Blanchard's transsexualism typology: Difference between revisions

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{{short description|psychological typology of gender dysphoria and transsexualism}}
{{short description|psychological typology of gender dysphoria and transsexualism}}
'''Blanchard's transsexualism typology''' is a [[psychological typology]] of [[gender dysphoria]], [[transsexualism]], and [[fetishistic transvestism]], created by [[Ray Blanchard]] through the 1980s and 1990s, building on the work of prior researchers, including his colleague, [[Kurt Freund]]. Blanchard categorized [[trans women]] into two groups: "[[homosexual transsexual]]s" who are attracted exclusively to men, and who seek [[sex reassignment surgery]] because they are feminine in both behavior and appearance; and "autogynephilic transsexuals" who are sexually aroused at the idea of having a female body.<ref name="Bancroft2009">{{cite book|author=Bancroft J|title=Human sexuality and its problems|pages=290–291 |year = 2009 |publisher = [[Elsevier]] |isbn=978-0-443-05161-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bI-Jau14aLAC&pg=PA290 | chapter = Transgender gender nonconformity and transvestism| authorlink = John Bancroft (sexologist)}}</ref> Blanchard's typology broke from earlier ones in that neither of the groups were considered "false transsexuals"; both autogynephilic and homosexual transsexuals were shown to benefit from transition. Before Blanchard, the idea that some types were not transsexual at all was a recurring theme in scholarly literature.{{citation needed|date=September 2019}}
'''Blanchard's transsexualism typology''' is a contested{{r|Davy|Pfeffer}}{{rp|1247}} [[psychological typology]] of [[gender dysphoria]], [[transsexualism]], and [[fetishistic transvestism]], created by [[Ray Blanchard]] through the 1980s and 1990s, building on the work of prior researchers, including his colleague, [[Kurt Freund]]. Blanchard categorized [[trans women]] into two groups: "[[homosexual transsexual]]s" who are attracted exclusively to men, and who seek [[sex reassignment surgery]] because they are feminine in both behavior and appearance; and "autogynephilic transsexuals" who are sexually aroused at the idea of having a female body.<ref name="Bancroft 2009">{{cite book |last=Bancroft |first=John |title=Human Sexuality and its Problems |date=2009 |publisher=Elsevier |isbn=978-0-443-05161-6 |pages=290-291 |edition=3rd |url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Human_Sexuality_and_its_Problems.html?id=bI-Jau14aLAC&q=blanchard |chapter=Transgender gender nonconformity and transvestism |authorlink=John Bancroft (sexologist)}}</ref> Blanchard's typology broke from earlier ones in that neither of the groups were considered "false transsexuals"; both autogynephilic and homosexual transsexuals were shown to benefit from transition. Before Blanchard, the idea that some types were not transsexual at all was a recurring theme in scholarly literature.{{citation needed|date=September 2019}}


Supporters of the typology include sexologists [[J. Michael Bailey]], [[Anthony Bogaert]], [[James Cantor]], [[Kurt Freund]], [[Anne Lawrence]], bioethicist [[Alice Dreger]], and others who cite evidence showing significant differences between the two groups, including sexuality, age of transition, ethnicity, IQ, fetishism, and quality of adjustment. Criticism of the typology has come from sexologists [[John Bancroft (sexologist)|John Bancroft]] and [[Charles Allen Moser]], psychologist Margaret Nichols,<ref name="nichols-2014">{{cite journal |last=Nichols |first=Margaret |title=A Review of “Men Trapped in Men's Bodies: Narratives of Autogynephilic Transsexualism” |journal=Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy |year=2014 |volume=40 |issue=1 |pages=71–73 |quote=Blanchard and Lawrence have received criticism from transgender activists, but more significant is that sexologists and sex therapists are now critics of the theory. I am one of those critics, and so this review is written from that perspective. |doi=10.1080/0092623X.2013.854559 }}</ref> academics Larry Nuttbrock, [[Julia Serano]], and Jaimie Veale, and others who argue that it is poorly representative of transgender people and non-instructive,{{clarify|date=September 2019}} and that the experiments behind it are poorly controlled or contradicted by other data. Blanchard's choice of wording has also been criticized as confusing or degrading, including by some supporters of the theory.{{who|date=September 2019}}<ref name="serano" />
Supporters of the typology include sexologists [[J. Michael Bailey]], [[Anthony Bogaert]], [[James Cantor]], [[Kurt Freund]], [[Anne Lawrence]], bioethicist [[Alice Dreger]], and others who cite evidence showing significant differences between the two groups, including sexuality, age of transition, ethnicity, IQ, fetishism, and quality of adjustment. Criticism of the typology has come from sexologists [[John Bancroft (sexologist)|John Bancroft]] and [[Charles Allen Moser]], psychologist Margaret Nichols,<ref name="nichols-2014">{{cite journal |last=Nichols |first=Margaret |title=A Review of “Men Trapped in Men's Bodies: Narratives of Autogynephilic Transsexualism” |journal=Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy |year=2014 |volume=40 |issue=1 |pages=71–73 |quote=Blanchard and Lawrence have received criticism from transgender activists, but more significant is that sexologists and sex therapists are now critics of the theory. I am one of those critics, and so this review is written from that perspective. |doi=10.1080/0092623X.2013.854559 }}</ref> academics Larry Nuttbrock, [[Julia Serano]], and Jaimie Veale, and others who argue that it is poorly representative of transgender people and non-instructive,{{clarify|date=September 2019}} and that the experiments behind it are poorly controlled or contradicted by other data. Blanchard's choice of wording has also been criticized as confusing or degrading, including by some supporters of the theory.{{who|date=September 2019}}<ref name="serano" />
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== Terminology ==
== Terminology ==
Blanchard's terminology employed the historical usage in scientific research on transsexuality, which was expressed relative to [[sex assigned at birth]]. That is, "homosexual" is used to refer to trans women who are attracted exclusively to men, while "non-homosexual" refers to trans women who are attracted to other people than men or who are attracted to neither men nor women.
Blanchard's terminology employed the historical usage in scientific research on transsexuality, which was expressed relative to [[sex assigned at birth]]. That is, "homosexual" is used to refer to [[trans women]] who are attracted exclusively to men, while "non-homosexual" refers to trans women who are attracted to other people than men or who are attracted to neither men nor women.


== Historical background ==
== Historical background ==
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Other researchers proposed still other typologies. Buhrich and McConaghy (1978) described only two types of transsexuality: "fetishistic transsexuals," who experienced erotic arousal during cross-dressing and heterosexual arousal, and "nuclear transsexuals" who did not.<ref>Buhrich, N., & McConaghy, N. (1979). Three clinically discrete categories of fetishistic transvestism. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior, 8,'' 151–157.</ref> Alternative terms for the fetishistic type have included ''[[eonism]]'' and ''[[sexo-aesthetic inversion]]''.<ref name="LawsO'Donohue2008">{{cite book | vauthors = Laws DR, O'Donohue WT | title=Sexual deviance: Theory, assessment, and treatment| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=yIXG9FuqbaIC&pg=PA408 | page = 408 |year=2008|publisher=[[Guilford Press]]|isbn=978-1-59385-605-2}}</ref>
Other researchers proposed still other typologies. Buhrich and McConaghy (1978) described only two types of transsexuality: "fetishistic transsexuals," who experienced erotic arousal during cross-dressing and heterosexual arousal, and "nuclear transsexuals" who did not.<ref>Buhrich, N., & McConaghy, N. (1979). Three clinically discrete categories of fetishistic transvestism. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior, 8,'' 151–157.</ref> Alternative terms for the fetishistic type have included ''[[eonism]]'' and ''[[sexo-aesthetic inversion]]''.<ref name="LawsO'Donohue2008">{{cite book | vauthors = Laws DR, O'Donohue WT | title=Sexual deviance: Theory, assessment, and treatment| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=yIXG9FuqbaIC&pg=PA408 | page = 408 |year=2008|publisher=[[Guilford Press]]|isbn=978-1-59385-605-2}}</ref>


Kurt Freund argued there were two etiologically distinct types of male-to-female transsexuals: one type associated with fetishistic crossdressing and found among gynephilic trans women, and one unassociated with fetishism and found among androphilic trans women.<ref name="freund1982">{{cite journal|vauthors=Freund K, Steiner BW, Chan S|date=February 1982|title=Two types of cross-gender identity|journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior|volume=11|issue=1|pages=49–63|doi=10.1007/BF01541365|pmid=7073469}}</ref><ref>Freund, K. (1985). Cross-gender identity in a broader context. In B. W. Steiner (Ed.), ''Gender dysphoria: Development, research, management.'' Plenum Press, NY:New York.</ref> Freund noted that the sexual arousal could be associated, not only with crossdressing, but also with other feminine-typical behaviors, such as applying make-up or shaving the legs.<ref name="Blanchard1985" /> Blanchard credited [[Kurt Freund|Freund]] with being first author to distinguish between the erotic arousal due to dressing as a woman ([[transvestic fetishism]]) and erotic arousal due to physically transforming into a more typically female form (autogynephilia).<ref name="Blanchard2005" />
The prevailing view prior to Blanchard's theory focused on two proposed types of transgender women, respectively labeled "homosexual transexuals" if sexually attracted to men, and "heterosexual fetishistic transvestites" if sexually attracted to women.{{r|Bancroft 2009}}<ref name="Pfeffer">{{cite book |last=Pfeffer |first=Carla A. |editor-last=Goldberg |editor-first=Abbie E. |title=The SAGE Encyclopedia of LGBTQ Studies |date=2016 |publisher=SAGE Publications |isbn=978-1-4833-7130-6 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4ss2DAAAQBAJ&q=autogynephilia |doi=10.4135/9781483371283.n439 |chapter=Transgender Sexualities}}</ref>{{rp|1249}} [[Kurt Freund]] argued there were two etiologically distinct types of male-to-female transsexuals: one type unassociated with fetishism and found among androphilic trans women, and another associated with fetishistic crossdressing and found among gynephilic trans women.<ref name="freund1982">{{cite journal|vauthors=Freund K, Steiner BW, Chan S|date=February 1982|title=Two types of cross-gender identity|journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior|volume=11|issue=1|pages=49–63|doi=10.1007/BF01541365|pmid=7073469}}</ref><ref>Freund, K. (1985). Cross-gender identity in a broader context. In B. W. Steiner (Ed.), ''Gender dysphoria: Development, research, management.'' Plenum Press, NY:New York.</ref> Freund noted that the sexual arousal could be associated, not only with crossdressing, but also with other feminine-typical behaviors, such as applying make-up or shaving the legs.<ref name="Blanchard1985" /> Blanchard applied the term ''autogynephilia'' to the latter type, hypothesizing that these trans women were expressing a sexual attraction to the idea of themselves as women.{{r|Bancroft 2009}}{{r|Pfeffer}}{{rp|1249}} He credited Freund with being first author to distinguish between the erotic arousal due to dressing as a woman ([[transvestic fetishism]]) and erotic arousal due to physically transforming into a more typically female form.<ref name="Blanchard2005" />


When Blanchard began his studies, all researchers of the topic had "identified a homosexual type of gender identity disturbance [which] occurs in homosexuals of both sexes. There is general agreement, moreover, on the clinical description of this syndrome as it appears in males and females".<ref name="Blanchard1989b" /> {{rp|316}} Researchers at the time concurred "that gender identity disturbance also occurs in males who are not homosexual but only rarely, if at all, in nonhomosexual females" and that "there is no consensus, however, on the classification of nonhomosexual gender identity disorders. Authorities disagree on the number of different syndromes, the clinical characteristics of the various types, and the labels used to identify them"<ref name="Blanchard1989b">Blanchard, R. (1989). The classification and labeling of nonhomosexual gender dysphorias. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior, 18,'' 315–334.</ref>{{rp|316}}
When Blanchard began his studies, all researchers of the topic had "identified a homosexual type of gender identity disturbance [which] occurs in homosexuals of both sexes. There is general agreement, moreover, on the clinical description of this syndrome as it appears in males and females".<ref name="Blanchard1989b" /> {{rp|316}} Researchers at the time concurred "that gender identity disturbance also occurs in males who are not homosexual but only rarely, if at all, in nonhomosexual females" and that "there is no consensus, however, on the classification of nonhomosexual gender identity disorders. Authorities disagree on the number of different syndromes, the clinical characteristics of the various types, and the labels used to identify them"<ref name="Blanchard1989b">Blanchard, R. (1989). The classification and labeling of nonhomosexual gender dysphorias. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior, 18,'' 315–334.</ref>{{rp|316}}
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Blanchard analyzed sex ratios and respective sex preferences. The results confirmed prior reports of there being larger numbers of male-to-female than female-to-male transsexuals. The results showed also that female-to-male transsexuals were almost exclusively attracted to females, whereas male-to-female transsexuals report a variety of sexual preferences, including attractions to men, women, and erotic cross-dressing.<ref name="Blanchardetal1987">{{cite journal|vauthors=Blanchard R, Clemmensen LH, Steiner BW|date=April 1987|title=Heterosexual and homosexual gender dysphoria|journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior| volume=16| issue=2| pages=139–152| doi=10.1007/BF01542067| pmid=3592961}}</ref> Other findings included that heterosexual MtF's were significantly older than either of the two homosexual groups (i.e., male-to-female's attracted to males and female-to-male's attracted to females). The heterosexual male-to-females said they felt their first cross-gender wishes around the time they first cross-dressed, whereas both the homosexual groups said their cross-gender wishes preceded cross-dressing (3–4 years on average). Where fetishistic arousal was acknowledged by over 80% of the heterosexual male-to-females, fewer than 10% of either homosexual group did. Blanchard therefore proposed that the larger numbers of trans women is not because males are more susceptible to gender dysphoria itself, but because natal males are more susceptible to fetishistic transvestism, which can, in turn lead to gender dysphoria.<ref name="Blanchardetal1987"/>
Blanchard analyzed sex ratios and respective sex preferences. The results confirmed prior reports of there being larger numbers of male-to-female than female-to-male transsexuals. The results showed also that female-to-male transsexuals were almost exclusively attracted to females, whereas male-to-female transsexuals report a variety of sexual preferences, including attractions to men, women, and erotic cross-dressing.<ref name="Blanchardetal1987">{{cite journal|vauthors=Blanchard R, Clemmensen LH, Steiner BW|date=April 1987|title=Heterosexual and homosexual gender dysphoria|journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior| volume=16| issue=2| pages=139–152| doi=10.1007/BF01542067| pmid=3592961}}</ref> Other findings included that heterosexual MtF's were significantly older than either of the two homosexual groups (i.e., male-to-female's attracted to males and female-to-male's attracted to females). The heterosexual male-to-females said they felt their first cross-gender wishes around the time they first cross-dressed, whereas both the homosexual groups said their cross-gender wishes preceded cross-dressing (3–4 years on average). Where fetishistic arousal was acknowledged by over 80% of the heterosexual male-to-females, fewer than 10% of either homosexual group did. Blanchard therefore proposed that the larger numbers of trans women is not because males are more susceptible to gender dysphoria itself, but because natal males are more susceptible to fetishistic transvestism, which can, in turn lead to gender dysphoria.<ref name="Blanchardetal1987"/>


The age at which trans women referred themselves to explore sex reassignment and their self-ratings of childhood femininity were also studied. Computer classification divided cases into heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, and asexual/analloerotic, according to cases' ratings of themselves. The homosexual group was significantly younger (mean age of 23.6 years) than the groups of heterosexual (mean of 39.1), bisexual (32.3), or asexual (35.3) transsexuals. The people in the homosexual group also rated themselves as significantly more feminine during their childhoods than the other groups, which did not differ from each other.<ref name="Blanchard1988" />
The age at which trans women referred themselves to explore [[sex reassignment]] and their self-ratings of childhood femininity were also studied. Computer classification divided cases into heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, and asexual/analloerotic, according to cases' ratings of themselves. The homosexual group was significantly younger (mean age of 23.6 years) than the groups of heterosexual (mean of 39.1), bisexual (32.3), or asexual (35.3) transsexuals. The people in the homosexual group also rated themselves as significantly more feminine during their childhoods than the other groups, which did not differ from each other.<ref name="Blanchard1988" />


On the basis of the different features they exhibited, Blanchard concluded that the various gender transpositions—male and female homosexuality, heterosexuality, transvestic fetishism, and gender dysphoria—are individual manifestations of two phenomena. The first one operates both in trans women and trans men, and represents a continuum from cis-heterosexual to cis-homosexual and at the extreme, gender dysphoric with (non-erotic) cross-dressing. The second one operates only or nearly only in trans women and represents a continuum from cis-heterosexual to transvestic fetishism (cis- but experiencing eroticism with cross-dressing), to gender dysphoria (with at least some history of eroticism while cross-dressing).<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{page needed|date=September 2019}} The eroticism experienced with cross-dressing and cross-gender images of oneself Blanchard called "autogynephilia", which has replaced the several prior terms.
On the basis of the different features they exhibited, Blanchard concluded that the various gender transpositions—male and female homosexuality, heterosexuality, transvestic fetishism, and gender dysphoria—are individual manifestations of two phenomena. The first one operates both in trans women and trans men, and represents a continuum from cis-heterosexual to cis-homosexual and at the extreme, gender dysphoric with (non-erotic) cross-dressing. The second one operates only or nearly only in trans women and represents a continuum from cis-heterosexual to transvestic fetishism (cis- but experiencing eroticism with cross-dressing), to gender dysphoria (with at least some history of eroticism while cross-dressing).<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{page needed|date=September 2019}} The eroticism experienced with cross-dressing and cross-gender images of oneself Blanchard called "autogynephilia", which has replaced the several prior terms.


== Homosexual vs. autogynephilic transsexuals==
== Homosexual vs. autogynephilic transsexuals==
Blanchard said that one type of gender dysphoria/transsexualism manifests itself in individuals who are exclusively attracted to men (Homosexual transsexuals averaged a [[Kinsey scale]] measurement of 5–6 and six is the maximum, or a 9.86±2.37 on the [[Modified Androphilia Scale]]<ref name="lawrence2005">{{cite journal|vauthors=Lawrence AA, Latty EM, Chivers ML, Bailey JM|date=April 2005|title=Measurement of sexual arousal in postoperative male-to-female transsexuals using vaginal photoplethysmography| url=http://www.indiana.edu/~sexlab/files/pubs/Lawrenceetal2005.pdf| journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior|volume=34|issue=2|pages=135–145|doi=10.1007/s10508-005-1792-z|pmid=15803248}}</ref><ref name="leavitt1990">{{cite journal|vauthors=Leavitt F, Berger JC|date=October 1990|title=Clinical patterns among male transsexual candidates with erotic interest in males|journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior|volume=19|issue=5|pages=491–505|doi=10.1007/BF02442350|pmid=2260914}}</ref>), whom he referred to as ''homosexual transsexuals'', adopting Freund's terminology.<ref name="Blanchardetal1987" /> The other type he defined as including those who are attracted to females (gynephilic), attracted to both males and females (bisexual), and attracted to neither males nor females (''analloerotic'' or asexual); Blanchard referred to this latter set collectively as the ''non-homosexual transsexuals''.<ref name="Blanchard1989class">{{cite journal|vauthors=Blanchard R|date=August 1989|title=The classification and labeling of nonhomosexual gender dysphorias|journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior|volume=18|issue=4|pages=315–334|doi=10.1007/BF01541951|pmid=2673136}}</ref><ref name="Blanchard1988">{{cite journal|vauthors=Blanchard R|date=January 1988|title=Nonhomosexual gender dysphoria|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=24|issue=1|pages=188–193|doi=10.1080/00224498809551410|pmid=22375647}}</ref> Blanchard says that the "non-homosexual" transsexuals (but not the "homosexual" transsexuals) exhibit ''autogynephilia'',<ref name="Blanchardetal1987" /> which he defined as a [[paraphilia|paraphilic]] interest in having female anatomy.<ref name="Blanchard1989" /><ref name="Blanchard1991" />
Blanchard said that one type of gender dysphoria/transsexualism manifests itself in individuals who are exclusively attracted to men (Homosexual transsexuals averaged a [[Kinsey scale]] measurement of 5–6 and six is the maximum, or a 9.86±2.37 on the [[Modified Androphilia Scale]]<ref name="lawrence2005">{{cite journal|vauthors=Lawrence AA, Latty EM, Chivers ML, Bailey JM|date=April 2005|title=Measurement of sexual arousal in postoperative male-to-female transsexuals using vaginal photoplethysmography| url=http://www.indiana.edu/~sexlab/files/pubs/Lawrenceetal2005.pdf| journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior|volume=34|issue=2|pages=135–145|doi=10.1007/s10508-005-1792-z|pmid=15803248}}</ref><ref name="leavitt1990">{{cite journal|vauthors=Leavitt F, Berger JC|date=October 1990|title=Clinical patterns among male transsexual candidates with erotic interest in males|journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior|volume=19|issue=5|pages=491–505|doi=10.1007/BF02442350|pmid=2260914}}</ref>), whom he referred to as ''homosexual transsexuals'', adopting Freund's terminology.<ref name="Blanchardetal1987" /> The other type he defined as including those who are attracted to females (gynephilic), attracted to both males and females (bisexual), and attracted to neither males nor females (''analloerotic'' or asexual); Blanchard referred to this latter set collectively as the ''non-homosexual transsexuals''.<ref name="Blanchard1989class">{{cite journal|vauthors=Blanchard R|date=August 1989|title=The classification and labeling of nonhomosexual gender dysphorias|journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior|volume=18|issue=4|pages=315–334|doi=10.1007/BF01541951|pmid=2673136}}</ref><ref name="Blanchard1988">{{cite journal|vauthors=Blanchard R|date=January 1988|title=Nonhomosexual gender dysphoria|journal=Journal of Sex Research|volume=24|issue=1|pages=188–193|doi=10.1080/00224498809551410|pmid=22375647}}</ref> Blanchard says that the "non-homosexual" transsexuals (but not the "homosexual" transsexuals) exhibit ''autogynephilia'',<ref name="Blanchardetal1987" /> which he defined as a [[paraphilic]] interest in having female anatomy.<ref name="Blanchard1989" /><ref name="Blanchard1991" />


The homosexual type corresponds to what is known as early-onset in other sources, while the autogynephilic type corresponds to what is known as late-onset in other sources. Homosexual transsexuals are proposed to be motivated by being very feminine in both behavior and appearance, and by a desire to romantically and sexually attract (ideally very masculine) men. Autogynephilic transsexuals are thought to be motivated by their sexual desire and romantic love for being women.<ref name="LawrenceBecoming" />
The homosexual type corresponds to what is known as early-onset in other sources, while the autogynephilic type corresponds to what is known as late-onset in other sources. Homosexual transsexuals are proposed to be motivated by being very feminine in both behavior and appearance, and by a desire to romantically and sexually attract (ideally very masculine) men. Autogynephilic transsexuals are thought to be motivated by their sexual desire and romantic love for being women.<ref name="LawrenceBecoming" />


