Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
Based on the articles on gender dysphoria, write a short paper about the influence of acceptance, parenting styles, and how these can directly steer a child’s gender identity.
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Moreover, think about society today and acceptance of varied gender roles compared to the 1950s. What is different today in parenting styles compared to the 1950s? Additionally, think about the criteria and changes made in the DSM in the most recent version (DSM-5) compared to earlier, outdated versions. Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
Also, consider and explore society’s influence on gender dysphoria in your argument. Is there a direct correlation to gender identity and society or not?
Paper should be 3-5 full pages and 3 resources formatted in APA.
Resources:
1. Library Article: Gender Dysphoria: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back
This article examines the newly revised diagnostic criteria for gender dysphoria and illustrates the substantial step forward in understanding the population it encompasses.
The article discusses there is much improvement in the definition, there still leaves room for growth in labeling such population. This article is required for all of this module’s tasks. Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
Lev, A. I. (2013). Gender dysphoria: Two steps forward, one step back. Clinical Social Work Journal, 41(3), 288-296. doi:http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy.snhu.edu/10.1007/s10615-013- 0447-0
2. PDF: Gender Dysphoria This article provides an overview of the newly established guidelines for gender dysphoria adopted by the DSM-5.
The article reviews the criteria for a gender dysphoria diagnosis and areas in which there still remains a struggle for those with this diagnosis. This article is required for all of this module’s tasks.
3. Library Article: Gender Stereotypes in the Family Context: Mothers, Fathers, and Siblings
This article explores gender stereotyping of children by their parents. The study examines parental expectations and stereotypes and how these differ compared to siblings of different genders. This article is required for all of this module’s tasks.
Endendijk, J. J., Groeneveld, M. G., van Berkel, S.,R., Hallers-haalboom, E., Mesman, J., & Bakermans-kranenburg, M. (2013). Gender stereotypes in the family context: Mothers, fathers, and siblings. Sex Roles, 68(9-10), 577-590. doi:http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy.snhu.edu/10.1007/s11199-013-0265-4
4. Library Article: The Early Development of Gender Differences
The study examines the inception of gender differences and influence of developmental roles. This article is required for all of this module’s tasks.
McIntyre, M., & Edwards, C. (2009). The Early Development of Gender Differences. Annual Review of Anthropology, 38, 83-97. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.snhu.edu/stable/20622642
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Gender_Dysphoria_Two_Steps_Fo.pdf
CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK FORUM
Gender Dysphoria: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back
Arlene Istar Lev
Published online: 18 July 2013
� Springer Science+Business Media New York 2013
Abstract The long-awaited DSM-5 has finally been
published, generating controversy in many areas, including
the revised diagnostic category of Gender Dysphoria. This
commentary contextualizes the history and reform of the
pathologization of diverse gender identities and expres-
sions, within a larger perspective of examining psycho-
logical viewpoints on sexual minority persons, and the
problems with continuing to label gender identities and
expressions as pathological or disordered.
Keywords Transgender � Gender � Diagnosis � GID � Gender dysphoria � Gender identity � LGBT � Trans � LGBTQ
Sexualities keep marching out of the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual and on to the pages of social
history. Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
Gayle Rubin 1984, p. 287.
Clinical Social Work has just celebrated its 40th anni-
versary, and this volume marks the first special issue devoted
to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) mental
health and psychotherapy. The lives of LGBT people, people
who are now reclaiming the word queer as a proud self-
descriptor to encompass the term LGBTQ (Tilsen 2013),
have changed dramatically in this same period of time.
LGBTQ people were leading clandestine, marginalized
lives, ostracized by family and friends, unable to have chil-
dren (or retain custody of them), living with a constant threat
of unemployment, creating false narratives about their social
lives to appease others and protect their private lives. Now
LGBTQ people have the potentiality of full lives—out,
proud, married, with families, serving in the military,
working for the government—with strong communities and
federal laws that protect us against bias-related violence.
