experience embodiment as racial gender terror. In doing so, Chen insists that attentiveness to race, nationalism, imperialism, genocide, and colonialism is fundamentally necessary for understanding transgender culture and social identities. Chen thus pushes
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Jane M. Kubiesa, Looi van Kessel, Frank Jacob, Robert Wood, and Paul Gordon Kramer
see it as one part in a longer change-over-time study that will contribute to American history more fully. Although the collection focuses on the United States, there are brief nods to trans-nationalism—Amsterdam and Sweden being mentioned in “Wet
Andrew J. Webber
. Family Archives “You mustn’t forget who you are.” (The mother’s parting injunction to Lore) If Heimat and Märchen are interdependent resources for the ideology of German nationalism and the sense of exclusive identification and belonging