Autogynephilic transsexuals are attracted to femininity while homosexual transsexuals are attracted to masculinity. However, a number of other differences between the types have been found. Bailey states that homosexual transsexuals begin transitioning earlier in life,<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|162}} generally before turning 30, which accounts for their supposedly better adjustment. They are also more likely to come from poorer, non-white, or socially marginalized backgrounds,<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|183–184}} and, by definition, are exclusively attracted to men. Autogynephilic transsexuals are either attracted to women, exclusively or not, or [[asexuality|asexual]].<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|162}} Bailey also argues that autogynephilia tends to appear along with other [[paraphilia]]s.<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|171-172}}
Autogynephilic transsexuals are attracted to femininity while homosexual transsexuals are attracted to masculinity. However, a number of other differences between the types have been found. Bailey states that homosexual transsexuals begin transitioning earlier in life,<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|162}} generally before turning 30, which accounts for their supposedly better adjustment. They are also more likely to come from poorer, non-white, or socially marginalized backgrounds,<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|183–184}} and, by definition, are exclusively attracted to men. Autogynephilic transsexuals are either attracted to women, exclusively or not, or [[asexuality|asexual]].<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|162}} Bailey also argues that autogynephilia tends to appear along with other paraphilias.<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|171-172}}


Anne Lawrence has proposed that autogynephilic transsexuals are more excited about [[Sex reassignment surgery|sexual reassignment surgery]] than homosexual transsexuals. She finds that homosexual transsexuals are typically ambivalent or indifferent about SRS, while autogynephilic transsexuals want to have surgery as quickly as possible, are happy to be rid of their penis, and proud of their new genitals.<ref name="LawrenceBecoming" /> Michael Bailey argued that homosexual transsexuals are unlikely to transition if their appearance as women would be very unattractive.<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|181}}
Sexologist [[Anne Lawrence]], a proponent of the concept,<ref name="Davy">{{cite journal |last=Davy |first=Zowie |title=The DSM-5 and the Politics of Diagnosing Transpeople |journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior |date=9 June 2015 |volume=44 |issue=5 |pages=1165–1176 |doi=10.1007/s10508-015-0573-6}}</ref> has proposed that autogynephilic transsexuals are more excited about sexual reassignment surgery than homosexual transsexuals. She finds that homosexual transsexuals are typically ambivalent or indifferent about SRS, while autogynephilic transsexuals want to have surgery as quickly as possible, are happy to be rid of their penis, and proud of their new genitals.<ref name="LawrenceBecoming" /> Michael Bailey argued that homosexual transsexuals are unlikely to transition if their appearance as women would be very unattractive.<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|181}}


According to Bailey and Lawrence, transsexuals who are active on the internet are overwhelmingly autogynephilic;<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Lawrence AA, Bailey JM | title = Transsexual groups in Veale et al. (2008) are "autogynephilic" and "even more autogynephilic" | journal = Archives of Sexual Behavior | volume = 38 | issue = 2 | pages = 173–175; author reply 176-7 | date = April 2009 | pmid = 18989768 | doi = 10.1007/s10508-008-9431-0 }}</ref> the two kinds of transsexuals rarely interact with each other or appear in the same spaces.<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|146}}
According to Bailey and Lawrence, transsexuals who are active on the internet are overwhelmingly autogynephilic;<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Lawrence AA, Bailey JM | title = Transsexual groups in Veale et al. (2008) are "autogynephilic" and "even more autogynephilic" | journal = Archives of Sexual Behavior | volume = 38 | issue = 2 | pages = 173–175; author reply 176-7 | date = April 2009 | pmid = 18989768 | doi = 10.1007/s10508-008-9431-0 }}</ref> the two kinds of transsexuals rarely interact with each other or appear in the same spaces.<ref name="Bailey03" /> {{rp|146}}
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==Autogynephilia<!--'Autogynephilia' and 'Autogynephilic' redirect here-->==
==Autogynephilia<!--'Autogynephilia' and 'Autogynephilic' redirect here-->==
'''Autogynephilia''' is the term Blanchard coined to refer to "a man's paraphilic tendency to be [[Sexual arousal|sexually aroused]] by the thought or image of himself as a woman,"<ref name="Blanchard1989" /> superseding prior terms, such as automonosexual, eonism, sexo-aesthetic inversion, and false transsexualism. Blanchard indicated he intended the term to refer to the full range of erotically arousing cross-gender behaviors and fantasies and that he intended the term to subsume transvestism, including sexual ideas in which feminine clothing plays only a small or no role at all.<ref name="Blanchard1991">Blanchard, R. (1991). Clinical observations and systematic studies of autogynephilia. ''Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy, 17,'' 235–251.</ref> He attributed the original recognition that some cross-dressing men were sexually aroused by the image of themselves as female to [[Magnus Hirschfeld]], who described automonosexuals as, "They feel attracted not by the women outside them, but by the woman inside them."<ref name="Hirschfeld1948">Hirschfeld, M. (1948). ''Sexual anomalies.'' New York: Emerson.</ref><ref name="Blanchard1989" />
'''Autogynephilia''' is the term Blanchard coined{{r|Bancroft 2009}}<ref name="Sanchez & Vilain">{{cite book |last1=Sánchez |first1=Francisco J. |last2=Vilain |first2=Eric |editor1-last=Patterson |editor1-first=Charlotte J. |editor2-last=D'Augelli |editor2-first=Anthony R. |title=Handbook of Psychology and Sexual Orientation |date=2013 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-1997-6521-8 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Handbook_of_Psychology_and_Sexual_Orient.html?id=bvy9NaEwPnwC&q=autogynephilia |chapter=Transgender Identities: Research and Controversies}}</ref>{{rp|47}} to express the view that the many late-transitioning trans women were driven to transition not by [[gender dysphoria]], but an extreme paraphilia characterized by an erotic interest in oneself as a woman.{{r|Sanchez & Vilain}}{{rp|47}} The term replaced earlier ones such as ''automonosexual'', ''eonism'', ''sexo-aesthetic inversion'', and ''false transsexualism''. Blanchard describes autogynephilia as "a man's paraphilic tendency to be [[Sexual arousal|sexually aroused]] by the thought or image of himself as a woman",<ref name="Blanchard1989" /> intending for the term to refer to the full range of erotically arousing cross-gender behaviors and fantasies and that he intended the term to subsume transvestism, including sexual ideas in which feminine clothing plays only a small or no role at all.<ref name="Blanchard1991">Blanchard, R. (1991). Clinical observations and systematic studies of autogynephilia. ''Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy, 17,'' 235–251.</ref> Blanchard attributed the notion of some cross-dressing men being sexually aroused by the image of themselves as female to [[Magnus Hirschfeld]], who stated, "They [automonosexuals] feel attracted not by the women outside them, but by the woman inside them."<ref name="Hirschfeld1948">Hirschfeld, M. (1948). ''Sexual anomalies.'' New York: Emerson.</ref><ref name="Blanchard1989" />