Forty years ago, I was a 15-year-old Jewish working-class
adolescent, growing up in the tail end of 1960s counter-cul-
ture, and deeply in love with my best girlfriend. My journals
were full of endless, painful monologues about her, about
society, and about where I would fit into the grownup world I
would soon be entering. I wasn’t exactly closeted—I called
myself bisexual—but I was filled with angst and confusion
and drowning in myriad social messages of what it meant to be
a lesbian (which in my journals I spelled ‘‘lesibean’’ because
even simple access to seeing words that reflected my experi-
ences in print was non-existent). I did not know how to talk
with my mother, my friends, my boyfriend, my girlfriend
about my emerging queer identity. What could be the future
for a young dyke? Where could I find a home, a job, a lover, a
life? And if I found my way to therapy, what would the psy-
chotherapist say to me that would affirm my identity? What
education did she have, what trainings had he attended, what
journal articles could she/he have read to help her or him help
me to grow to be a healthy secure and very queer adult?
In entering into this discourse with you, the reader, I must
start with a moment of silence, for all that has not been said
within the therapy professions, within social work and family
therapy—the professional communities I call home—these
past 40 years. The LGBTQ communities have been hard at
work informing politics, changing policy, opening minds,
indeed transforming the world in many ways—and our clin-
ical communities have followed along, taking a mostly pro-
gressive, supportive stance on issues as they have arisen,
incorporating a ‘‘gay-affirmative’’ approach into our clinical
A. I. Lev (&) School of Social Welfare, State University New York at Albany,
Albany, NY, USA
e-mail: arlene.lev@gmail.com
123
Clin Soc Work J (2013) 41:288–296
DOI 10.1007/s10615-013-0447-0
practices (Levy and Koff 2001), but as a social work com-
munity, I wonder if we have done enough (Levy and Koff
2001). Have we been at the vanguard of advocacy and pro-
gressive change, or have we merely followed the evolving
trends (Hegarty 2009)? I hope that this inaugural issue heralds
a change not just in direction, but in conceptualization, so that
LGBTQ issues become not a ‘‘special issue,’’ but are incor-
porated into the framework and organization of the journal. I
was taught many years ago to always ask the questions ‘‘Who
is not present at the table? Whose voice is not being heard?’’
The challenge of fully incorporating LGBTQ clinical
knowledge into the mainstream of clinical social work is to
deconstruct heteronormative thinking, to queer the discourse. I
will try in the words that follow to move this discussion past
‘‘gay-affirmative’’ therapy, and to imagine a more queer psy-
chotherapy, one that truly challenges the pathologizing of
LGBTQ lives, and heteronormativity of non-queer ones. I want
to look at the role that diagnoses play in the development of
identity, communities, and the therapeutic gaze. The context of
this discussion is the change from Gender Identity Disorder to
Gender Dysphoria in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5; American
Psychiatric Association (APA) 2013), but it is by necessity a
wider discourse about both sexual orientation and gender
identity, the social and political context of the holding envi-
ronment we call therapy, as well as an emerging queer sensi-
bility that challenges the hegemony of pathological labeling.
The shift in diagnostic nomenclature initiates a potential shift in
clinical conceptualization from gender nonconformity as
‘‘other,’’ ‘‘mentally ill,’’ or ‘‘disordered’’ to understanding that
gender, as a biological fact and as a social construct, can be
variable, diverse, and changeable, and existing without the
specter of pathology. De-centering the cisgender assumption
that normal people remain in the natal sex (cis) and that dis-
ordered people change (trans) is at the root of debate regarding
gender diagnoses in the DSM and the battle for their reform.
I became a social worker 25 years ago to work with what
we then called the gay community. I fought and lost the battle
as the Chair of the ‘‘Gay Issues Committee’’ of the New York
State Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers
(NASW) to change the name to the ‘‘Lesbian and Gay Issues
Committee’’; the word lesbian was still foreboden. Although
this was over a decade after homosexuality had been removed
from the DSM, ‘‘gay’’ issues were poorly integrated in my
social work education. The only time I heard the word trans-
sexual as a student (the word transgender had not yet been
coined) was when a teacher said, ‘‘You know that some people
want to change sex?! Really!’’ She leaned into the class and
repeated in a loud incredulous whisper for emphasis,
‘‘Really!’’ When I became an adjunct professor (in the same
Social Work program in the late 1980s) and I asked my col-
leagues how they addressed issues of sexual orientation in the
curricula, I was met with blank stares. Was there really
nothing to say about homosexuality now that it was no longer a
diagnosis in the DSM? Really?! Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
However, despite the silence within training institutions,
there have been many positive changes for LGB people
socially and politically. In the past few decades lesbian and
gay people have secured many civil rights. It is worth
pondering whether these social changes would have hap-
pened if homosexuality had remained in the DSM. Do you
think we would be seeing these massive social changes,
like marriage equality? Throwing off the yoke and stigma
of ‘‘pathology’’ allowed not only for the coming out of gay,
lesbian, and bisexual people, but also allowed for legal,
political, and clinical transformations that could never have
been granted a ‘‘mentally ill’’ population. How would your
psychotherapy practice look different than it currently
does, if homosexuality was still a mental disorder? These
questions are an important prelude to the discussion of
Gender Dysphoria in the DSM. Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
The acronym LGBT has become a moniker, a catch-all
expression meant to include a group of people who may not
have all that much in common. It has become a practice of
mine, whenever I receive new classroom textbooks, to look
in the index for the phrase LGBT, and then see what the
content reveals. Most of the time what is revealed is gen-
eral information on lesbian and gay people. The B and T
are too often silent. Although I mentioned above that I feel
relatively secure that lesbians and gay men are receiving
competent care when seeking therapy, I do not pretend to
feel that trusting about the clinical treatment received when
we toss in the unique issues bisexual people face in either
heterosexual or same-sex partnerships (see Scherrer, this
issue for an in-depth discussion regarding bisexual indi-
viduals). And what about the complex issues transgender,
transsexual, and gender non-conforming people experience
within the confines of the consulting room?
I began to work with transgender clients and their
families in the mid-1980s. I had no training in under-
standing gender identity, gender expression, gender dys-
phoria, or the process of transitioning one’s sex medically,
legally, or psychologically. In my first sessions with a
transwoman I will refer to as Krystal the Duchess, I was
initially baffled, bringing to the sessions not much more
than a compassionate heart, an open-mind, and deeply
challenged feminist politic. Krystal arrived in therapy,
presenting as a mild-mannered, disheveled and middle
aged depressed man named Norman who lived at home
with his mother. Norman could have easily been diagnosed
with various personality disturbances, severe anxiety, and
perhaps a mild psychotic disorder, and indeed would have
been if diagnostics were the primary clinical lens I used.
Krystal then revealed herself to me, bigger than life, a drag
artist who traveled to New York City on the weekends to
perform in Greenwich Village; a double-life she had lived
Clin Soc Work J (2013) 41:288–296 289
123
for decades. Krystal disclosed that this was no longer
performance, she wanted to fully live as Krystal, but felt
stuck, caught between two genders, two different worlds,
and saw no way to actualize herself, to become Krystal.
Frankly, neither did I. Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
At the same time, another client was referred to me, a
young masculine female named Sam, who had come out as
a lesbian when she was still a teenager, and received
support from her parents, as well as a gay-affirmative social
worker. She confided to me: ‘‘I’m not really a lesbian; I’m
really a man.’’ I asked her girlfriend what she thought of
this statement, and she conferred, ‘‘Of course, she’s a man.
If she’s not a man, then I would be a lesbian, and I am
definitely not a lesbian!’’ I thought this was the worst case
of internalized homophobia I had ever seen (and I’d seen
plenty by then), if not a mutual delusion system. I was
clearly in over my gay-affirmative head!
Both Krystal and Mel arrived in my office because they
were told I was an ‘‘expert,’’ but perhaps the only real
expertise I had was realizing how little I really knew about
sexuality, sexual orientation, and gender. Being a biblio-
phile, I spent the next 5 years reading everything there was
to read on gender identity, transsexualism, Gender Identity
Disorder, and the political analyses emerging from the
burgeoning transgender liberation movement. Mix thor-
oughly, cook on a low heat, and my book Transgender
Emergence: Therapeutic Guidelines for Working with
Gender-Variant People and Their Families was born.
