Transgender in America

1500 Words3 Pages

I would like to start my research paper on Transgender by informing the reader on what the definition and the terms for Transgender are. According to an online journal found on the American Psychological Association on Psychotherapy, it is explained that transgender identity is usually known as incompatible between a person’s sex assigned at birth such as male or female and their internal sense of their gender identity (Budge, 2013). Many individual transgender identify themselves as male or female, where others will identify themselves as transgender. “Though “transitioning” has often been used to describe a medical transition (e.g., after sexual reassignment surgery), psychotherapists are encouraged to use the term to encompass any type of change as a client moves forward with their identity proc. Terms and pronouns can change rapidly. As a result, psychotherapists should check in with clients regularly about the pronouns and labels that are most fitting for their clients” (Budge, 2013). It is essential that in order to understand, one should be open minded when being introduced to the topic about transgender.

The main thing every individual should now is the difference between gender, sex and gender identity.

“Gender is the conceptual category (labeled feminine or masculine) that a culture assigns to a wide range of phenomena. People (man or woman), actions or attributes (a manly grip, a feminine walk), physical objects or phenomena (Mother Nature, Father Time, her [a ship’s] maiden voyage)- virtually anything can be gendered in a given society. Sex refers to the biological characteristics of genitals, internal reproductive organs, gonads (ovaries and testes), hormones, and chromosomes. Male and female are ...

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... clients. Psychotherapy, 50(3), 356-359. doi:10.1037/a0032194 Retrieved from: http://web.ebscohost.com.pegleg.park.edu

Girshick, L. B. (2008). Transgender Voices: Beyond Women and Men. Hanover: University Press of New England. Retrieved from: http://web.ebscohost.com.pegleg.park.edu

Glicksman, E. (2013). Transgender Today. Through History Transgender people have been misunderstood and seldom studied. That’s beginning to change. 44 (4), 36. Retrieved from: http://www.apa.org

Lev, A. I. (2004). Transgender emergence: Therapeutic guidelines for working with gender-variant people and their families. New York: The Haworth Clinical Practice Press.

Loree, C. D. (2010). Thinking about the Unthinkable: Transgender in an Immutable Binary World. New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 24 (1), 63-70. Retrieved from: http://files.eric.ed.gov

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