Follow-up research has not found an empirical basis for autogynephilia as a sexual identity.<ref name="Goldberg">{{cite book |editor1-last=Goldberg |editor1-first=Abbie E. |title=The SAGE Encyclopedia of LGBTQ Studies |date=2016 |isbn=978-1-48-337132-0 |pages=1249–1250 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4ss2DAAAQBAJ&q=%22autogynephilia+was+proposed%22 |ref=harv}}</ref> Blanchard's findings have been questioned as not having been [[Reproducibility|replicated]] by other researchers and as failing to [[Treatment and control groups|control for]] the same traits occurring in [[cisgender]] women.{{r|Karasic|serano}} Thomas E. Bevan writes that the concept is insufficiently [[operationalizable]] and therefore fails as a scientific theory or hypothesis.<ref name="Bevan">{{cite book |last1=Bevan |first1=Thomas E. |title=The Psychobiology of Transsexualism and Transgenderism: A New View Based on Scientific Evidence |date=2015 |publisher=Praeger |location=Santa Barbara, Calif. |isbn=978-1-4408-3126-3 |page=193 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gvk7BQAAQBAJ&q=autogynephilia |ref=harv}}</ref>
The concept of autogynephilia received little public interest until the publication of sexologist J. Michael Bailey's ''[[The Man Who Would Be Queen]]'' in 2003, which was followed by peer-reviewed articles critiquing the methodology used by Blanchard.{{r|Sanchez & Vilain}}{{rp|48}} Follow-up research has not found an empirical basis for autogynephilia as a sexual identity.{{r|Pfeffer}}{{rp|1249}} Blanchard's findings have been questioned as not having been [[Reproducibility|replicated]] by other researchers and as failing to [[Treatment and control groups|control for]] the same traits occurring in [[cisgender]] women.{{r|Karasic|serano}} Thomas E. Bevan writes that the concept is insufficiently [[operationalizable]] and therefore fails as a scientific theory or hypothesis.<ref name="Bevan">{{cite book |last1=Bevan |first1=Thomas E. |title=The Psychobiology of Transsexualism and Transgenderism: A New View Based on Scientific Evidence |date=2015 |publisher=Praeger |location=Santa Barbara, Calif. |isbn=978-1-4408-3126-3 |page=193 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gvk7BQAAQBAJ&q=autogynephilia |ref=harv}}</ref>

The concept has been criticized for assuming that only trans women experience sexual desire mediated by their own gender identity.{{r|Pfeffer}}{{rp|1249-50}} [[Julia Serano]] states that autogynephilia is not limited to trans women, being similar to sexual arousal in cisgender women.{{r|Davy}}


===Development===
===Development===
Blanchard was able to identify autogynephilia by developing a formal scale to measure it. His database included patients' responses to questionnaire items that all clinic patients submitted. These included questions such as ''Have you ever become aroused while picturing yourself having a ''nude'' female body or with certain features of the nude female form?'' and ''Have you ever become sexually aroused while picturing yourself as a fully dressed woman being admired by another person?'' Using a statistical technique called [[factor analysis]], Blanchard showed that such questions aligned according to three factors, which he labelled the Core Autogynephilia Scale, the Autogynephilic Interpersonal Fantasy Scale, and an Alloeroticism Scale. The Core Autogynephilia Scale confirmed the hypothesis that each of the heterosexual, bisexual, and analloerotic transsexuals experienced autogynephilia, whereas the homosexual transsexual group did not.<ref name="Blanchard1989" />{{Primary source inline|date=October 2019}}
Blanchard was able to identify autogynephilia by developing a formal scale to measure it. His database included patients' responses to questionnaire items that all clinic patients submitted. These included questions such as ''Have you ever become aroused while picturing yourself having a ''nude'' female body or with certain features of the nude female form?'' and ''Have you ever become sexually aroused while picturing yourself as a fully dressed woman being admired by another person?'' Using a statistical technique called [[factor analysis]], Blanchard showed that such questions aligned according to three factors, which he labelled the Core Autogynephilia Scale, the Autogynephilic Interpersonal Fantasy Scale, and an Alloeroticism Scale. The Core Autogynephilia Scale confirmed the hypothesis that each of the heterosexual, bisexual, and analloerotic transsexuals experienced autogynephilia, whereas the homosexual transsexual group did not.<ref name="Blanchard1989" />{{Primary source inline|date=October 2019}}

Following controversy over the portrayal of transgender women in ''The Man Who Would Be Queen'', Blanchard stated that the truth or falsity of the autogynephilia concept still required further research to resolve.{{r|Bancroft 2009|Moser 2010}}


===Description===
===Description===
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==Criticism==
==Criticism==
===General===
===General===
The concept received attention when sex researcher and trans woman [[Anne Lawrence]] described it on her website in the late 1990s.<ref name="lawrence1998">{{cite web | last = Lawrence | first = AA | url = http://home.swipnet.se/~w-13968/autogynephilia.html | title = Men Trapped in Men's Bodies:An Introduction to the Concept of Autogynephilia | date = 1998-10-01 | access-date = 2012-02-10 }}</ref> In 2003, when Bailey published ''The Man Who Would Be Queen'', in which he based his portrayal of male-to-female transsexual people on Blanchard's taxonomy, an enormous controversy resulted.<ref name="Dreger2008" />
The concept received attention when sex researcher and trans woman [[Anne Lawrence]] described it on her website in the late 1990s.<ref name="lawrence1998">{{cite web | last = Lawrence | first = AA | url = http://home.swipnet.se/~w-13968/autogynephilia.html | title = Men Trapped in Men's Bodies:An Introduction to the Concept of Autogynephilia | date = 1998-10-01 | access-date = 2012-02-10 }}</ref>{{Primary source inline|date=November 2019}} J. Michael Bailey's 2003 book ''The Man Who Would Be Queen'', which based its portrayal of male-to-female transsexual people on Blanchard's taxonomy, attracted intense criticism.{{r|Bancroft 2009|Sanchez & Vilain}}{{rp|48}}<ref name="Dreger2008" /> Bailey argued that both "homosexual transsexuals" and "autogynephilic transsexuals" were driven to transition mainly for sexual gratification, as opposed to gender-identity reasons.{{r|Bancroft 2009}} Transgender activists and scholars have disputed the taxonomy used by Blanchard and Bailey, arguing that the theory unduly sexualizes trans women's gender identity.<ref name="Sojka">{{cite book |last=Sojka |first=Carey Jean |editor-last=Nadal |editor-first=Kevin L. |title=The SAGE Encyclopedia of Psychology and Gender |date=2017 |publisher=SAGE Publications |isbn=978-1-48-338428-3 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books/about/The_SAGE_Encyclopedia_of_Psychology_and.html?id=TX5ZDwAAQBAJ&q=%22blanchard%27s+taxonomy%22 |doi=10.4135/9781483384269.n588 |chapter=Transmisogyny}}</ref>{{rp|1729}}


Jaimie Veale gathered a convenience sample over the Internet of trans women's impressions of and opinions on Blanchard's typology.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Veale J, Clark DE, Lomax TC |date=2012|title=Male-to-female transsexuals’ impressions of Blanchard’s autogynephilia theory | journal = International Journal of Transgenderism |volume=13|issue=3|pages=131–139|doi=10.1080/15532739.2011.669659 }}</ref> Of the 170 people answering the survey, 47.5% said they experienced autogynephilia, 33% said the typology was too narrow and restrictive, 15% said it did not apply to their experiences, and 5% said that the typology was driven by questionable motives such as "to encourage 'elitist divisionism'." Jaimie Veale, a psychology academic, published an alternative typology in 2010 which proposes that variances in gender identity are driven by personality and social factors which determine whether psychological [[defense mechanism]]s are employed to avoid or repress gender nonconformity, resulting in the later expression of this gender nonconformity.<ref name="veale2010">{{Cite journal | vauthors = Veale JF, Lomax T, Clarke D | doi = 10.1080/15532739.2010.514217 | title = Identity-Defense Model of Gender-Variant Development | journal = International Journal of Transgenderism | volume = 12 | issue = 3 | pages = 125–138 | year = 2010 | pmid = | pmc = }}</ref>
Jaimie Veale and colleagues gathered a convenience sample over the Internet of trans women's impressions of and opinions on Blanchard's typology. Of the 170 people answering the survey, 47.5% said they experienced autogynephilia, 33% said the typology was too narrow and restrictive, 15% said it did not apply to their experiences, and 5% said that the typology was driven by questionable motives such as "to encourage 'elitist divisionism'".<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Veale J, Clark DE, Lomax TC |date=2012 |title=Male-to-female transsexuals’ impressions of Blanchard’s autogynephilia theory | journal=International Journal of Transgenderism |volume=13 |issue=3 |pages=131–139 |doi=10.1080/15532739.2011.669659}}</ref> Veale published an alternative typology in 2010 which proposes that variances in gender identity are driven by personality and social factors which determine whether psychological [[defense mechanism]]s are employed to avoid or repress gender nonconformity, resulting in the later expression of this gender nonconformity.<ref name="veale2010">{{Cite journal | vauthors = Veale JF, Lomax T, Clarke D | doi = 10.1080/15532739.2010.514217 | title = Identity-Defense Model of Gender-Variant Development | journal = International Journal of Transgenderism | volume = 12 | issue = 3 | pages = 125–138 | year = 2010 | pmid = | pmc = }}</ref>


