Wind
38. Homeward
39. Costs
40. Iowa Drag
41. Professoressa
42. Second Voice
43. Making It Up
44. Home
45. Differences
46. Christ’s Mass 1997
 
Afterword

Recenzii

"This is a woman worth knowing. She has given us a highly readable, dramatic account of her crossing."

"A fascinating and poignant story. . . . Revealing, humorous, and provocative."

"A searing tale of the traumas and rewards of gender change. . . . A powerful indictment of legal, medical, and institutional obstruction."

"A tautly crafted memoir of her transition from Don McCloskey, conservative Chicago school economist, to Deirdre McCloskey, power shopper, domestic superachiever, and campy doyenne of difference feminism." 

"A testimony to her struggles and courage, Crossing invites the reader to enter Deirdre (formerly Donald) McCloskey's mind as she decides to become a woman after a lifetime as a man, husband, and father." 

"The very courageous story of someone trying to live an honest life, whatever the consequences."

"That an affluent, upper-middle-class person should be so powerless against a mental-health bureaucracy still subscribing to its offical pronouncement that transsexualism is a 'gender identity disorder' makes for gripping reading."

"A groundbreaking memoir. . . . Mccloskey was one of those people who seemed to have everything: wide influence as an economist and the tenure to go with it, several books in print, and a much-loved wife and children. What McCloskey lacked was something so fundamental that most of us don't even think to be grateful for it: a gender identity that felt right. . . . A really fascinating perspective."