Please login or sign up to post and edit reviews.
- Publication Date |
- Jun 07, 2022
- Episode Duration |
- 00:19:19
Emma Heaney talks about the social organization of the supposedly biologically derived terms of the sex binary into a hierarchy of persons and qualities. She speaks widely about the work that she and her colleagues are doing, drawing on a tradition of scholarship that includes the work of Luce Irigaray, Hortense Spillers, Cathy J. Cohen and others.
Emma Heaney is a teacher, researcher, and writer living in Queens. Her first book, a study of the medicalization of trans femininity and the uptake of the diagnostic figure in works of twentieth-century literature and philosophy, is The New Woman: Literary Modernism, Queer Theory, and the Trans Feminine Allegory (Northwestern, 2017). Her forthcoming second book, Feminism Against Cisness, is an edited collection of essays by Trans Studies scholars who use anti-colonial, Black, and Marxist feminist methods to address the many legacies of the historical emergence of the idea that assigned sex determines sexed experience. Her introduction for that collection, entitled “Sexual Difference Without Cisness” provides the basis for this interview.
Image: © 2021 Saronik Bosu
Music used in promotional material: “Flow” by dustmotes
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit
megaphone.fm/adchoices
Support our show by becoming a premium member!
https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/gender-studiesThis episode could use a review!
This episode could use a review! Have anything to say about it? Share your thoughts using the button below.
Submit Review