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OverviewA history of trans medicine that uses Scandinavian sources to tell a global story. Standardizing Sex traces the emergence of trans medicine in Scandinavia in the twentieth century, exploring the construction and negotiation of medical expertise among medical professionals, patients, and activists in the media and government bureaucracy. The book combines the author's analysis of medical records and other archival sources with oral history interviews with former patients, activists, doctors, psychologists, and civil servants. Physician-historian Ketil Slagstad uses the Scandinavian story of sex reassignment to anchor not only the role of the state but also bureaucracy and social rights. Scandinavian countries, he shows, played a foundational role in the emergence of trans medicine internationally. As a result, Standardizing Sex tells a transnational history of medicine that sheds light on a set of relations and problems that continue to impact discussions of trans medicine and trans rights around the world. Slagstad's sources offer a rare opportunity to explore the emergence of trans medicine in action in the clinic, laboratory, waiting room, and operating room, as well as in the bureaucrat's office, on the psychologist's couch, and in the publications and meetings of activist groups. Together, these sources allow for the analysis of the increasingly complex negotiations of nosological criteria, medical knowledge, and medical practices in a formative period for transgender medicine. More generally, the book offers a story about the reshaping of the normal and the pathological in modern societies. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ketil SlagstadPublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.594kg ISBN: 9780226843223ISBN 10: 022684322 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 11 September 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction: A Welfare State Story Chapter 1: Eugenic Beginnings Chapter 2: Sex Change and Sex Offense Chapter 3: Collecting Cases, Outlining Symptoms, Making Diagnoses Chapter 4: Hormone Architecture and Guinea Pigs Chapter 5: The Hospital Home and Surgical Pragmatism Chapter 6: Sex and the Binary State Chapter 7: Society as Cause and Cure Chapter 8: Draw Your Sex and I Will Tell You Who You Are Chapter 9: Community Care and Scientific Activism Chapter 10: Epidemiological Dreams and the Operationalization of Regret Chapter 11: Bureaucratizing Medicine Conclusion: Social Medicine and the Norms of Health Acknowledgments Abbreviations Notes Interviews Bibliography IndexReviews“This important book richly historicizes medical engagement with transgender individuals and the emergence of particular forms of practices and institutions in trans medicine. Slagstad decenters the history of the emergence of transgender medicine, redirecting our attention from North American gender identity clinics to the crucial role Scandinavian countries played in the development and establishment of transgender medical practices from the early twentieth century onwards. As he shifts from the local to the national to the regional to the global, he reveals a world in which seemingly universal tools and technologies are shaped by local traditions and acquire different meanings.” -- Sandra Eder, author of “How the Clinic Made Gender” Author InformationKetil Slagstad is a research fellow at the Institute for the History of Medicine and Ethics in Medicine at Charité: Universitätsmedizin Berlin. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |