Caterina Nirta is senior lecturer in social sciences at the University of Roehampton, UK
This book looks at how the transgender individual marks their own position inside and outside the boundaries of a category which often offers institutionalised and manufactured images of transgender identity and communities.
Introduction
Chapter 1 - How Might It Be?
1.1 Why Deleuze?
1.2 Why Video Diaries?
1.3 Why This Research?
Chapter 2 - Actualised Utopias
2.1 Utopia of the 'Not-Yet'
2.2 No Future, No Present
2.3 Temporal Immanence
2.4 Future in the Present
2.5 Sustainable Utopian Ethics
Chapter 3 - Logics of Recognition
3.1 Gender Recognition Act 2004
3.2 Shift Gender/Sex
3.3 Until Death Do Us Part
3.4 Dialectics of Recognition
3.5 Limits of Recognition
3.6 Intersectionality
3.7 Will to Be Imperceptible
The Diary Sessions, I - On Gender Recognition
Chapter 4 - Spatial Dystopia. Or a Case Against Public Toilets
4.1 The Monolingualism of Public Toilets
4.2 The Making of Public Toilets
4.3 The Un-Making of Public Toilets
4.4 An Ethics for Public Toilets
The Diary Sessions, II - On Public Toilets
Chapter 5 - Marginal Bodies
5.1 The Monstrous Body
5.2 The othered Body
5.3 Different Bodies
5.4 Perverse Bodies
5.5 Nomadic Bodies
The Diary Sessions, III - On Wrong Bodies
Conclusion