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Additions?
Films featuring genderqueer/trans individuals:
"Velvet Goldmines"
"To Wong Fu, Thanks for Everything"
"Priscilla, Queen of the Desert"
"Hedwig & the Angry Inch"
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
TV characters are already covered in the fictional characters list; doesn't seem to be sufficient reason to keep them separate. Thoughts?
Marianna251TALK18:27, 14 August 2016 (UTC)
@
Ringbang: Hi! Sorry it's taken me so long to reply - I've been away from the site for a few months. Knowing the history makes the current state of
List of transgender characters in film and television make much more sense; thanks for the info! Renaming and reorganising the film and television article sounds like a good idea.
For renaming, I'd be in favour of returning it to "Transgender in film and television", since that covers the bases a lot more thoroughly. If it works best as a list, an alternative could be "List of film and television shows with transgender themes". For reorganising, what do you think of having "Trans men", "Trans women" and "Depictions of both" as primary sections, each then split into "Major" and "Minor" subsections? It would mix film and TV together, but a sortable table with a "Film/TV" column would solve that. Splitting it into major and minor would then sift out the works that only have transgender people/issues as subplots. Thoughts?
Marianna251TALK21:32, 18 May 2017 (UTC)
@
Marianna251: Glad to have you back!I would love to see the article develop away from the list format. People love adding things to the list, but there's very little to tie the additions together: no sense of context, era, relationship, or significance. As the list grows, the content becomes more trivial, and finding the most relevant works becomes more difficult; reliable sources rarely appear. I think the article would work best if it resembled a
literature review or history, but it will take a while to get there.You know, splitting the article into
Transmasculinity in film and television and
Transfemininity in film and television might actually clear the way to developing the content more fully. Otherwise, I agree that we should at least bring back the title "Transgender in film and television". For the list format, I think a masculine/feminine division is fine, but words like transmasculinity and transfemininity are less presumptuous. There seems to be an implicit preference for
binary gender in categorising content in transgender lists. That reflects a cultural bias, and potentially
original research in a viewer's interpretation of a character. When talking about works collectively, permutations of transmasculine and transfeminine avoid these problems, and are also more inclusive. —
Ringbang (
talk)
14:55, 22 May 2017 (UTC)
@
Ringbang: Good point about masculinity/femininity. I was going with the current sections in the article, but they felt awkward to me and I'm glad you've got an alternative.
I agree on moving the article move away from a list. I'd love to split the article as you describe into transmasculinity/transfeminity in film and TV, but that might be a goal for further down the line since it's going to take a lot of work to sort the article out without splitting it too. I've been playing around with ideas for content/layout
my sandbox - it's just a rough layout with some notes right now, but I've tried to incorporate what we've discussed so far and I'd welcome your comments.
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Hi David, the Film and Cartoon sections were small subsets of the more complete List of transgender characters in film and television. This isn’t a disruptive edit. — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
SpeakForMe (
talk •
contribs)
22:13, 1 January 2019 (UTC)
@
SpeakForMe: I understand you want to move the material to the other page. It can exist in both places with a summary version here. Please get more support per
WP:BRD before removing again. --
David Tornheim (
talk)
22:54, 1 January 2019 (UTC)
@
David Tornheim: This isn't a summary, it's a subset of the information on the other page. As per
WP:MERGEREASON I believe this qualifies as a duplicate section, as they have the exact same scope. Do have your reasons for reverting as per
WP:BRD? My understanding is that it encourages good faith bold editing, and that I don't need specific support?
SpeakForMe (
talk)
23:02, 1 January 2019 (UTC)
Yes. You did not leave a subset: You deleted *all* the content. Maybe other editors support that, but I don't.
@
David Tornheim: That merge was for the whole page, and resulting plan was never implimented. The information is still duplicated and also looks like it covers the other 3 reasons for merging. What reasons do you have for reverting?
SpeakForMe (
talk)
23:25, 1 January 2019 (UTC)
Please read above:
Decision made not to merge, but to rename List of transgender characters in film and television to Transgender in film and television and expand its content instead. Marianna251TALK 15:18, 24 June 2017 (UTC)
Is that still happening? It looks like it has been abandoned, and the two pages have continued to be duplicates for the past couple of years.
