The recent storm of media attention surrounding transgender youth may reflect much broader cultural anxieties. Certainly, it is a furore over a tiny population 鈥 of more than 13 million under-18s in the UK, 2,016 were referred to the NHS Gender Identity Development Service in 2016-17. This edited collection is positioned by its authors as heretical and marginalised, but reflects concerns voiced regularly in recent times. They identify as 鈥済ender critical feminists鈥 (rather than 鈥渢rans-exclusionary radical feminists鈥) but inhabit the same small but acrimonious position in a feminist movement that is otherwise predominantly inclusive of trans people.
See co-editors鈥 response to review and another letter
The messages of the book are bold. The first is that 鈥渢ransgender children do not exist鈥. As an academic contribution to the debate, the promise is in its theoretical framework. Having dismissed the perspectives of youth, parents, charities, medicine, social policy and the law as 鈥渦nproven鈥 and 鈥渋ntellectually incoherent鈥, it suggests that trans youth are a discursive invention. 鈥淭ransgenderism鈥, it contends, reinforces traditional gender binaries, propping up the patriarchy. This framework remains undeveloped and the chapters are inconsistent, offering a hotchpotch of pet clich茅s that sidestep the evidence-base. Trans youth are variously explained by tribal belonging; restrictive femininity; the distressing human condition; childhood trauma; male transvestites鈥 sexual desires; and really being gay.
Perhaps hopes were pinned on the highest-profile contributor, whose activism is currently aimed at blocking schools from accepting that children may be transgender. But of 57 sources cited in Stephanie Davies-Arai鈥檚 chapter, only seven are peer-reviewed research and these are cherry-picked and distort the wider medical and sociological evidence. Meanwhile, editor Michele Moore鈥檚 account of transgender theory leans on dated and inaccurate stereotypes of trans identities that make tiresome reappearances throughout. Nowhere is it acknowledged that many trans people experience binary gender norms as tyrannical, or that many (if not all) trans identities actively queer these binaries.
The second message is that children are 鈥渢ransgendered鈥 by adults and that this is 鈥渁busive鈥. The book constructs an artifice of a society teeming with over-eager parents, whereas research consistently shows that trans youth are often rejected by their families and peers. While claiming that they are motivated by children鈥檚 well-being, the authors frequently misuse or ignore recent international studies that unequivocally show both high rates of depression, self-harm and suicide among trans adolescents and the safeguarding effects of gender-affirming support. Indefensibly, the book is almost silent on widely substantiated hate crime against trans youth. The authors鈥 account of secret meetings to plan the book 鈥 鈥渆ach afraid of very real consequences for our families and livelihoods鈥 鈥 is the single point of resonance with the challenges faced by their subjects.
糖心Vlog
Gender critical feminists are often accused of recycling second-wave feminism鈥檚 failure to address differences between groups of women, but as 鈥渞adical feminism鈥 most of the arguments here are barely recognisable. Some fundamental principles are missing: powerful people shouldn鈥檛 dictate others鈥 identities, for example. More specifically, Brunskell-Evans and Moore reflect a white middle-class feminism untouched by subaltern or queer perspectives. Masquerading as scholarly text, this is epistemological chicanery, with the contributors adopting an already vocal repositioning as the silenced minority. In labelling 鈥渢ransgenderism鈥 abusive, they don鈥檛 listen to the supposedly abused; in claiming to challenge 鈥渢he seemingly unstoppable celebration of transgender ideology鈥, they present arguments neatly aligned with much recent media coverage. The irony is complete, the consequences no less serious.
Rachel Pain is professor of human geography at Newcastle University.
糖心Vlog
Transgender Children and Young People: Born In Your Own Body
Edited by Heather Brunskell-Evans and Michele Moore
Cambridge Scholars, 244pp, 拢61.99
ISBN 9781527503984
Published 1 January 2018
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?







