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BARRY KAY ARCHIVE
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London
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As a Women - The Other Women
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Home
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Barry Kay's preface to the book
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Bibliographic Notes
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During many return visits to Australia over the past fifteen years, I have seen the steady emergence of male transvestisism [sic; et seq] in Sydney and also the establishment of its large transsexual community. My interest in the phenomenon has grown as each time I became more conscious of the wide disparity that lies between this sub-culture and the society from which it springs. As a result I began the series of portraits that are now contained in this book.
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In the preface to his photographic socio-anthropological documentary, As a Woman / The Other Women, Barry Kay shares his observations and experiences made within Sydney's vast transgender community. The images were taken during the years 1974-75. On 18 October 1976, the publication was lauched at The Photographers' Gallery, Soho, London, in conjuntion with an exhibition of a selection of photographs contained in this volume.
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Alice, Bubbles |
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Until recently more conventional employment for this community was unobtainable, leaving entertainment and prostitution as the principal means of survival in Sydney. However this has begun to change as wider public acceptance has increased their emancipation. Sydney's transsexual community appears large by comparison to the population and noticeably more outlets are provided for employment than in most other international cities of its size. Throughout the Western world similar communities or ghettos exist, which not only vary in scale but differ widely through cultural influences. It was from the discussions while photographing in Sydney that I began to see how much national characteristics had conditioned the development of this particular sub-culture.
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Cynamone |
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Angelique, Ponty & Karita |
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Although an increasing number of males who openly adopt alternative roles may for some be symptomatic of a trend towards the greater merging of the sexes, in this instance it seems to point towards a reaction to the pattern of Australia's male orientated society. Such a condition is of course familiar ground to anthropologists. Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead have both examined and compared widely differing cultural patterns, showing how primitive societies have institutionalised or repressed transvestisism in its different aspects. Examples of tansvestisism and transsexual communities recur throughout history, although as terms of definition they are of comparatively recent origin, appearing restricted in their meaning, especially where the dividing line is often not clear. Definition becomes even more limited when only describing one particular aspect - such as female impersonation.
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Rikki |
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Suzanne |
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In Germany, Magnus Hirschfeld first used the term transvestite for a major study on the subject, "Die Transvestiten" published in 1925 [1]. Hirschfeld was one of the chief pioneers [2] in this field together with sexologists such as Krafft-Ebing and Havelock Ellis. But at this time knowledge of the subject was only in its infancy and the use of hormone treatment and surgery did not exist for those who are now classified as transsexual [3]. It was not until 1953 that the term appeared, being employed as a further distinction by the authority in America, Dr. Harry Benjamin [4], in order to describe those with such strong gender confusion as to require, in many instances, a physical conversion. It is this area that has become most widely known of recent years through reports of "Sex Changes" in the popular press.
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Outside the medical profession, very little is understood or known about such conditions and even within scientific circles today there is still much speculation as to categories and origins, apart from any views for or against treatment. In his scientific report "The Transsexual Phenomenon", one of the most comprehensive studies of the subject to date, Dr. Benjamin examines and endeavours to explain the infinite range of subtle variation contained within the phenomenon. He raised questions of congenital cause and of childhood conditioning as well a suggesting the influence of cultural differences. The basic distinction that has been drawn between transvestite and transsexual image of himself as the opposite sex, whereas the transsexual is motivated by the feeling that he belongs to the opposite sex. Between these two states lie innumerable gradations and as predicted by the first person whom I photographed, never did I meet anyone whose condition appeared to be the replica of another. Transvestisism receives less publicity currently than transsexualism possibly due to more guilt surrounding the condition. Although not so familiar to the public, in fact its incidence is greater than transsexualism.
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Mel |
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Simone, Lenore |
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With an increasing acceptance of transsexualism in Sydney, in the past few years, there has been a noticeable willingness among transvestites to discuss their situation in the media. Their attachment to cross-dressing as understood in the clinical sense, involves some emotional and erotic stimulation and a certain amount of confusion with gender role. Feminine identification can be stronger for some than it is for others. In another instance, cross-dressing may also be a fetish. Although transvestisism is considered a less serious conflict than that of transsexualism, it is continually at odds with the Western tradition of strictly defining gender role. Australian society seems to express the extremes of this polarity. Most transvestites tend to lead homosexual lives and are often married with emotionally stable backgrounds, but the extent of their partners' understanding varies considerably. In Sydney, members of the Sea Horse Club, an organisation for transvestites, have even devised an alphabetic scale to qualify this particular range of toleration. "D", which is in the middle of the scale, represents antagonism and is typified by the case of a young wife who refuses to sleep with her husband on the grounds that she is not lesbian. They remain together only for the sake of their children, while every endeavour is made to restrain his attempts at gratifying the need for "dressing" elsewhere.
