<< 1 >>
Rating: Summary: Take us out of ignorance!!! Review: A total page turner. took me way out of my own narrow thinking. Bravo!!!! a must read. Thank you Rosalyn.
Rating: Summary: Inspirationaltransition story Review: Here is an unusual book. In simple terms, it is a personal transsexual experience. But it is so much more. It is the story of the transsexual experience on the streets of New York from the early 1970s through the beginning of the new millennium. It is the story of the sleazy side of New York during the same period, seen through the eyes and experiences of a transsexual. And, it is an inspirational story of a courageous transsexual person surviving the streets to become a highly-respected professional social worker and political activist.
Rosalyne Blumenstein was identified male at birth. She was introduced to shame by five years old when she dressed female with dress-up clothes provided in kindergarten. She left school and home at age 13, and spent the majority of her next 18 years working in New York's famous (infamous?) sex industry. She experienced life on the street as a prostitute, drug user, and peep-show girl.
Then she overcame her drug addiction. She returned to the peep show business clean for another seven years, supporting herself through college and graduate school with her earnings and scholarships. She was an early participant in the Gender Identity Project within Mental Health and Social Services at the Lesbian and Gay Community Services Center of New York. By March 1996, she became the first ever Director of the project.
The book is somewhat disjointed, making it difficult to read straight through. It is best read in segments, and is organized in a way to facilitate reading in that fashion. Life on the streets and in the clubs is related in great and intimate detail. Some will find both the language and discussions offensive, but it reflects the environment where Ms. Blumenstein spent much of her life. No one without this experience can really understand what it was like or what strength and courage it required to survive and overcome it.
As a volunteer at the Center, Ms. Blumenstein realized how out of touch she was without a formal education. She also realized that most of those she worked with were truly out of touch without her informal (street) education. Her collegiate success built on her transsexual experience to make her uniquely-qualified for her varied mental health and social services, especially for the marginalized members of our gender communities.
"This book is about pain, it's about celebration, it's about taking risks, its about going crazy, and it's about being fabulous and adventurous" It is an inspirational success story of a young woman originally designated male overcoming this incorrect designation, overcoming drug and alcohol abuse, and overcoming her life on the streets of New York to become a leader in HIV/AIDS prevention, education and outreach to all LGBT, and many other services to various marginalized communities.
Rating: Summary: Best Book on the Subject! Review: I just finished this most amazing book after learning about it on Gendertalk. It was by far the best book I've ever read on the subject and I've read about all of them.
Rating: Summary: Best Book on the Subject! Review: I just finished this most amazing book after learning about it on Gendertalk. It was by far the best book I've ever read on the subject and I've read about all of them.
Rating: Summary: Rosalyne Blumenstein's Secret Journey Review: I knew Roz Blumenstein during the 1990s, when she was Director of the Gender Identity Project of the Gay & Lesbian Community Center of New York. I didn't know, until she asked me to read a pre-release copy of her book Branded T, that she was simultaneously working in the peep shows on Broadway. In print, I saw a different side of Ms. Blumenstein-- a side that was struggling with issues of self-worth and self-discovery. I had thought she had it SO together!It takes great courage to tell the world of our secret struggles, our insecurities, our private fears, our little pockets of craziness. Ms. Blumenstein has that courage. She has given us a book that transcends her gender issue and speaks to the human spirit. As one reviewer at Amazon has said, it's sad, and funny, too. It's an amazing read.
Rating: Summary: Soon to be a best seller Review: One of the best books written yet on transgender issues...I would definitely recommend it to everyone interested in learning more about this community. A MUST READ for everyone, especially health care providers, substance abuse providers and HIV/AIDS Specialists.
Rating: Summary: Soon to be a best seller Review: One of the best books written yet on transgender issues...I would definitely recommend it to everyone interested in learning more about this community. A MUST READ for everyone, especially health care providers, substance abuse providers and HIV/AIDS Specialists.
