Beyond Personhood

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A01=Talia Mae Bettcher
Author_Talia Mae Bettcher
beyond the binary
binary
black studies
Category=JBSF
Category=QDTS
decolonial theory
dysphoria
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
feminism
gender
Harold Garfinkel
Judith Butler
Latinx studies
misgendering
oppression
political theory
queer
social ontology
TERF
trans studies
transgender
transition
transsexual
wrong body

Product details

  • ISBN 9781517902575
  • Weight: 368g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Mar 2025
  • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A bold intervention in the philosophical concepts of gender, sex, and self

Beyond Personhood provides an entirely new philosophical approach to trans experience, trans oppression, gender dysphoria, and the relationship between gender and identity. Until now, trans experience has overwhelmingly been understood in terms of two reductive frameworks: trans people are either “trapped in the wrong body” or they are oppressed by the gender binary. Both accounts misgender large trans constituencies while distorting their experience, and neither can explain the presentation of trans people as make-believers and deceivers or the serious consequences thereof. In Beyond Personhood, Talia Mae Bettcher demonstrates how taking this phenomenon seriously affords a new perspective on trans oppression and trans dysphoria-one involving liminal states of “make-believe” that bear positive possibilities for self-recognition and resistance.

Undergirding this account is Bettcher’s groundbreaking theory of interpersonal spatiality-a theory of intimacy and distance that requires rejection of the philosophical concepts of person, self, and subject. She argues that only interpersonal spatiality theory can successfully explain trans oppression and gender dysphoria, thus creating new possibilities for thinking about connection and relatedness. 

An essential contribution to the burgeoning field of trans philosophy, Beyond Personhood offers an intersectional trans feminism that illuminates transphobic, sexist, heterosexist, and racist oppressions, situating trans oppression and resistance within a much larger decolonial struggle. By refusing to separate theory from its application, Bettcher shows how a philosophy of depth can emerge from the everyday experiences of trans people, pointing the way to a reinvigoration of philosophy.

Talia Mae Bettcher is professor of philosophy at California State University, Los Angeles, and coeditor of Trans Philosophy, also published by the University of Minnesota Press.

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