51勛圖

2025 Speakers

Emily Hobson, Laurie Marhoefer, Jo Hsu - Widening the Arc of Trans History

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VISITING SPEAKER SERIES

WIDENING THE ARC OF TRANS HISTORY


EMILY HOBSON

Women/Lesbian/Prison/Trans?:
Categories of Mobilization in ACT UP's Campaign to
Change the Definition of AIDS
Monday, June 23rd, 2025
3:00 PM - 4:30 PM
McPherson Library, A003


LAURIE MARHOEFER

Trans Berlin:
Making the Modern Transgender World
in Jazz Age Germany
Monday, June 30th, 2025
3:00 PM - 4:30 PM
McPherson Library, A003

JO HSU

The Burden of Proof and Other Stories:
Reimagining Evidence from the Trans/Crip Diaspora
Wednesday, July 2nd, 2025
3:00 PM - 4:30 PM
McPherson Library, A003

 

Emily Hobson - “Women/Lesbian/Prison/Trans?: Categories of Mobilization in ACT UP’s Campaign to Change the Definition of AIDS.”

Abstract: From 1989 through 1992, a coalition of activists fought to convince the United States Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to expand its diagnostic criteria for AIDS and through this to compel the Social Security Administration to grant more people, particularly women, access to AIDS-related health care, services, and benefits. The ultimately successful campaign, led by the Women’s Caucuses of ACT UP and known as Change the Definition, was both a policy fight over medicine and social welfare and a cultural struggle over women’s and lesbians’ racialized, classed, and sexual relationships to AIDS. Change the Definition complicated and destabilized the categories of women as a collectivity and lesbian as an identity, and did so especially by confronting the connections between AIDS and incarceration. By linking women and lesbian to prison and HIV, Change the Definition rearticulated women and lesbian as subjectivities of deviance rather than respectability, difference rather than sameness, and risk rather than safety, thereby challenging prevailing constructions of gender and sexuality. The categories of mobilization that animated Change the Definition form part of the genealogies of prison abolition and trans(-inclusive) feminisms and offer a meaningful model for analyzing the relationships between categories of women, lesbian, bisexual, queer, and trans in racial capitalism.

Bio: Emily Hobson is an historian of radical social movements, queer politics, and HIV/AIDS in the United States. An Associate Professor of History and Gender, Race, and Identity (GRI) at the University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) and a past chair of the GRI department, she received her PhD and Master’s degree from the University of Southern California in American Studies and Ethnicity and her BA from Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges in History and Literature. Emily is the recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities (2025-26, terminated by federal action), the National Humanities Center (2024-25), the One Archives Foundation, Smith College, CUNY’s Center for LGBTQ Studies, the University of California Santa Barbara, and other sources. They are the author of Lavender and Red: Liberation and Solidarity in the Gay and Lesbian Left (2016) and co-editor, with Dan Berger, of Remaking Radicalism: A Grassroots Documentary Reader of the United States, 1973-2001 (2020). Emily’s current research examines the history of HIV/AIDS activism by, for, and with people incarcerated in the United States. Activists in this movement organized feminist, queer, and abolitionist opposition to the convergence of state neglect and state violence that defined the Reagan through Clinton eras. Articles from this project have been published or are forthcoming in Signs, Radical History Review, QED, Sinister Wisdom, The Abolitionist, and Truthout, among other venues. Emily currently serves the American Studies Association as a member of the ASA National Council (2023-2025) and the 2025 ASA Program Committee.


Laurie Marhoefer - "Trans Berlin: Making the Modern Transgender World in Jazz Age Germany."

Abstract: Some people think transgender politics is new, or that it began in the 1990s. But in fact, transgender people have always existed, and the real story of the beginnings of modern transition are much older. Before the First World War, Germany had a transgender political movement, and under pressure, the German government had begun to grant a limited form of legal transition. From a transgender orphan who escaped from nuns in the Alps in the 19th C, to a young man who changed his sex around 1900 in Hamburg, to a middle aged woman who went to court in 1929 to fight for her right to live as a woman, this talk tells the stories of some of the trans people who helped to shape what became Weimar Germany's exciting and vibrant world of trnasgender politics, until the Nazis took power and destroyed it.

Bio: Laurie Marhoefer is a historian of the queer and transgender past. His work has been influential in public conversations about queer and trans people living in Germany under the Weimar Republic and Nazi State. In 2024, he helped to co-write a historians' amicus brief for the pivotal US Supreme Court Case US v. Skrmetti. He also wrote a biography of the Asian Canadian gay activist and Vancouver resident Li Shiu Tong and his boyfriend Magnus Hirschfeld. Marhoefer is a professor at the University of Washington in Seattle, where he lives with his child and dog. He is currently writing Trans Berlin, due out with Tiny Reparations (Penguin Random House) in 2027.


Jo Hsu - “The Burden of Proof and Other Stories: Reimagining Evidence from the Trans/Crip Diaspora.”

