Transgender Experiences Beyond the Binary: A Phenomenological Study of Arizonans with Non-Binary Gender Identities

abstract: This phenomenological study explores the question: What are the lived experiences of Arizonans who identify their gender identities as ‘non-binary’? (‘non-binary’ defined here as anyone who identifies their gender as something other than ‘always and exclusively male or always and exclusive...

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Other Authors: Skinner, Ashton (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.46231
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-462312018-06-22T03:09:01Z Transgender Experiences Beyond the Binary: A Phenomenological Study of Arizonans with Non-Binary Gender Identities abstract: This phenomenological study explores the question: What are the lived experiences of Arizonans who identify their gender identities as ‘non-binary’? (‘non-binary’ defined here as anyone who identifies their gender as something other than ‘always and exclusively male or always and exclusively female’). The study explores the lived realities of four non-binary identified transgender people living in Arizona. Each participant took a short survey and conducted a 45-minute in-person interview, conducted through phenomenological questioning to evoke deep descriptions of experience. After analyzing the results through feminist hermeneutic phenomenology, this study suggests that the experience of non-binary gender identity presents an essential pattern of cultivating self-realization. The essential themes of internal recognition, external presentation, and movement toward wellness fell into this pattern. The United States has conceptualized transgender identity in many ways, from pathologizing to politicizing, to medically affirming views. Although the literature on this topic is quite small, there is no doubt that non-binary transgender people exist in U.S. public life. Ultimately, if non-binary people are to find affirming paths toward self-realization, they must be heard from their own experiences in their own voices. Dissertation/Thesis Skinner, Ashton (Author) Sandlin, Jennifer (Advisor) Nakagawa, Kathryn (Committee member) Santos, Carlos (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Social research LGBTQ studies Gender studies Gender Identity Gender Queer LGBT Non Binary Non-Binary Gender Transgender eng 108 pages Masters Thesis Social and Cultural Pedagogy 2017 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.46231 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2017
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Social research
LGBTQ studies
Gender studies
Gender Identity
Gender Queer
LGBT
Non Binary
Non-Binary Gender
Transgender
spellingShingle Social research
LGBTQ studies
Gender studies
Gender Identity
Gender Queer
LGBT
Non Binary
Non-Binary Gender
Transgender
Transgender Experiences Beyond the Binary: A Phenomenological Study of Arizonans with Non-Binary Gender Identities
description abstract: This phenomenological study explores the question: What are the lived experiences of Arizonans who identify their gender identities as ‘non-binary’? (‘non-binary’ defined here as anyone who identifies their gender as something other than ‘always and exclusively male or always and exclusively female’). The study explores the lived realities of four non-binary identified transgender people living in Arizona. Each participant took a short survey and conducted a 45-minute in-person interview, conducted through phenomenological questioning to evoke deep descriptions of experience. After analyzing the results through feminist hermeneutic phenomenology, this study suggests that the experience of non-binary gender identity presents an essential pattern of cultivating self-realization. The essential themes of internal recognition, external presentation, and movement toward wellness fell into this pattern. The United States has conceptualized transgender identity in many ways, from pathologizing to politicizing, to medically affirming views. Although the literature on this topic is quite small, there is no doubt that non-binary transgender people exist in U.S. public life. Ultimately, if non-binary people are to find affirming paths toward self-realization, they must be heard from their own experiences in their own voices. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Social and Cultural Pedagogy 2017
author2 Skinner, Ashton (Author)
author_facet Skinner, Ashton (Author)
title Transgender Experiences Beyond the Binary: A Phenomenological Study of Arizonans with Non-Binary Gender Identities
title_short Transgender Experiences Beyond the Binary: A Phenomenological Study of Arizonans with Non-Binary Gender Identities
title_full Transgender Experiences Beyond the Binary: A Phenomenological Study of Arizonans with Non-Binary Gender Identities
title_fullStr Transgender Experiences Beyond the Binary: A Phenomenological Study of Arizonans with Non-Binary Gender Identities
title_full_unstemmed Transgender Experiences Beyond the Binary: A Phenomenological Study of Arizonans with Non-Binary Gender Identities
title_sort transgender experiences beyond the binary: a phenomenological study of arizonans with non-binary gender identities
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.46231
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