Rating: Summary: Another meaningful way to proclaim, "I am real" Review: Rosalyne Blumenstein's "Branded T" is vivid testimony to the power and significance subjugated voices play in the movement to contest and end oppression. As a consequence of this oppression, Rosalyne has been gendered as "other" and is "Branded T[rans]" by the dominant culture that insists her personal understanding of gender is a deception, both to herself and to others, setting the stage for a conflict between two knowledge's, one purporting to know universal truths and a second knowledge scaled to the individual, Rosalyne's knowledge of herself. The vast majority of the knowledge addressing the lives and concerns of people of trans-experience and with trans-histories has been collected and authored by non-trans-identified clinicians and academics, organizations and providers, often raising concerns about the exploitation of trans-identities as phenomena. This contrasts with a more primary resource: the spoken, written, electronic and performed voices, literature and material available from within the trans-communities, by trans-identified people themselves. The knowledge that oppressed peoples have of themselves and their lived bodies has a power and value beyond the individual. This narrative perspective recovers a subjugated knowledge that offers a potent and under utilized resource for community development, as well as for the development of the practical knowledge needed to share space with these communities. The knowledge map of culture, space, policy, power and language created by the dominant non-trans culture excludes trans-people and the trans-communities from consideration or relabel and reconfigure those needs to suit their purposes. In the context of a space allocation that maps territory and resources on the basis of class, race, ethnicity and gender, trans-space is difficult to perceive, almost invisible. As such, Rosalyne's narrative contributes to the drawing of a countermap of trans-experiences as normative. When seen as normative, the adaptive strengths that trans, gender-different and gender-othered people accumulate, the communities they create, and their different sense of fit, become valued components in a cohesive sense of identity. Recognition of subjugated knowledge is integral to supporting this as a normative identity The subjugated position of Rosalyne's developing narrative often reveals an acute sense of insurgency. Not content to express her vision of the oppression that she and her cohort endures, her narrative explores action, small resistances, internal triumphs and hidden victories. The insurgent use of the narrative knowledge as a healing device then becomes a form of action knowledge or action narrative. "Branded T" can then be seen as a potent addition to this developing body of knowledge, a knowledge that is aggressively maneuvering to shift the vision the trans-communities from one based on a global knowledge structured in diagnosis and pathology to one ordered on identity, management of stigma, and creation of community using the subjugated knowledge the trans-communities themselves create and value. In this context, Rosalyne's voice vitally reclaims the power of self-knowledge and has discovered another meaningful way to proclaim, "I am real."
Rating: Summary: One of the Best Books on this Subject I've Read! Review: Rosalyne Blumenstein, whose gender identity dysphoria took her down a tumultuous path from drug-addicted sex worker at a Times Square peep show to her present-day psychotherapy practice, began her transition as a teenager. In her excellent and illuminating book, Branded T, she discusses the ramifications of growing up, painfully aware of another side of her that needed to be addressed. Rosalyne writes of an emotional "incongruity" so powerful that it carried her contradictory feelings even well beyond her transition. Rosalyne's gender dysphoric feelings produced a sense of great shame. As a child, the emotional pain she experienced drove her to escape to a fantasy world, where she would often remain in bed dreaming erotically of becoming the girl she already experienced herself to be. As a young child Rosalyne's parents seldom questioned or challenged her leanings toward femininity, but she vividly recalls a time in nursery school, where a trunk filled with dress-up clothing kindled a longing to be a bride. On the very day she put on a white lace dress, her brother and mother made a visit to the class. Rosalyne, seeing her family, ran under a table, a huge "sense of shame weighing her down." She states that she is uncertain about the mechanism that caused her to experience this "deep, ingrained sense of inappropriateness," and why, at such an early age, she felt the desire for feminine things. "The shame was embedded in me," she writes. Before becoming drug-free, going to college, graduate school, and turning her life around, Rosalyne spent eleven years as a sex worker, using drugs and trying to conceal her TS past from the world. Experiencing violence, grief, degradation, and several suicide attempts, she was now at her wits end and ready to get out of the sex field and eventually free herself emotionally by coming out to the world as TS. Her experience with drugs and with her gender struggle led to non-profit counseling work with the gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender community, where ironically, she at first became even more closeted about her past, frightened about people finding out about her history-her internalized shame spawning a viscous cycle of her own transphopia. Although Rosalyne passed as female, she noticed that most transsexuals who had transitioned, looked transsexual. The false sense of privilege she received in passing actually caused her to have more shame about being transsexual. Society had implanted a kind of self-hatred surrounding her own transsexuality. For many years after her transition, Rosalyne notes that her ability to relate to men as "beings," and not just economic or sexual entities, was one of her greatest challenges. Each time she met a man, her trauma about her transsexual past would resurface. Her own uncertainty and lack of self-esteem mirrored how society responds to a woman of TS experience. Even today she remarks that this wounding has never abated. The shame seemingly continues to be at work.
Rating: Summary: What you think you know Review: What I thought I would find in the pages of this book when reading it was what I thought I already knew but to my pleasent surprize I found more. I found self-exploration, pride, humility, courage, and most importantly honesty. In our world where life is taken for granted on a daily basis and so few people share thier stories Ms. Blumenstein lets it all hang out. I couldn't wait to get to the next page. Her story is funny and sad at the same time but her exploration of self is enlighting and empowering, it's a journey you take with her. It is not often enough that a heart-felt story you can relate to is told and she tells it. You don't have to be gay, lesbian, Bi, or Trans to understand her struggles you just have to be human. There are so little readings out there that ask you to expand your mind but this book expands not only your mind but your heart and compassion to how far we still have to go to just let people be who they are ment to be. Thank you for sharing your story and your enlightenment with me.
<< 1 >>
|