Abstract: In 2025, the question is not should academia imagine differently, but how will our disciplines adapt to a world with ever-compounding cruelties? This talk asks, what possibilities are lost in an overreliance on argument and “evidence”? I use nonlinear storytelling to explore how academic conventions and scientific consensus have buttressed the myriad harms targeting LGBTQ people, people of color, and disabled people. Attacks on gender-affirming care, public health precautions, and anti-racist movements are often portrayed as anti-intellectual, but this view neglects the longstanding involvement of scientists and academics. It also ignores the complicities of our own disciplines and professional standards. Bending rhetorical insight through the prism of the lyric, I explore the knowledge that escapes linear thinking. Drawing from scholars and activists including Cameron Awkward-Rich, Eli Clare, Margaret Price, La Marr Jurelle Bruce, Kai Cheng Thom, Johanna Hedva, and Remi Yergeau, I dwell with the irrational, the broken, and the maladaptive. This is a story told in crip time, through trans-of-color imagination, with the urgency of chronic pain and illness. There are no easy answers here, but there is potential in the journey— if you’ll take it with me.

Bio: Jo Hsu (They/Them) is an associate professor of Rhetoric & Writing and Women’s, Gender, & Sexuality Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. They’re the author of Constellating Home: Trans and Queer Asian American Rhetorics, and their work explores how storytelling shapes policy and culture. They’re currently working on several projects related to anti-trans rhetoric, narratives of pathologization, and contested diseases.

Stephen Davidson - Voice Coach

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Stephen Davidson

TRANS+ COMMUNITY VOICE WORKSHOPS
A practical introduction to transmasculine & transfeminine voice
for members of the Trans+ community
(including NB/GNC folks)


Wednesday, May 14, 2025
Transmasculine workshop: 5:00 PM - 6:00 PM PDT
Transfeminine workshop: 6:15 PM - 7:15 PM PDT
UVic Hickman 110 & Online 

 

Transmasculine Workshop: We'll look at how the voice works, what T changes (and doesn’t), and explore vocal qualities that read as masculine. You'll practice in low-key pairs, never on the spot, with time for questions and tips on how to practice.

Transfeminine Workshop: We'll explore how the voice works, what makes it sound feminine, and try simple exercises to begin shifting vocal habits. You’ll practice in relaxed pairs, never on the spot, with plenty of time for questions and discussion.

Stephen Davidson founded London Trans Choir in 2017 and has been working with trans voices of all kinds ever since. As a trained actor and musician, he brings a dynamic and flexible approach to voice work for all voice types. Through his work with The Tavistock and Portman Gender Clinic, Trans Choir, Love Tank, and with actor/singers from beginner to West End levels, he has worked with every voice type under the sun. A leading authority on transmasculine voice, he released his third book, The Transmasculine Voice: A Guide To Vocal Euphoria in 2024.

Chloe Turner - Visiting Researcher

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Chloe Turner

MANUFACTURED DOUBT:
Mapping UK Transgender Disinformation


Tuesday, May 27, 2025
2:30 PM - 4:00 PM PDT
Cornett A317 & Online 

 

Transgender disinformation is information intentionally produced to mislead public understanding of transgender populations, including strategic fabrication of facts, methodical data manipulation, selective statistical representation, intentionally decontextualised research conclusions, and the use of dubious or misappropriated sources, among other tactics. The intention of such disinformation is to manufacture uncertainty, cultivate fear and distrust, and—with increasing strategic precision—direct coordinated pressure campaigns against transgender people and the supportive ecosystems surrounding transgender communities: affirming parents and partners, evidence-based healthcare practitioners, responsive local governance structures, and the cultural institutions. This lecture looks at UK transgender disinformation narratives, tactics, and the illusions it uses to make such claims stick and spread to create disinformation afterlives that continue to shape public discourse long after their original contexts have dissolved.

Chloe Turner is a trans writer and researcher currently completing a PhD with the Centre for Feminist Research, Goldsmiths University of London on transgender disinformation. Turner's writing on trans studies can be found or forthcoming in the European Journal of Cultural Studies, Culture Health & Sexuality, The Geographical Journal, Media Theory, The Sociological Review and New Sociological Perspectives. Turner has previously been a Visiting Research Fellow at the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy at Columbia University, New York City and at present teaches queer and transgender studies at Central Saint Martins, London. Turner is the Governance and Policy Lead of The Museum of Transology, the largest collection of material culture of transgender, non-binary and intersex lives in the world. Turner writes a regular substack on trans politics titled: WHIPLASH.

Aino Pihlak - Visiting Researcher

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Aino Pihlak

PUTTING THE FEMME IN FEMINIST:
Trans Feminism & the 'Male Lesbian'
in the American Second Wave


Thursday, May 22, 2025
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM PDT
Cornett A317 & Online 

 

A slur, a joke, or a case of mistaken identity? Surely the ‘male lesbian’ is one of these. Yet this term’s actual herstory is far more interesting. Throughout American feminism’s Second Wave, potentially thousands of trans femmes identified this way in North America and Europe. The lesbian feminism articulated by them in the 1970s constitutes one of the most enduring and intellectually significant subsets of lesbian feminism to come out of the Second Wave. Join trans femme historian Aino Pihlak for her talk about the trans lesbian feminism first developed by Sally Douglas in 1970 and then popularized through the Salmacis Society. The herstory of Salmacis, Sally Douglas, and the “male lesbian,” disrupts dominant ideas of the supposed antagonisms between “trans” and “lesbian” in the 1970s. Indeed, the distinctly trans femme led, sex-positive, lesbian femme-inism of the organisation can reanimate lesbian feminism today.

Aino Pihlak is a trans woman and emerging social historian who studies past articulations of trans feminine existence. In addition to her interest in trans feminine porn studies, she is a scholar of twentieth-century, Anglophone, and overwhelmingly white, trans feminine subcultural periodical networks. She hopes her analyses of the complexities and messiness of past trans live