zombiezami's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective medium-paced

3.5

I have had this book on my TBR for quite a long time. So long, it seems, that quite a bit of this feels outdated. Still, there are some helpful and revelatory points here

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stevia333k's review against another edition

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informative medium-paced

5.0

This book filled me in on what cis people were assuming back when I was a kid. It also named a few dynamics I had forgotten about.

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ebmaher's review against another edition

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hopeful informative reflective slow-paced

4.0

Julia Serano says she wrote this book for many reasons, but mainly to create the book she would have wanted to read as a young trans woman, and I think that’s really evident throughout. It’s both the books strength — it’s remarkably readable, personal, and incisive — and it’s weakness — Serano even says in the preface to the second edition that she wishes she’d have been able to move beyond her own experience to consider race, class, nationality, etc. create different trans experiences.

Serano is a likable and capable companion throughout. As a former gender studies major, there was much I was familiar with, but I particularly appreciated Serano’s framing of oppositional sexism and her critique of queer culture’s and queer studies’s dismissal of femininity. A useful text for understanding where terfs come from and (on a clear and well-argued level) why they’re so wrong.

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