ButlerJ. (1993). Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of “Sex.”New York: Routledge.
2.
CavanaghS. (2010). Queering Bathrooms: Gender, Sexuality, and the Hygienic Imagination. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
3.
CorbettK. (2009). Boyhood femininity, gender identity disorder, masculine presuppositions, and the anxiety of regulation. Psychoanalytic Dialogues19:353–370.
4.
CorbettK. (2016). A Murder over a Girl: Justice, Gender, Junior High. New York: Henry Holt.
5.
EhrensaftD. (2011). Boys will be girls, girls will be boys: Children affect parents as parents affect children in gender nonconformity. Psychoanalytic Psychology28:528–548.
6.
FastI. (1990). Aspects of early gender development: Toward a reformulation. Psychoanalytic Psychology7(Suppl.):105–117.
7.
Fausto-SterlingA. (2012). Sex/Gender: Biology in a Social World. New York: Routledge.
8.
FreudS. (1905). Three essays on the theory of sexuality. Standard Edition7:130–243.
9.
FreudS. (1926). The question of lay analysis: Conversations with an impartial person. Standard Edition20:183–250.
10.
FriedbergA. (2016). Abstract of International Psychoanalysis Symposium: Sexuality and Its Discontents. Mount Sinai Medical Center, March26.
11.
GrossmanW.I.KaplanD.M. (1988). Three commentaries on gender in Freud’s thought: A prologue to the psychoanalytic theory of sexuality. In Fantasy, Myth, and Reality: Essays in Honor of Jacob A. Arlow, M.D., ed. BlumH.P.KramerY.RichardsA.K.RichardsA.D.Madison, CT: International Universities Press, pp. 339–370.
12.
HaleC.J. (1998). Consuming the living, dis(re)membering the dead in the butch/FTM borderlands. Gay & Lesbian Quarterly4:311–348.
13.
HansellJ. (2011). Where sex was, there shall gender be? The dialectics of psychoanalytic gender theory. Psychoanalytic Quarterly80:55–71.
14.
HarrisA. (2009). Gender as Soft Assembly. New York: Routledge.
15.
LaFargeL. (2014). How and why unconscious phantasy and transference are the defining features of psychoanalytic practice. International Journal of Psychoanalysis95:1265–1278.
16.
OwenH.E.HalberstadtJ.CarrE.W.WinkielmanP. (2016). Johnny Depp, reconsidered: How category-relative processing fluency determines the appeal of gender ambiguity. PLoS ONE11(2): e0146328.
17.
PhillipsS.H. (1998). A new analytic dyad: Homosexual analyst, heterosexual patient. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association46:1195–1219.
18.
RoughtonR. (2002). Rethinking homosexuality: What it teaches us about psychoanalysis. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association50:733–763.
19.
SaketopoulouA. (2014). Mourning the body as bedrock: Developmental considerations in treating transsexual patients analytically. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association62:773–806.
20.
TourjéeD. (2015). “He’s not done killing her”: Why so many trans women were murdered in 2015. Broadly, December16, online.