Criticism of the typology of "homosexual transsexuals" is generally focused in two categories: the use of the terms "homosexual" and "non-homosexual" to refer to transsexuals by their assigned sex<ref name="bagemihl">{{cite book | last = Bagemihl | first = B | chapter = Surrogate phonology and transsexual faggotry: A linguistic analogy for uncoupling sexual orientation from gender identity | title = Queerly Phrased: Language, Gender, and Sexuality | editors = Livia A; Hall K : | page = 380 | publisher = [[Oxford University Press]] | isbn = 0-19-510471-4 }}</ref><ref name="benjamin1966"/>{{rp|Chapter 2, Paragraph 16}} and the data underlying the typology itself.<ref name="pmid19591032">{{cite journal | vauthors = Moser C | title = Autogynephilia in women | journal = Journal of Homosexuality | volume = 56 | issue = 5 | pages = 539–547 | year = 2009 | pmid = 19591032 | doi = 10.1080/00918360903005212 }}</ref><ref name="veale2008" /> Harry Benjamin, in his seminal work ''The Transsexual Phenomenon'', opined that the question "is a transsexual homosexual?" had both "yes" and "no" answers depending on whether sexual anatomy or [[gender identity]] was prioritised, and in cases of post-operative male-to-female transsexuals, describing them as "homosexual men" was against "common sense and reason".<ref name="benjamin1966" />
Criticism of the typology of "homosexual transsexuals" is generally focused in two categories: the use of the terms "homosexual" and "non-homosexual" to refer to transsexuals by their assigned sex<ref name="bagemihl">{{cite book | last = Bagemihl | first = B | chapter = Surrogate phonology and transsexual faggotry: A linguistic analogy for uncoupling sexual orientation from gender identity | title = Queerly Phrased: Language, Gender, and Sexuality | editors = Livia A; Hall K : | page = 380 | publisher = [[Oxford University Press]] | isbn = 0-19-510471-4 }}</ref><ref name="benjamin1966"/>{{rp|Chapter 2, Paragraph 16}} and the data underlying the typology itself.<ref name="pmid19591032">{{cite journal | vauthors = Moser C | title = Autogynephilia in women | journal = Journal of Homosexuality | volume = 56 | issue = 5 | pages = 539–547 | year = 2009 | pmid = 19591032 | doi = 10.1080/00918360903005212 }}</ref><ref name="veale2008" /> Harry Benjamin, in his seminal work ''The Transsexual Phenomenon'', opined that the question "is a transsexual homosexual?" had both "yes" and "no" answers depending on whether sexual anatomy or [[gender identity]] was prioritised, and in cases of post-operative male-to-female transsexuals, describing them as "homosexual men" was against "common sense and reason".<ref name="benjamin1966" />


[[Charles Allen Moser]], a trans health specialist and sex researcher, criticized Blanchard's typology, stating that it uses an overly-broad definition of autogynephilia, is not sufficiently relevant to MtF transsexual patients, fails to account for all information on sexual and romantic interests of homosexual and transsexual people, and lacks supporting data.<ref name="moser2010">{{cite journal | vauthors = Moser C | title = Blanchard's Autogynephilia Theory: a critique | journal = Journal of Homosexuality | volume = 57 | issue = 6 | pages = 790–809 | date = July 2010 | pmid = 20582803 | doi = 10.1080/00918369.2010.486241 | edition = 6 }}</ref>
[[Charles Allen Moser]], a trans health specialist and sex researcher, criticized Blanchard's typology, stating that it uses an overly-broad definition of autogynephilia, is not sufficiently relevant to MtF transsexual patients, fails to account for all information on sexual and romantic interests of homosexual and transsexual people, and lacks supporting data.<ref name="Moser 2010">{{cite journal | vauthors = Moser C | title = Blanchard's Autogynephilia Theory: a critique | journal = Journal of Homosexuality | volume = 57 | issue = 6 | pages = 790–809 | date = July 2010 | pmid = 20582803 | doi = 10.1080/00918369.2010.486241 | edition = 6 }}</ref>


The concept of autogynephilia has also been criticized as [[transphobic]].{{r|Goldberg}} Transgender advocates have challenged Blanchard's and Lawrence's claim that surgical [[gender transitioning]] is usually sought for erotic, rather than gender-identity reasons.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Tosh |first1=Jemma |title=Psychology and Gender Dysphoria: Feminist and Transgender Perspectives |date=2016 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-31-774599-0 |page=? |url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Psychology_and_Gender_Dysphoria.html?id=bmOpCwAAQBAJ&q=autogynephilia |language=en}}</ref> [[Julia Serano]], a trans activist and biologist by training, wrote in the ''[[International Journal of Transgenderism]]'' that there were flaws in Blanchard's original papers, including that they were conducted among overlapping populations primarily at the [[Clarke Institute]] in [[Toronto]] without nontranssexual controls, that the subtypes were not empirically derived but instead were "[[begging the question]] that transsexuals fall into subtypes based on their sexual orientation," and that further research had found a non-deterministic correlation between cross-gender arousal and sexual orientation.<ref name="serano">{{Cite journal | last1 = Serano | first1 = J. M. | title = The Case Against Autogynephilia | url = http://www.juliaserano.com/av/Serano-CaseAgainstAutogynephilia.pdf | doi = 10.1080/15532739.2010.514223 | journal = International Journal of Transgenderism | volume = 12 | issue = 3 | pages = 176–187 | year = 2010 | pmid = | pmc = }}</ref> She said that Blanchard did not discuss the idea that cross-gender arousal may be an effect, rather than a cause, of gender dysphoria, and that Blanchard assumed that [[correlation does not imply causation|correlation implied causation]].<ref name="serano" />
The concept of autogynephilia has also been criticized as [[transphobic]].{{r|Pfeffer}}{{rp|1249}} Transgender advocates have challenged Blanchard's and Lawrence's claim that surgical [[gender transitioning]] is usually sought for erotic, rather than gender-identity reasons.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Tosh |first1=Jemma |title=Psychology and Gender Dysphoria: Feminist and Transgender Perspectives |date=2016 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-31-774599-0 |page=? |url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Psychology_and_Gender_Dysphoria.html?id=bmOpCwAAQBAJ&q=autogynephilia}}</ref> [[Julia Serano]], a trans activist and biologist by training, writes in the ''[[International Journal of Transgenderism]]'' that there were flaws in Blanchard's original papers, including that they were conducted among overlapping populations primarily at the [[Clarke Institute]] in [[Toronto]] without nontranssexual controls, that the subtypes were not empirically derived but instead were "[[begging the question]] that transsexuals fall into subtypes based on their sexual orientation," and that further research had found a non-deterministic correlation between cross-gender arousal and sexual orientation.<ref name="serano">{{Cite journal | last1 = Serano | first1 = J. M. | title = The Case Against Autogynephilia | url = http://www.juliaserano.com/av/Serano-CaseAgainstAutogynephilia.pdf | doi = 10.1080/15532739.2010.514223 | journal = International Journal of Transgenderism | volume = 12 | issue = 3 | pages = 176–187 | year = 2010 | pmid = | pmc = }}</ref> She states that Blanchard did not discuss the idea that cross-gender arousal may be an effect, rather than a cause, of gender dysphoria, and that Blanchard assumed that [[correlation does not imply causation|correlation implied causation]].<ref name="serano" />


