doctoralThesis
Famílias em transição: uma etnografia sobre relacionalidade, gênero e identidade nas vidas trans
Fecha
2021-12-16Registro en:
NOVO, Arthur Leonardo Costa. Famílias em transição: uma etnografia sobre relacionalidade, gênero e identidade nas vidas trans. 2021. 415f. Tese (Doutorado em Antropologia Social) - Centro de Ciências Humanas, Letras e Artes, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2021.
Autor
Novo, Arthur Leonardo Costa
Resumen
This research aims to understand how family relations of transgender men and women change
through their gender transition, investigating processes and practices of relatedness in gender
and family relations. Research subjects were mothers of transgender children, as well as
transgender men and women, with whom I recorded in-depth interviews and whose lives I
followed during 14 months of ethnographic fieldwork in João Pessoa, Paraíba, between 2018
and 2019. Fieldwork sites were government agencies and institutions of public policies for
travestis and transexuals, and a medical ambulatory of the public health system that provides
specialized care for gender transition. I also followed the activities of an association of families
and parents of gays, lesbians, and transgender people called Mães pela Diversidade (Mothers
for Diversity), participating in mutual-help meetings, gatherings, parades, protests, and other
kinds of events. I analyse how families became active participants in their children’s gender
transition as they learned and acknowledged different discourses and knowledges, participated
in institutions, and interacted with specialists such as medical doctors and psychologists. I also
considered differences and particularities between families with transgender young children
and those of transgender men and women. Gender transition’s effects overflow beyond the
individual experiences of those who transition, moving transgender people’s families to create
new ways to relate and interact with each other. It creates disruptions as well as transformations
in identities, memories, and family ties.