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Continue reading →: LGBTQ+ People Are Not Going BackSpeaking out against the shameful silence on trans rights from the Democratic Party over the last few months. #LGBTQNotGoingBack
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Continue reading →: Vote for the 2024 TFR Reader’s Choice Awards + 1st Ever December Trans Readathon!Voting is open now for the inaugural TFR Reader’s Choice Awards! Vote by Dec. 27th.
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Continue reading →: Three Things You Can Do Right Now to Combat Anti-Trans Censorship (CW #9)A printable zine of the Trans Literature Preservation Project, nationwide action on December 3rd, 2024, and more!
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Continue reading →: Observing Trans Day of Remembrance (CW #8)Remembering those we’ve lost this year.
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Continue reading →: How to Build Your Trans MicrolibraryAre you as ADHD as I am? Then here’s a quick and easy guide to help you get a headstart on your microlibrary.
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Continue reading →: The Trans Literature Preservation Project: A Practical Guide to Resisting CensorshipProject 2025 wants to criminalize trans literature. Here’s a game plan for keeping our stories alive.
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Continue reading →: 12 Spooky Books by Transfemmes to Read This Halloween (CW #7)Vampires, living dolls, and dysphoria, oh my!
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Continue reading →: Transfemininity and Dissociative Identity Disorder: An Undertheorized IntersectionFemme alters in AMAB bodies are a common occurrence for those with Dissociative Identity Disorder. So why don’t transfeminine theorists talk about them?
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Continue reading →: American Evangelicalism and the Ineptitude of the Whig Party – A Brief History of Transfeminine Literature, Pt. 3On the Second Great Awakening, transvestic lithography, abolitionism, and the gross incompetency of the American Whig Party.
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Continue reading →: Dorothy’s Boy by M.K. Bengtson (2009) – Books by Transfemmes You Should Read #1Dorothy’s Boy (2009) by M.K. Bengtson is a psycho-sexual examination of trans childhood and religious repression – but a closer analysis and an excellent sequel adds more depth and nuance than meets the eye.
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Continue reading →: How I Discover Transfeminine Fiction (CW #4)A down and dirty guide to my research methods for underground transfeminine fiction and the expectations you should have about the results they’ll produce.
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Continue reading →: The Moral Origins of Obscenity: A Brief History of Transfeminine Literature, Pt. 1Where did anti-trans discrimination in publishing begin? Our unlikely search takes us back to William Wilberforce, the Society for the Suppression of Vice, and the American Revolution.


