Download Ebook Nonbinary: Memoirs of Gender and Identity, by Micah Rajunov
Nicht verändern den Kopf, wenn Sie beginnen zu beabsichtigen Leseverhalten zu haben. Diese Routine ist ein ausgezeichnete sowie hervorragendes Verhalten. Sie müssen es mit den besten Büchern beleben. Mehrere Bücher zeigen, wie dort erstaunlichen Inhalt auf jedes Genre Basis liefern und auch Themen. Auch jede Veröffentlichung hat verschiedenen Geschmack komponiert; sie werden sicherlich viel besser Problem schaffen, wenn extrem gut ausgecheckt. Das ist genau das, was uns auch gerne Nonbinary: Memoirs Of Gender And Identity, By Micah Rajunov macht als einer der Führer jetzt zu überprüfen.
Nonbinary: Memoirs of Gender and Identity, by Micah Rajunov
Download Ebook Nonbinary: Memoirs of Gender and Identity, by Micah Rajunov
Gehe vorwärts, besser zu sein in bessere Zukunft! Jeder fühlt sich sicherlich diese weise Wort für ihr Leben tatsächlich zu kommen. Der Wunsch, das ist aber nicht der Wunsch. Dies ist ein echter Punkt, dass Personen erhalten können, wenn sie wirklich gut, das Leben zu tun. Wir machen Sie wirklich effektiv das Gefühl für die Zukunft zu erhalten, sind einige Schritte erforderlich. Eine der Aktionen, die Sie durchlaufen könnte liest, speziell das Buch.
Pressestimmen
It is fascinating to witness, as a queer scholar, how much has been accomplished in these past decades. Nonbinary makes a profound contribution through an insistence upon increasing exposure to the concepts and lived experiences of contemporary queer people and ideas. This book will do amazing things. This is a vital queer theory textbook.--K. W. Mott, Seton Hall UniversityWhat a treat to expand my understanding of gender through time and space, and be reminded that we are not a monolith. These memoirs are sure to captivate and comfort the nonbinary community and open the eyes of those who have had little reason to question the gender binary.--Charlie McNabb, author of Nonbinary Gender Identities: History, Culture, ResourcesNonbinary is a beautiful collection, filled with moving and personal stories from life outside the binary. Reading it felt like coming home to a community I'd always longed for. Folks from all across the gender spectrum should dive into these gorgeous insights and revelations about living a life of authenticity.--Jill Soloway, creator of TransparentThis book is beyond vital. It is the anthology I've always yearned for, but never realized could be real. Nonbinary blows open the core of the thing, goes straight for the heart, burrows deep and then some. In a world that insists trans and nonbinary people adopt consistent, easy-to-digest messaging about who we are, this anthology stands bravely above the noise, boldly declaring our multiplicity as our beauty, our contradiction as our multifaceted shimmer.--Jacob Tobia, author of Sissy: A Coming-of-Gender StoryA thoughtfully assembled collection of fresh and alert writing about the beautiful past, complex present, and dazzling future of nonbinary people and identities. Nonbinary contains the kind of specific stories, redolent of truth and feeling, that open a door for anyone, of any gender, to walk through and be engaged (and entertained, too!).--S. Bear Bergman, author of Blood, Marriage, Wine, & GlitterNonbinary is a great book--timely, wide-ranging, interesting, readable, and relatable. This will be a great primer for parents, teachers, doctors, and anyone else who wants to understand the nonbinary community.--Jen Manion, Amherst CollegeThe time is certainly right for a book of this sort that puts a human face on an otherwise theoretical subject. It is, altogether, an original and necessary contribution to the ever-expanding body of LGBTQIA+ literature.--Booklist[These] essays evince a sincere desire to candidly share difficult feelings on a complicated topic. This well-meaning book will be an asset in college classroom conversations about queer theory.--Publishers WeeklyThe collection is an overall strong and diverse one. . . . Nonbinary is a useful snapshot of what it means to be nonbinary now and in the past with hopes for the way forward.--Library JournalThe anthology is a good resource for people exploring their own nonconforming identity, but it's also a useful, honest read about being human in general.--Rebecca Rafferty "Rochester City Newspaper "
Über den Autor und weitere Mitwirkende
Micah Rajunov is a writer, researcher, and advocate. Since 2011, Micah has created community resources for nonbinary identities through the site genderqueer.me. MicahÂ’s personal transition story has been featured in mainstream publications as well as a full-length documentary.Scott Duane is an author, advocate, and queer trans man who has been an accidental activist for nearly a decade. He devotes his efforts to creating resources and spaces where trans voices can be heard.
