Being Transgender: What You Should Know
By (Author) Dana Jennett Bevan Ph.D.
Foreword by Dallas Denny
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
14th November 2016
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
306.768
Hardback
264
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
680g
Written for general audiences, this unprecedented book comprehensively answers many questions about being transgender with current experiential and scientific information, including the evidence for a biological transgender predisposition. With transgender people visibly achieving fame in entertainment, the literary world, and other arenas, increasing numbers of transgender people are choosing to publicly announce that they are transgender. All of this has brought transgender people and the associated issues of being transgender into mainstream discourse. The demand for fact-based, scientific information on being transgender has never been higher. Written by a transgender person who is also a physiological psychologist, this book is the first for general readers that explains what is known about transgender causation, what life as a transgendered individual is like, and the science involved in living a transgender life. This book serves to improve understanding of being transgender among general audiencesincluding transgender readersby describing the science and experience of being transgender. It supplies an enlightening understanding of what if feels like to be transgender, when it starts, the many paths for living a transgender life, and methods to face challenges such as bullying and rejection. It provides a worldview that transgender people are neither broken nor diseased, but rather that they exhibit transgender behavior because of a biological predisposition for which there is solid scientific evidence.
Thomas E. Bevan, PhD, is president and owner of a company that conducts research on biopsychology applications, including capturing the science and experience of being transgender. Bevan has published two books on transgender science, including Praeger's The Psychobiology of Transsexualism and Transgenderism.