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Helen Boyd will be speaking on the subject of Trans Identities and Cultural Politics at two upcoming colleges:
Published Oct 21, 2006 - 10:32 PM
Read full article: 'Helen Boyd in Indiana & Texas' (42 more words)
Set in the near-future, The Rights of Numbers is a political science-fiction novel. The story centers on an Alliance of computer entrepreneurs who hire mercenaries for a desperate struggle to stop a computer monopoly from corrupting the American government. With rumors spreading about a planned military action against a young democracy, can the Alliance expose Enivid Technologies as the only party that has anything to gain in a bloody conflict over media rights? More information, as well as the full-length non-DRMed eBook is downloadable from the author's site.The Rights of Numbers is Brenda Make's first fiction release. She is the author of the work in progress: Saving Throw, the Genderrain Project.
Published Jan 11, 2006 - 05:57 AM
Announcements: The IFGE Synchronicity Bookstore is proud to announce that we are now stocking Dena? Doyle's series of instrutional DVD's on Sensual Feminine Movement.
The IFGE Synchronicity Bookstore
Published Dec 23, 2005 - 01:47 AM
Read full article: 'The IFGE Synchronicity Bookstore is proud to announce that we are now stocking Dena? Doyle's series of instrutional DVD's on Sensual Feminine Movement.' (1009 more words)
Originally appeared in Transgender Tapestry #104, Winter 2004. Review by Katrina C. Rose Most of us are aware of the concept of ?the big lie?: make sure it, whatever ?it? may be, is repeated enough, and it becomes accepted as true whether or not it has any basis in reality. Another type of big lie is the assertion of something so preposterous, yet so simplistic, that the perfectly accurate yet equally simplistic response/refutation sounds even more preposterous than the initial lie?necessitating extensively-researched answers presented in laborious, boring academic formats that most people can?t follow and, as such, are ignored.
Published Dec 13, 2004 - 08:00 AM
Read full article: 'The Man Who Would Be Janice Raymond' (1617 more words) Reviews: The Man Who Would Be Queen: The Science of Gender-Bending and Transsexualism by J. Michael Bailey
Originally appeared in Transgender Tapestry #104, Winter 2004. Review by Marisa Richmond, Ph.D. Transsexuality has become an increasingly popular topic of study by many therapists. Many support groups are contacted, often by graduate students seeking to expand their knowledge in a field that is not well-understood by outsiders. More and more, members of the transgender community are speaking for themselves through books and journals, produced both for the transgender community and various professional communities. One new entry in this field is by J. Michael Bailey, an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Northwestern Univer-sity. Bailey?s contribution to the field is, however, marked by numerous snide remarks about transsexuals and shows an incredible disdain for the community he purports to support while simultaneously using very poor methodology in making his claims.
Published Dec 13, 2004 - 08:00 AM
Read full article: 'The Man Who Would Be Queen: The Science of Gender-Bending and Transsexualism by J. Michael Bailey' (1212 more words) |