Produktinformation
Taschenbuch: 250 Seiten
Verlag: Columbia Univers. Press; Auflage: 1st edition (9. April 2019)
Sprache: Englisch
ISBN-10: 0231185332
ISBN-13: 978-0231185332
Größe und/oder Gewicht:
15,2 x 1,9 x 22,9 cm
Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung:
Schreiben Sie die erste Bewertung
Amazon Bestseller-Rang:
Nr. 820.376 in Fremdsprachige Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Fremdsprachige Bücher)
I bought this book for two reasons:1. I wanted to better understand what it is to be nonbinary, to gain a sense of what it's like, their lives.2. I wanted to compare the writer's journey's to mine, to see where we overlap, where we don't, and learn from them.As a trans woman I know that I don't need to understand nonbinary people to remain validating of them. I now have a much better and informed understanding. I learned a lot and feel that I can speak to others about what I learned.I thoroughly recommend this book. Each memoir is well written, very readable, and concise. We need more books like this one.
I got an ARC of this book.I spend a lot of my time reading about binary trans identities. That is the world that makes the most sense to me since I am a binary trans person. I lived in Berkeley for a while and absolutely hated it. I figured out it was because the trans space that was so anti-binary that it became a social death sentence to identify binary. I felt erased and hated. I wanted to read this book to start to put some of my own issues with the nonbinary community aside, since I didn't have any issues with nonbinary people or the movement until I lived in Berkeley. I wanted to feel like the trans community was home again, all of it. This book brought me back to the nonbinary community I was used to. One full of power, love, acceptance, and courage. One that acknowledges that being binary isn't sinful, but it just doesn't work for them. One full of questions, lots of thinking, and lots of experimentation. The sort of community that gives me hope for the trans community, that is will one day come together instead of being filled with in-fighting. The book covers really important topics ranging from being trans enough to what a transition looks like to feeling erased by the trans community. All of the feelings I have had throughout my transition being binary. The only difference being I had more support being binary that the nonbinary people in this collection did. I wish I could support them all. I wish I could have been part of the groups they joined trying to find a home. I would have been the first one to welcome them. No trans person should ever wrestle with the idea that they are or are not trans enough. They should never feel like they don't belong in a trans space. We should all support each other. I hope this book finds people who are questioning their gender and their expression. It opens so many doors into what nonbinary could look like and asks so many questions. It will be a great resource for people. The book really hit home for me and taught me so much about a world I only ever got glimpses of through friends and my own understanding of gender. It also affirmed something that has been in the back of my mind for years. It also made me feel more comfortable with my own body. I haven't had bottom surgery. This book made me feel less pressure to have bottom surgery, to conform to the stereotype of a transition. I want bottom surgery, but it opened the door to really question why I want it. Do I want it because that is what I expect trans people to want? Do I want it because it is right for me? This book opens up so many ideas of what it means to be trans. The answer I got was easy: if you feel like you are trans, then you are trans. If you feel nonbinary, you do you. Do whatever sort of transition works for you. Don't be ashamed, don't be afraid, but if you are you are not alone. I know this review was all about my binary gender, but that is the only lens I have to understand the people who told their stories. Their stories are not mine, but they had similar themes as my world. I want to be as confident as the people telling their stories.
I'm not entirely sure what I expected from this, because I saw the title and grabbed an opportunity for some broadening of my mind, some education. I certainly got an education, just not the formal one that one might expect from a book by a university press. I think I got something unique and priceless.The intro to the book was confusing, because I didn't quite clock immediately that the guys named on the cover aren't the authors - they're simply the editors of various people's stories. And, if I am not mistaken, part of the intro was done by Riki Wilchins, whose tone and words I don't love, having read a couple of her works and having reviewed one of them, only to find that she'd taken exception to my words (she's since deleted her comments). I was almost debating not reading on when I saw RW's connection, but I decided to continue, and I am so glad that I did.The book consists of a series of short essays/pieces written by people who are nonbinary. They seemed to range from different ages, races, backgrounds, family settings and I think I enjoyed every single one bar one where it was told as if the author was speaking about themselves in the third person - sorry that I can't recall the name or title.To hear their tales, to learn of their physical and mental journeys, their struggles, their courage and determination was humbling and made me realise how much het-me takes for granted.At the end of the book the editors give us the names of the authors in a kind of glossary, introducing them a tad more, and making me appreciate what I've read even more. It's rare that a book about gender is so varied, and this is one of the most uplifting that I've read.ARC courtesy of Columbia University Press and NetGalley, for my reading pleasure.
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