Serano also stated that the wider idea of cross-gender arousal was affected by the prominence of [[sexual objectification]] of women, accounting for both a relative lack of cross-gender arousal in transsexual men and similar patterns of autogynephilic arousal in non-transsexual women.<ref name="serano" /> She criticised proponents of the typology, claiming that they dismiss non-autogynephilic, non-androphilic transsexuals as misreporting or lying while not questioning androphilic transsexuals, describing it as "tantamount to hand-picking which evidence counts and which does not based upon how well it conforms to the model",<ref name="serano" /> either making the typology unscientific due to its unfalsifiability, or invalid due to the nondeterministic correlation that later studies found.<ref name="serano" /> Further criticisms alleged that the typology undermined lived experience of transsexual women, contributed to pathologisation and sexualisation of transsexual women, and the literature itself fed into the stereotype of transsexuals as "purposefully deceptive", which could be used to justify discrimination and violence against transsexuals.<ref name="serano" /> According to Serano, studies have usually found that some non-homosexual transsexuals report having no autogynephilia.<ref name="serano" />
Serano also stated that the wider idea of cross-gender arousal was affected by the prominence of [[sexual objectification]] of women, accounting for both a relative lack of cross-gender arousal in transsexual men and similar patterns of autogynephilic arousal in non-transsexual women.<ref name="serano" /> She criticised proponents of the typology, claiming that they dismiss non-autogynephilic, non-androphilic transsexuals as misreporting or lying while not questioning androphilic transsexuals, describing it as "tantamount to hand-picking which evidence counts and which does not based upon how well it conforms to the model",<ref name="serano" /> either making the typology unscientific due to its unfalsifiability, or invalid due to the nondeterministic correlation that later studies found.<ref name="serano" /> Further criticisms alleged that the typology undermined lived experience of transsexual women, contributed to pathologisation and sexualisation of transsexual women, and the literature itself fed into the stereotype of transsexuals as "purposefully deceptive", which could be used to justify discrimination and violence against transsexuals.<ref name="serano" /> According to Serano, studies have usually found that some non-homosexual transsexuals report having no autogynephilia.<ref name="serano" />


When developing the typology, Blanchard found that gynephilic gender identity patients who reported never experiencing arousal to crossdressing were still measurably aroused by autogynephilic stimuli, and that autogynephilia among non-androphilic trans women was negatively associated with tendency to color their narrative to be more socially acceptable.<ref name=":0" /> {{rp|12–13}} This led Blanchard to conclude that non-homosexual trans women who reported no autogynephilic interests were misrepresenting their stories. This conclusion has been criticized for being [[Falsifiability|unfalsifiable]]<ref name="serano" /> and for being based on an incorrect way of measuring autogynephilia.<ref name="moser2010" />
When developing the typology, Blanchard found that gynephilic gender identity patients who reported never experiencing arousal to crossdressing were still measurably aroused by autogynephilic stimuli, and that autogynephilia among non-androphilic trans women was negatively associated with tendency to color their narrative to be more socially acceptable.<ref name=":0" /> {{rp|12–13}} This led Blanchard to conclude that non-homosexual trans women who reported no autogynephilic interests were misrepresenting their stories. This conclusion has been criticized for being [[Falsifiability|unfalsifiable]]<ref name="serano" /> and for being based on an incorrect way of measuring autogynephilia.<ref name="Moser 2010" />


T. M. Bettcher, based on her own experience as a trans woman, has critiqued the notion of "autogynephilia," and "target errors" generally, within a framework of "erotic structuralism," arguing that the notion conflates essential distinctions between "source of attraction" and "erotic content," and "(erotic) interest" and "(erotic) attraction," thus misinterpreting what she prefers to call, following Serano, "female embodiment eroticism." She maintains that not only is "an erotic interest in oneself as a gendered being," as she puts it, a non-pathological and indeed necessary component of regular sexual attraction to others, but within the framework of erotic structuralism, a "misdirected" attraction to oneself as postulated by Blanchard is outright nonsensical.<ref name="Bettcher2014">{{cite journal | vauthors = Bettcher TM | title = When selves have sex: what the phenomenology of trans sexuality can teach about sexual orientation | journal = Journal of Homosexuality | volume = 61 | issue = 5 | pages = 605–620 | date = 2014 | pmid = 24295078 | doi = 10.1080/00918369.2014.865472 | url = https://www.academia.edu/5300966/When_Selves_Have_Sex_What_The_Phenomenology_of_Trans_Sexuality_Can_Teach_About_Sexual_Orientation }}</ref>
T. M. Bettcher, based on her own experience as a trans woman, has critiqued the notion of "autogynephilia," and "target errors" generally, within a framework of "erotic structuralism," arguing that the notion conflates essential distinctions between "source of attraction" and "erotic content," and "(erotic) interest" and "(erotic) attraction," thus misinterpreting what she prefers to call, following Serano, "female embodiment eroticism." She maintains that not only is "an erotic interest in oneself as a gendered being," as she puts it, a non-pathological and indeed necessary component of regular sexual attraction to others, but within the framework of erotic structuralism, a "misdirected" attraction to oneself as postulated by Blanchard is outright nonsensical.<ref name="Bettcher2014">{{cite journal | vauthors = Bettcher TM | title = When selves have sex: what the phenomenology of trans sexuality can teach about sexual orientation | journal = Journal of Homosexuality | volume = 61 | issue = 5 | pages = 605–620 | date = 2014 | pmid = 24295078 | doi = 10.1080/00918369.2014.865472 | url = https://www.academia.edu/5300966/When_Selves_Have_Sex_What_The_Phenomenology_of_Trans_Sexuality_Can_Teach_About_Sexual_Orientation }}</ref>

Revision as of 09:44, 11 November 2019

Blanchard's transsexualism typology is a contested[1][2]: 1247  psychological typology of gender dysphoria, transsexualism, and fetishistic transvestism, created by Ray Blanchard through the 1980s and 1990s, building on the work of prior researchers, including his colleague, Kurt Freund. Blanchard categorized trans women into two groups: "homosexual transsexuals" who are attracted exclusively to men, and who seek sex reassignment surgery because they are feminine in both behavior and appearance; and "autogynephilic transsexuals" who are sexually aroused at the idea of having a female body.[3] Blanchard's typology broke from earlier ones in that neither of the groups were considered "false transsexuals"; both autogynephilic and homosexual transsexuals were shown to benefit from transition. Before Blanchard, the idea that some types were not transsexual at all was a recurring theme in scholarly literature.[citation needed]

Supporters of the typology include sexologists J. Michael Bailey, Anthony Bogaert, James Cantor, Kurt Freund, Anne Lawrence, bioethicist Alice Dreger, and others who cite evidence showing significant differences between the two groups, including sexuality, age of transition, ethnicity, IQ, fetishism, and quality of adjustment. Criticism of the typology has come from sexologists John Bancroft and Charles Allen Moser, psychologist Margaret Nichols,[4] academics Larry Nuttbrock, Julia Serano, and Jaimie Veale, and others who argue that it is poorly representative of transgender people and non-instructive,[clarification needed] and that the experiments behind it are poorly controlled or contradicted by other data. Blanchard's choice of wording has also been criticized as confusing or degrading, including by some supporters of the theory.[who?][5]

In the transgender community, the typology has been the subject of controversy, which drew public attention with the publication of Bailey's The Man Who Would Be Queen in 2003.

