Tuesday, August 9, 2016

CROSSING GENDER LINES

Deirdre N. McCloskey, Crossing: A Memoir (Chicago & London: U. of Chicago, 1999) (From the book jacket: "We have rad the stories of those who have 'crossed' race lines, class lines, and cultural lines. But few have crossed--completely and entirely--the gender line. Deirdre Mccluskey, the former Donald, had done so, and she now tells the dramatic and poignant story of her travel in her memoir. Crossing." "A renowned economist and historian, a husband and father, Donald McCloskey had crossdressed for years without wanting more. But rather suddenly, at age fifty-two, a sense that he was denying his real identity grew to the point that he knew he had to become a women. Crossing is the story of this realization and its consequences. McCloskey relates in detail the process of physically becoming a woman but also describes the emotional wake--personal and professional--left by the decision. Her mother accepts her; her children reject her. Some conservative economists prove to be gender libertarians, but some progressive feminists prove to be gender authoritarians. McCloskey's account of her crossing and her painstaking efforts to learn to 'to a woman' enfold all the aspects of her journey into fundamental questions about about gender and identity, hatred and anxieties, that have surprising answers." "Crossing is the story of a golden boy of conservative economics, a child of the 1950s and 1960s privilege, who became a woman. Of necessity she also became an artist performing, and them embodying, gender. She notes that the performance was enacted 'often with no audience and seldom with a script.' Crossing is the start of an engrossing, terrifying, and uplifting scripts. It is also an amazing story beautifully told.").

Meredith Russo, If I Was Your Girl (New York: Flatiron Books, 2016) (young adult fiction).