This T is NOT silent
Posted: Fri Jan 25, 2013 8:44 am
A very brief article from Salon, but with a link to a powerful short video on one individuals transition. What caught me was her grim expression at the beginning and her beautiful smile at the end
.
Trans woman shares her male-to-female transition on YouTube (http://www.salon.com/2013/01/23/trans_w ... ansition_o n_youtube/)
The "T" at the end of LGBT is often silent. How a viral YouTube video might change that VIDEO
BY KATIE MCDONOUGH (http://www.salon.com/writer/katie_mcdonough/)
Salon
JAN 23, 2013
YouTube user iiGethi (http://www.youtube.com/user/iiGethii?feature=watch) documented her male-to-female transition with roughly one thousand photos over a three-year period. She then edited them into a single video, which quickly went viral.
The footage is striking for a few reasons. The first is perhaps the most superficial (and obvious): iiGethis transformation is astonishing. Through hormone therapy and Facial Feminization Surgery, her appearance changes dramatically, literally before the viewers eyes.
The second isnt about what iiGethi captured, but the video itself. Because of social stigma and violence often faced by trans people (http://www.glaad.org/blog/violence-agai ... urder-rate), many try to maintain their anonymity while transitioning. But iiGethis YouTube stardom (there are nearly 4 million views to date) does quite the opposite. Much like Against Me frontwoman Laura Jane Graces coming out story (http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/ ... l-20120531) in Rolling Stone, iiGethi is inviting public conversation about a very private process.
Comments on her YouTube channel run the gamut. But from the honest and inquisitive (To be honest, Ive wondered this a lot why?) to the deeply moving (I am 70 years old, and I am so awed by your courage), they are overwhelmingly positive and open. The dialogue the video is generating provides a small glimpse at the online culture that can serve as a lifeline to many trans men and women as they begin the complicated process of transitioning.
The video is also unique in its reach. The T at the end of LGBT is all too often silent. And as gay marriage has come to stand as the banner issue for the 21st century gay community, there has been a quiet erasure of other queer experiences embodied by millions of men and women in the United States and elsewhere.
So documenting a story like iiGethis isnt just important for a trans community struggling for visibility, safety and basic human rights (http://dctranscoalition.wordpress.com/c ... -campaign/), its just as vital for a country grappling with gender, family and identify configurations that are (and will continue to be) ever-evolving
http://www.salon.com/2013/01/23/trans_w ... ansition_o n_youtube/
The video (with over 4 million hits) is located at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xjM-wJY ... KA&index=2
Trans woman shares her male-to-female transition on YouTube (http://www.salon.com/2013/01/23/trans_w ... ansition_o n_youtube/)
The "T" at the end of LGBT is often silent. How a viral YouTube video might change that VIDEO
BY KATIE MCDONOUGH (http://www.salon.com/writer/katie_mcdonough/)
Salon
JAN 23, 2013
YouTube user iiGethi (http://www.youtube.com/user/iiGethii?feature=watch) documented her male-to-female transition with roughly one thousand photos over a three-year period. She then edited them into a single video, which quickly went viral.
The footage is striking for a few reasons. The first is perhaps the most superficial (and obvious): iiGethis transformation is astonishing. Through hormone therapy and Facial Feminization Surgery, her appearance changes dramatically, literally before the viewers eyes.
The second isnt about what iiGethi captured, but the video itself. Because of social stigma and violence often faced by trans people (http://www.glaad.org/blog/violence-agai ... urder-rate), many try to maintain their anonymity while transitioning. But iiGethis YouTube stardom (there are nearly 4 million views to date) does quite the opposite. Much like Against Me frontwoman Laura Jane Graces coming out story (http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/ ... l-20120531) in Rolling Stone, iiGethi is inviting public conversation about a very private process.
Comments on her YouTube channel run the gamut. But from the honest and inquisitive (To be honest, Ive wondered this a lot why?) to the deeply moving (I am 70 years old, and I am so awed by your courage), they are overwhelmingly positive and open. The dialogue the video is generating provides a small glimpse at the online culture that can serve as a lifeline to many trans men and women as they begin the complicated process of transitioning.
The video is also unique in its reach. The T at the end of LGBT is all too often silent. And as gay marriage has come to stand as the banner issue for the 21st century gay community, there has been a quiet erasure of other queer experiences embodied by millions of men and women in the United States and elsewhere.
So documenting a story like iiGethis isnt just important for a trans community struggling for visibility, safety and basic human rights (http://dctranscoalition.wordpress.com/c ... -campaign/), its just as vital for a country grappling with gender, family and identify configurations that are (and will continue to be) ever-evolving
http://www.salon.com/2013/01/23/trans_w ... ansition_o n_youtube/
The video (with over 4 million hits) is located at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xjM-wJY ... KA&index=2