SpeakForMe (
talk)
00:10, 2 January 2019 (UTC)
I don't see a problem with it the way it is. If you want to get a 3rd opinion
WP:3O or start or start an
WP:RfC, have at it. Maybe other editors agree with you that it is a problem. The way I see it, "if it's not broke, don't fix it." --
David Tornheim (
talk)
00:14, 2 January 2019 (UTC)
any reason why she's on this list? If you haven't found one yet,I might be able to provide one:"Haruhi from Ouran High School Host Club is an androgynous girl who's living as a male student at her school due to specific circumstances. She says she doesn't think gender is important, which is just vague enough to have multiple interpretations including that Haruhi might be non-binary."- from the tvtropes article on the ambiguous gender identity trope.
Masterball2 (
talk)
04:29, 28 January 2019 (UTC)
The character George from
Enid Blyton's book series
The Famous Five shows all evidence of being trans. This is never explicitly mentioned in the books, as the concept of transgender people hadn't really entered the public eye and the term had yet to be invented. He is cited as one of the first trans characters in children's literature. The problem I'm having is that the only source I can find which states this explicitly is a blog, which I am averse to cite. Should I go looking for another source or just up and cite it?
ᐉ
Allie 849 (
talk)
14:37, 8 May 2020 (UTC)
Unless it's specifically stated in the books or by the author, it's just speculation. It's like Nick from 'The Great Gatsby'. Perhaps he was gay, but it can never be proven one way or another.
Bkatcher (
talk)
01:59, 9 May 2020 (UTC)
Abbreviating name of article
Should this article be re-named to just "List of trans fictional characters" ? That would cover both transgender and transsexual characters in a neatly simplified sentence.
IseDaByThatEditsTheBoat (
talk)
12:20, 25 May 2020 (UTC)
The following is a closed discussion of a
requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a
move review after discussing it on the closer's talk page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
For those curious about the status quo
here is a comparison of titles using "trans" vs. "transgender". The latter seems to be significantly more common, though there are three significant articles that use "trans" outside of a proper name:
Trans woman,
Trans man, and
Trans bashing. (Apologies if I missed any.)
Colin M (
talk)
03:49, 27 May 2020 (UTC)
Support there is no real meaning behind 'trans' listed on the disambiguation page that u/Netoholic links to that is applicable to natural persons other than that of an abbreviation for transgender and transsexual. Further, several style guides, such as
GLAAD Media's, list trans as a shorthand for transgender and transsexual. Yes, the entry does continue to say that it is a bit ambiguous, but again, no other real meaning from the disambiguation page applies to natural persons here.
IseDaByThatEditsTheBoat (
talk)
13:39, 27 May 2020 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Oppose per the previous comments about "trans" being a more colloquial term than the specific and uniform "transgender". I support removing "transsexual", as transgender is sufficiently encompassing alone. With only two supports and two opposes (prior to my opposition here), this was closed very prematurely.
Onetwothreeip (
talk)
22:14, 2 July 2020 (UTC)
Proposed addition to the List of fictional trans characters
This
edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered.
• Information to be added or removed: Please add the character Kevelynd Vyalt Vyndrak to the List of fictional trans characters.
• Explanation of issue: The character of Kevelynd Vyalt Vyndrak is not yet included on the List of fictional trans characters. :( Information about Kevelynd: Kevelynd Vyalt Vyndrak appears in The Garnet Crown (published on August 10, 2020). Kevelynd is an apothecary and guild master who lives and works in the city of Veldren. He is also a trans man who is living in stealth because the oppressive, classist society that the shadow-sorcerer, Zaldyan, has enforced on the planet of Aldrayon has created a dangerous world for transgender people to be out in.
• References supporting change: Kevelynd's Fandom Wiki page:
https://crimson-plumes.fandom.com/wiki/Kevelynd_(Vyalt)_Vyndrak
Happy #NationalComingOutDay Be kind to yourself & take your time. You’re valid no matter if you’re out or not. We’re writing #ownvoices stories that include LGBTQIA+ characters. Kevelynd comes out as transgender in The Garnet Crown.
