Disrupting Invisibility Fields – Provincializing ‘Western Code’ Trans* Narratives

Authors

  • Marek Sancho Höhne Europa-Universität Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder) / Berlin
  • Thamar Klein Universität zu Köln

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17169/ogj.2019.24

Keywords:

biopolitics, decolonialization, gender, medico-legal, transgender, resistance

Abstract

This paper illuminates the colonial project of medicalizing and diciplining trans* bodies in order to disrupt ‘Western code’ trans* narratives. We will first explore different systems of control concerning (trans*)gender that are employed by the ‘Western code’: biologization, temporality, classification, and pathologization. We will then move on to reflect on some realities of trans*-specific healthcare and its colonial heritage. In both of these sections, our attention lies with ‘invisibility fields’ (in Germany and South Africa) –the cloaked power structures that disguise the colonial project as somebody else’s problem. Finally, in an attempt to interrupt and provincialize ‘Western code’ trans* narratives, we open up space for counternarratives and stories of resistance.

Author Biographies

Marek Sancho Höhne, Europa-Universität Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder) / Berlin

Marek Sancho Höhne is currently writing their PhD on destabilizing popular imaginations of trans_gender and putting them into dialogue with trans_life stories, lecturing at different universities and working as a project manager. Their research interest include social- and cultural anthropology, autoethnography, trans_gender and queer studies, passing, intersectionality, migration, biographies and mapping.

Thamar Klein, Universität zu Köln

Thamar Klein lectures at the University of Cologne. Their research interests include medical anthropology, transgender and queer studies as well as research methods.

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Published

2019-06-25

How to Cite

Höhne, M. S., & Klein, T. (2019). Disrupting Invisibility Fields – Provincializing ‘Western Code’ Trans* Narratives. Open Gender Journal, 3. https://doi.org/10.17169/ogj.2019.24

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Research Articles

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