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Stories of Resistance, Survival and Beauty from the Bay Area’s Trans Community

Stories of Resistance, Survival and Beauty from the Bay Area’s Trans Community

We talk about the Bay Area’s trans community.

KQED's Forum

June 19, 202555m 48s

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Show Notes

The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a Tennessee law on Wednesday that bans gender-affirming medical care for minors. For many transgender people, the ruling is yet another setback in a long line of attacks on their rights that stretches back through most of human history. And yet, transgender people have created a rich legacy throughout, especially in the Bay Area. Two new projects highlight their stories. One is a KQED series profiling important trans artists and activists from the 1890s-2000s. Another is a new book, “So Many Stars: An Oral History of Trans, Nonbinary, Genderqueer, and Two-Spirit People of Color”. We’ll talk to their creators and an expert in gender law about the court’s decision and what lessons we can take from trans history.


Guests:

Nastia Voynovskaya, editor and reporter, KQED Arts

Caro De Robertis, author, "So Many Stars: an Oral History of Trans, Nonbinary, Genderqueer, and Two Spirit People of Color"; They are also the author of the novels "The Palace of Eros," "The President and the Frog," "Cantoras," "The Gods of Tango," "Perla" and "The Invisible Mountain."

Donna Personna, San Francisco resident and trans rights activist

Suzanne Goldberg, professor and director of the Sexuality and Gender Law Clinic, Columbia Law School

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