This supernatural and fantasy webcomic, set in "mad side of heaven," and a comic for "very open minded people," has multiple LGBTQ characters.[1] Acquamarina is an iced angel who is a
trans man who is also
pansexual while Ametista is also an iced angel, along with being an
asexualtrans woman.[2]
This comic by Jenn Dolari features several transgender characters, like C, Allison, Heidi, and Amy.[3]
Allison
Heidi
Amy
Doll
Storm Dogs
2013
Although she is a futuristic sex worker with a fully functional womb, some have said that her depiction of Doll as trans is still "pretty realistic."[4]
This webcomic, by Christie Smith focuses on intimacy and dating from a transgender perspective, centers on a gay, and
overweight, trans woman, Eve, and has "some very frank discussions about physical intimacy."[5] The story was well received by the trans community, while Smith added that Alison Bechdel's webcomic "Dykes To Watch Out For" was a big influence on her.[6] This comic also includes Eve's crush, and best friend, Lucy, while her lesbian friend, Lilith, has a crush on Eve, along with other LGBT characters, like a trans man named Adam, and two estranged lovers, Candace and Abelle.
This comic by Valerie Halla features a trans girl protagonist named Fenic and a queer cast, like two presumably gay characters (Leo and Louis), a lesbian named Fran with a girlfriend, and two characters who use they/them pronouns (Jess and Tahmonai).[7][8] Fenic, a "20-year-old trans lesbian" from Skyport, has been living in the "run-down queer district of Market Square" for five years, and has a magic ability to "manipulate any object from a distance," even though this magic is "temperamental."[8]
Jayden
Afro Chronicles
2020
This autobiographical webcomic focuses on the creator's transition and "journey of self-discovery" as a Black
trans man.[9]
Josette
Aerial Magic
2018–2019
She chose her own name and in the comic is called "self-named," but if she lived in the human world she'd "describe herself as trans."[10] She is the girlfriend of Cecily, who is mentoring the protagonist of the comic, Wisteria.
Leo
The Doctors are Out
2020-Present
In this romantic comedy, Leo, is a trans man who goes out on a date with Mary, one of the assistants of protagonist Fernando Guevera at his vet clinic.[11]
Leo
Help Us! Great Warrior
2015
Beginning as a webcomic, this fantasy, adventure, and humor series features Leo, an openly trans woman of color, confirmed to be "the first character confirmed to be trans in an all-ages comic."[4]
Lola Lion
Acception
2015–present
This ongoing Dutch
teendramedyromancewebcomic by Coco “Colourbee” Ouwerkerk,[12] who was inspired by "manga genres such as shojo and shounen," focuses on a rainbow-haired male protagonist named Arcus McCarthy, a high school student who faces some hostility for his appearance. The comic also features various LGBT characters.[13] This includes Lola Lion, a trans woman who is
transitioning,[14] and John is a trans man who becomes Lola's friend.[15]
John
Lyza
Ive Met Someone
2019–present
Lyza is a friend of the story's protagonist, Jenna (also known as JK), a member of the college's LGBT Alliance club at college, and a trans lesbian.[16]
Will
Will, a trans man,[17] is a character in the comic.
This comic by Vincent Kao features a trans man named Max as a protagonist who comes out to his mom and has to face the obstacles of becoming a
magical girl.[18]
She is a police lieutenant who has a relationship with a trans female sex worker named Dini.[4] She faces discrimination and disgust because her transition, and ultimately "defeats a serial killer who is targeting trans women." This comic series was written by a trans woman named
Maddie Blaustein who voiced Meowth in the American version of the Pokemon cartoon, among other voice acting roles.
This webcomic, by Christine Smith, tells the story of a trans girl, Sarah, has a cast of other LGBT characters, and her struggles as she faces transphobia.[21]
Slice of life comic by Valerie Halla is about trans childhood friends, Alexandra Stripes, Nat Mint, Lark Stripes, and Lynette Mercier.[7] It is implied that Lynette has a crush on Lark.[22]