In the years that have followed, I have worked with
hundreds of trans people, their partners, their children,
and their extended families. I have worked with hetero-
sexual, married men well into mid-life who had been
secretly cross-dressing since they were small boys, and
had never revealed this to anyone, until they told me,
indeed until they showed me; I’ve heard this story more
times than I can count. I worked with butch-identified
lesbians who wanted to live as men, but their lesbian
lovers didn’t want to be with men—they wanted the
particular masculinity that butch women exude. I have
worked with 5-year-old children who were absolutely sure
that they were girls, and having a penis did not in any
way deter them from their convictions; as they matured,
they are still 100 % sure of this. I have worked with
many heterosexual couples trying to come to grips with
whether to allow their teenagers to start hormone-block-
ers, giving them time to decide whether to begin puberty
as a boy or as a girl. I have worked with young adults
who eschew all pronouns, all genders, and call themselves
queer with a fierce pride. I worked with a Roman Cath-
olic priest, who lives full-time as a woman now. Trans-
gender people represent an enormous diversity of
humanity, crossing all racial, ethnic, class, and cultural
populations, all ages, dis/abilities, and religions.
The word transition is used to describe the process of
changing gender that Krystal and Sam and so many others
since were describing; it is also a word used during the
birth of a baby, when the head begins to crown. I have
spent the last few decades witnessing this transition, the
crowning, the birth, their re-birth, if I dare to use such a
term. There is much that I have learned in this process, but
one thing is perfectly clear, transgender people are more
like the rest of us—cisgender people, those who do not
challenge the sex binary—than they are like one another.
For the most part they are mentally stable—no small task
given what they face—and when they are not so stable,
they are unstable in the ways the rest of us are: anxious,
depressed, and sometimes struggling with deeper mental
health issues. But their gender is not disordered (Lev
2005); indeed their gender is quite ordered, just not in
conventional ways. Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
I live in awe of these transformations and the emotional
cost of these journeys, but in the mid-1980s I was mostly
just infuriated because one thing was blatantly clear read-
ing clinical treatises on trans/gender—the entire field
(small enough at the time that I likely read every tome ever
written) was built on the exact same pathologizing narra-
tive that had made homosexuality a viable diagnosis for
nearly 100 years (Oosterhuis 1997). The story of Gender
Identity Disorder, and the new diagnosis of Gender Dys-
phoria, is a narrative of an oppressed people and their
liberation struggle, amid the psychobabble of gender con-
formity, mental illness, and medicalization of human
diversity. Plummer (1981) has said that the ‘‘…realization that one was collectively oppressed rather than individually
disturbed…’’ (p. 25) was the realization of gay and lesbian people in the 1960s, a realization that began to dawn on transgender people in the 1990s. Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
The diagnosis of homosexuality rested on simple het-
eronormative assumptions about what was ‘‘natural,’’
‘‘healthy,’’ ‘‘functional,’’ ‘‘common’’ (it is, after all the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual). Within the confines of
western culture, same-sex love was obviously pathological,
outside the expected boundaries of human behavior and
experience. Based on those assumptions, psychological
theories developed etiologies of ‘‘why’’ someone could be
like ‘‘that.’’ The answers, based initially in psychoanalytic
ideology as well as the behavioral and cognitive theories of
gender acquisition that developed later, led to theories of
faulty child-rearing and mother-blame: homosexuality in
men was caused by over-involved mothers and distant
fathers, causing a disturbance in proper gender socialization
(see Stoller 1966); (in classic pre-feminist psychoanalytic
theory, there was a mostly silence about what caused les-
bianism (Kitzinger 1993). Decades later these ideas seem
anachronistic, as thousands of lesbian, gay, and bisexual
people attest to coming from very different family
290 Clin Soc Work J (2013) 41:288–296
123
structures, most whose configuration does not resemble the
suffocating mother/distant father dynamic (see LaSala, this
issue for a detailed discussion of this topic). However, my
review of the literature revealed that these same etiological
theories were resurrected in the late twentieth century to
explain transsexualism.
