netmouse: (Default)
netmouse ([personal profile] netmouse) wrote2005-04-19 05:39 pm

Transgender and Transsexual

Jamie's thesis engendered a discussion with a friend about his use of the word transgender instead of transexual. I realized I didn't think of transgender and transexual as being politically different, so I looked up the definitions.


Transgender: exhibiting the appearance and behavioral characteristics of the opposite sex
Transsexual: a person who psychologically identifies with the opposite sex and may seek to live as a member of this sex especially by undergoing surgery and hormone therapy to obtain the necessary physical appearance (as by changing the external sex organs)



Transgender: People who were assigned a gender at birth, based on their genitals, but who feel that this is a false or incomplete description of themselves.
Transsexual: One who wishes to be considered by society as a member of the opposite sex. (may be pre- post- or non-operative, but that's the person's own business and in any case they wish to be referred to by the gender they display/declare).

Transsexual is thus (in my understanding, and in several references I've seen) a subset of transgender. But definitely somone who cares enough about the social recognition of their own gender to claim a specific gender publicly and usually to change their appearance to make that more obvious. I find it surprising that the Merriam Webster definition of Transgender is external, when it seems very internal to me. Transvestitism would be the practice of taking on the external characteristics of the opposite sex without any change in personal gender identification. Perhaps. :P


How do you define the terms? How are the differences between them significant to you? or not?

related link:
Sexuality.org Transgender Terminology

[identity profile] brendand.livejournal.com 2005-04-19 03:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Personally, I don't care for the word "transgender." For many reasons, not the least of which is that there is disagreement over the definition of the word "gender." To me, gender is masculine or feminine. Sex is male or female. It's not uncommon for people to refer to me as "she." I don't know why that is. But it's true. I, of course, am male. And while I do not consider myself to be "transgender" according to the dictionary definition above, there is an argument to be made that I could be considered transgender by *your* definition. I don't feel that my being a man is a false representation of who I am, but I wouldn't disagree with anyone who thought it was an incomplete representation.

I rather dislike when the word "gender" is followed by two boxes labelled "M" and "F" because I feel it's more accurate to check "F." However, if the two boxes were preceded by the word "sex" I would gladly check "M."

As far as your question, though, I would think they are more similar than dissimilar. I see your point about transgender being internal, but I think it's the internal knowledge that makes people want to show who they feel they are inside on the outside.