AizuraAZBeyMBeauchampT, et al. (2020)
Thinking with trans now. Social Text38(4): 125–147.
2.
AminK (2018)
Glands, eugenics, and rejuvenation in “man into woman”: A biopolitical genealogy of transsexuality. TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly5(4): 589–605.
3.
AminK (2020)
Trans* plasticity and the ontology of race and species. Social Text 14338(2): 49–71.
4.
BeyM (2017)
The trans*-ness of Blackness, the Blackness of trans*-ness. TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly4(2): 275–295.
5.
BriceS (2021)
Trans subjectifications: Drawing an (im)personal politics of gender, fashion, and style. GeoHumanities7(1): 301–327.
6.
FassinD (2010)
Ethics of survival: A democratic approach to the politics of life. Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development1(1): 81–95.
7.
JacksonZI (2016)
Losing manhood: Animality and plasticity in the (neo)slave narrative. Qui Parle25(1–2): 95–136.
8.
MalatinoH (2019)
Future fatigue: Trans intimacies and trans presents (or how to survive the interregnum). TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly6(4): 635–658.
9.
MalatinoH (2020) Trans Care.
Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press.
10.
SamuelsE (2014) Fantasies of Identification: Disability, Gender, Race.
New York:
New York University Press.
11.
SnortonCR (2017) Black on Both Sides: A Racial History of Trans Identity.
Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press.
12.
StrykerS (1994)
My words to Victor Frankenstein above the village of Chamounix: Performing transgender rage. GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies1: 237–254.
13.
StrykerS (2004)
Transgender studies: Queer theory’s evil twin. GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies10(2): 212–215.
14.
StrykerS (2019)
More words about “My words to Victor Frankenstein”. GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies25(1): 39–44.
15.
WeheliyeA (2014) Habeas Viscus: Racializing Assemblages, Biopolitics, and Black Feminist Theories of the Human.
Durham:
Duke University Press.