Few therapists today would treat a lesbian or gay client
using a lens of causality, nor would they try to assist them
in living a heterosexual life (and indeed, if they did so, they
would be going against the ethical and moral standards of
nearly every professional mental health organization, see
Anastas, this issue). However, the field of transgendersim
is only recently coming out (literally) from the shroud of
etiology. What if gender transitions are a normative part of
the diversity of human identity? Research from history,
anthropology, and the biological sciences seem to show
that non-binary gender identities, gender transformations
and transpositions, are ubiquitous across human and non-
human communities, throughout history and cross-cultur-
ally (see Lev 2004). What if there is nothing disordered,
dysfunctional, odd, or unnatural about transgendering? If
transgender is not pathological, then what is it that needs to
be diagnosed? Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
Although Homosexuality was officially removed from
the DSM in 1973, it was replaced in the DSM-III with an
only somewhat less noxious diagnosis—Ego-Dystonic
Homosexuality, which was not removed until 1980. Dys-
tonic refers to the subjective experience of unhappiness and
is contrasted with syntonic behavior, or one’s comfort with
their same-sex desires. The DSM-III stated that this diag-
nosis should only be used when the client had unwanted
homosexual feelings and it also stated that ‘‘…distress resulting from a conflict between a homosexual and society
should not be classified’’ (APA 1980, p. 282). It soon
became clear that living in a homophobic and heterosexist
culture left few ‘‘happy well-adjusted homosexuals,’’ and
given the complexities of internalizing a stigmatized
minority status, the diagnosis was determined to be biased,
and was removed.1
At about the same time that homosexuality was removed
from the DSM, gender identity diagnoses were included.
From a contemporary perspective, this appears confusing,
especially when you realize it was the same men who
developed the DSM diagnosis for gender identity who were
the strongest advocates for both the removal of
homosexuality from the DSM and also the early pioneers
working with, and supportive of, transsexuals and their
need for medical assistance in transition (see Drescher
2010; Zucker and Spitzer 2005). Why would they want to
pathologize gender identity diversity while we were finally
liberating homosexuality as a diagnosis? It was thought at
the time that the inclusion of a diagnostic category would
legitimize transgender identity and would assist in the
development of treatment and professional attention for
this invisible and vilified population. History has indeed
shown some wisdom in this perspective. However, it has
also left us 30 years later with a diagnostic category that
pathologizes a minority community, and potentially inter-
feres with their pleas for civil rights and acceptance within
the human family. Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
A brief review of this process follows: In the DSM-III
(APA 1980), two diagnoses were included for the first time,
one called Transsexualism, to be used for adults and ado-
lescents, and the second Gender Identity Disorder of
Childhood. In DSM-III-R (APA 1987), a third diagnosis
was added: Gender Identity Disorder of Adolescence and
Adulthood, non-transsexual type, which was removed
when the DSM-IV (APA 1994) was published.2 Also in the
DSM-IV the two previous diagnoses were conflated into
one, Gender Identity Disorder (GID), with different criteria
sets, one for adolescents and adults, and another for chil-
dren (see pages 537–538). Additionally, the diagnosis of
Transvestic Fetishism, a paraphilia, has undergone
numerous changes in nomenclature and criteria during the
revisions; all were included in the section on Sexual and
Gender Identity Disorders.
For the past few years, there has been a fervent move-
ment among both trans-activists and professionals to
remove the gender diagnoses from the DSM, and in lieu of
that, to at least reform them (see Lev et al. 2010; Winters
2008a). However, depathologizing gender identity in the
DSM mirrors the slow process of change in removing
homosexuality, incrementally through many versions of the
DSM. As Winters (under pseudonym Wilson) noted back in
1997, ‘‘American psychiatric perceptions of transgender
people are remarkably parallel to those for gay and lesbian
people before the declassification of homosexuality as a
mental disorder in 1973’’ (p. 15). Similar to the history of
the removal of homosexuality from the DSM, some head-
way has been made in the construction of the DSM-5, and
improvements are slowly evolving, in gradual stages, of
what appears to be a positive direction.1 Many are not aware that a residual category for homosexuality remained in the DSM-IV under the category of Sexual Disorders Not
Otherwise Specified [NOS]. This category includes three items, the
last one was, ‘‘Persistent and marked distress about sexual orienta-
tion’’ (DSM-IV-TR. 2000, p. 582); ostensibly this could be used for
anyone struggling with sexual orientation, though I suspect it was not
often used for heterosexuals struggling with their straightness. This
has been removed in the DSM-5.
2 The phrase ‘‘non-transsexual type’’ referred primarily to male
cross-dressers, but in some ways was a foreshadowing of the
emergence of diverse gender expressions that might not involve a
complete gender transition. Short Paper: Gender Dysphoria
Clin Soc Work J (2013) 41:288–296 291
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Gender_Stereotypes_in_the_Fami.pdf
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20622642.pdf