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Carol |
Frequently "dressing" rituals can be highly elaborate with many hours of painstaking preparation in order to create the transformation. Although it could be interpreted simply as a form of justification, on several occasions transvestites suggested that their "dressing" was also a creative act, providing some artistic satisfaction. Such motivation I often heard from female impersonators who consider themselves neither as transvestite nor transsexual disliking the identification with either, some dispense with a pseudonym.
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Pearl |
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In one instance I encountered a group known as "The Synthetics", whose pseudo-transvestite activities previously enjoyed notoriety in Sydney. Their "dressing" was a form of satire, more typically American in origin than Australian. One of its members gradually became the subject of the satire - now transsexual, he lives as a woman, has regular electrolysis and hormone treatment and intends shortly to undertake the conversion operation. At one of our photographic sessions, he related how his life had at different times been changed by two passing observations. The first was that he was an atheist, while pursuing a Jesuit vocation. The second, that he was transsexual, while engaged in satirising it. Each came as a revelation, resulting in complete reversal on both occasions.
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Stan Munro * |
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Tracy |
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Of recent years a sex reassignment programme has been instigated in Sydney, making the sex conversion operation officially available. Thorough investigation into each case is carried out to establish the validity of the patient's claim and as this requires many interviews with long periods of waiting, many fear a negative result and turn to the alternative, private surgery. This eliminates the required psychiatric advice which most prefer to bypass. The expense of private treatment is considerable, though I know of several who would endure any temporary discomfort in order to save for surgery. In such cases this usually involves employment on day and night shifts, often supplemented by prostitution. Those who can afford it travel abroad to have the conversion operation, mostly in Cairo or Casablanca, for very few with whom I spoke were content with local results. Although their predicament is generally known throughout the transsexual community it does not seem to deter others from seeking treatment.
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Robbie |
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Sue, Diane |
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Home
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Most recently, there have been increasing numbers of young people experimenting with hormones. This is perhaps symptomatic of the more general availability of drugs. Hormone tablets are reasonably easy to acquire in Sydney through several pharmacies that provide them without prescription. A number of teenagers, I suspect, were indulging in hormone treatment less from transsexual needs than from an attraction to the glamour associated with transsexualism. It struck me that this may be largely initiated by Sydney's cult of the all-male revue which imitates a female stereotype - that of the glamorous showgirl. In European or American cultures, this stereotype supplies the fantasies to counteract domestic routine - in Australia, the role has more recently been delegated to men. It is a
curious comment on the country's social mores that its audiences will respond not to the original but to the synthetic copy. Female review now tends to enjoy less popularity than the all-male revue and this is further emphasised by the fact that many of Sydney's strip club entertainers are transsexual. Sometimes they show considerable pride in deceiving the customers, thereby satisfying their ultimate aim of being accepted totally as women. This aim however, is more usually expressed through a desire to seek anonymity in complete seclusion. I have heard it claimed repeatedly that the real goal was for life as a suburban housewife, and those who have succeeded in finding a partner to realize that ambition are greatly envied. The cult of glamour, no matter how necessary a shield, still remains impersonal and the desire for a more genuine existence is always a dominant factor in their lives.
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Preface to the German-language edition and more photographs >> Die anderen Frauen
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Magnus Hirschfeld published his study «Die Transvestiten - eine Untersuchung über den erotischen Verkleidungstrieb» («The Transvestites - a Study of the Erotic Drive of Crossdressing») as early as 1910 - publisher: Alfred Pulvermacher & Co, Berlin. It was the second and unrevised edition that appeared in 1925 - publisher: Ferdinand Spohr Verlag, Leipzig. The accompanying illustrated edition, entitled «Der erotische Verkleidungstrieb» («The Erotic Drive of Crossdressing»), which Hirschfeld compiled together with Max Tilke, was published in 1912. back to text
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Magnus Hirschfeld was in fact the first to describe transvestism as a phenomenon in its own right. As of 1900, in an attempt of shedding some light on the subject, information and essays, edited and published by Hirschfeld himself, appeared in the
«Jahrbuch für sexuelle Zwischenstufen» («Annual for Sexual Intermediaries»). back to text
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The first sex change surgeries as well as the first hormone treatments were conducted in the reactionary-reformative days of the Weimar Republic (1919-1933). At that time, transsexuals were still categorised as transvestites. back to text
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In his essay «Die intersexuelle Konstitution» («The Intersexual Constitution») Magnus Hirschfeld coined the term seelischer Transsexualismus (mental-emotional/psychological transsexualism) - see: «Jahrbuch für sexuelle Zwischenstufen» («Annual of Sexual Intermediaries»), XXIII, 1923. Its current significance and use, however, are to be traced back to the works of David O. Cauldwell (1949) and particularly so to those of Harry Benjamin (1953), both of whom were familiar with Hirschfeld's work and his contributions to sex change surgery. Those interested in the subject are recommended to consult the International Journal of Transgenderism, 5 (2001) 2. back to text
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Magnus Hirschfeld
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http://www.barry-kay-archive.org/PHOTO/TT/TT_Intro_en.html
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