Terminology

Blanchard's terminology employed the historical usage in scientific research on transsexuality, which was expressed relative to sex assigned at birth. That is, "homosexual" is used to refer to trans women who are attracted exclusively to men, while "non-homosexual" refers to trans women who are attracted to other people than men or who are attracted to neither men nor women.

Historical background

Observations suggesting that there exist multiple types of transsexualism date back to the beginning of the 20th century. Havelock Ellis used the terms eonism and sexo-aesthetic inversion in 1913 to describe cross-gender feelings and behaviors,[6] and Magnus Hirschfeld observed multiple types of such individuals.[7] Hirschfeld divided cases into five types: homosexual, bisexual, heterosexual, asexual, and "automonosexual."[8] The term automonosexualism was coined by Rohleder in 1901 to refer to when an individual is excited by his own body,[9] and Hirshfeld used it to describe excitement in natal males to the thought or image of themselves as women.[10]

Researchers used varying subsets of that typology for several decades. Hamburger used all five of Hirschfelds types.[11] Randall classified transsexual cases into homosexual, heterosexual, or bisexual.[12] Walinder used homosexual, heterosexual, and asexual.[13] Bentler also divided postoperative transsexuals into homosexual, heterosexual, and asexual,[14] although the asexual group might be better described as analloerotic, due to their reporting high rates of masturbation.[15]

In 1966, Harry Benjamin wrote that researchers of his day thought that attraction to men, while feeling that oneself is a woman, was the factor that distinguished a transvestite from a transsexual.[16]

Other researchers proposed still other typologies. Buhrich and McConaghy (1978) described only two types of transsexuality: "fetishistic transsexuals," who experienced erotic arousal during cross-dressing and heterosexual arousal, and "nuclear transsexuals" who did not.[17] Alternative terms for the fetishistic type have included eonism and sexo-aesthetic inversion.[18]

The prevailing view prior to Blanchard's theory focused on two proposed types of transgender women, respectively labeled "homosexual transexuals" if sexually attracted to men, and "heterosexual fetishistic transvestites" if sexually attracted to women.[3][2]: 1249  Kurt Freund argued there were two etiologically distinct types of male-to-female transsexuals: one type unassociated with fetishism and found among androphilic trans women, and another associated with fetishistic crossdressing and found among gynephilic trans women.[19][20] Freund noted that the sexual arousal could be associated, not only with crossdressing, but also with other feminine-typical behaviors, such as applying make-up or shaving the legs.[10] Blanchard applied the term autogynephilia to the latter type, hypothesizing that these trans women were expressing a sexual attraction to the idea of themselves as women.[3][2]: 1249  He credited Freund with being first author to distinguish between the erotic arousal due to dressing as a woman (transvestic fetishism) and erotic arousal due to physically transforming into a more typically female form.[6]

When Blanchard began his studies, all researchers of the topic had "identified a homosexual type of gender identity disturbance [which] occurs in homosexuals of both sexes. There is general agreement, moreover, on the clinical description of this syndrome as it appears in males and females".[15] : 316  Researchers at the time concurred "that gender identity disturbance also occurs in males who are not homosexual but only rarely, if at all, in nonhomosexual females" and that "there is no consensus, however, on the classification of nonhomosexual gender identity disorders. Authorities disagree on the number of different syndromes, the clinical characteristics of the various types, and the labels used to identify them"[15]: 316 

Research

Blanchard conducted a series of studies on people with gender dysphoria, analyzed the files of cases seen in the Gender Identity Clinic of the Clarke Institute of Psychiatry and comparing them on multiple characteristics.[10][21][22]

Blanchard set out initially to extend Freund's hypothesis of there being only two types, testing whether asexual and bisexual transsexualism were actually subtypes of heterosexual transsexualism.[10] Blanchard applied a statistical technique called cluster analysis to sort cases into groups four groups—homosexual, heterosexual, bisexual, and asexual or analloerotic (not attracted to others at all)—according to their self-ratings of how attracted they were to males and to females.[10][21] Blanchard then compared these four groups with regard to their responses to the question, "Did you ever feel sexually aroused when putting on females' underwear or clothing?" The great majority of each of the heterosexual, asexual, and bisexual groups said they did experience such feelings, but only few people in the homosexual group did.[10]

Blanchard analyzed sex ratios and respective sex preferences. The results confirmed prior reports of there being larger numbers of male-to-female than female-to-male transsexuals. The results showed also that female-to-male transsexuals were almost exclusively attracted to females, whereas male-to-female transsexuals report a variety of sexual preferences, including attractions to men, women, and erotic cross-dressing.[22] Other findings included that heterosexual MtF's were significantly older than either of the two homosexual groups (i.e., male-to-female's attracted to males and female-to-male's attracted to females). The heterosexual male-to-females said they felt their first cross-gender wishes around the time they first cross-dressed, whereas both the homosexual groups said their cross-gender wishes preceded cross-dressing (3–4 years on average). Where fetishistic arousal was acknowledged by over 80% of the heterosexual male-to-females, fewer than 10% of either homosexual group did. Blanchard therefore proposed that the larger numbers of trans women is not because males are more susceptible to gender dysphoria itself, but because natal males are more susceptible to fetishistic transvestism, which can, in turn lead to gender dysphoria.[22]

The age at which trans women referred themselves to explore sex reassignment and their self-ratings of childhood femininity were also studied. Computer classification divided cases into heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, and asexual/analloerotic, according to cases' ratings of themselves. The homosexual group was significantly younger (mean age of 23.6 years) than the groups of heterosexual (mean of 39.1), bisexual (32.3), or asexual (35.3) transsexuals. The people in the homosexual group also rated themselves as significantly more feminine during their childhoods than the other groups, which did not differ from each other.[23]

On the basis of the different features they exhibited, Blanchard concluded that the various gender transpositions—male and female homosexuality, heterosexuality, transvestic fetishism, and gender dysphoria—are individual manifestations of two phenomena. The first one operates both in trans women and trans men, and represents a continuum from cis-heterosexual to cis-homosexual and at the extreme, gender dysphoric with (non-erotic) cross-dressing. The second one operates only or nearly only in trans women and represents a continuum from cis-heterosexual to transvestic fetishism (cis- but experiencing eroticism with cross-dressing), to gender dysphoria (with at least some history of eroticism while cross-dressing).[24] [page needed] The eroticism experienced with cross-dressing and cross-gender images of oneself Blanchard called "autogynephilia", which has replaced the several prior terms.

Homosexual vs. autogynephilic transsexuals

Blanchard said that one type of gender dysphoria/transsexualism manifests itself in individuals who are exclusively attracted to men (Homosexual transsexuals averaged a Kinsey scale measurement of 5–6 and six is the maximum, or a 9.86±2.37 on the Modified Androphilia Scale[25][26]), whom he referred to as homosexual transsexuals, adopting Freund's terminology.[22] The other type he defined as including those who are attracted to females (gynephilic), attracted to both males and females (bisexual), and attracted to neither males nor females (analloerotic or asexual); Blanchard referred to this latter set collectively as the non-homosexual transsexuals.[27][23] Blanchard says that the "non-homosexual" transsexuals (but not the "homosexual" transsexuals) exhibit autogynephilia,[22] which he defined as a paraphilic interest in having female anatomy.[21][28]

The homosexual type corresponds to what is known as early-onset in other sources, while the autogynephilic type corresponds to what is known as late-onset in other sources. Homosexual transsexuals are proposed to be motivated by being very feminine in both behavior and appearance, and by a desire to romantically and sexually attract (ideally very masculine) men. Autogynephilic transsexuals are thought to be motivated by their sexual desire and romantic love for being women.[29]

Autogynephilic transsexuals are attracted to femininity while homosexual transsexuals are attracted to masculinity. However, a number of other differences between the types have been found. Bailey states that homosexual transsexuals begin transitioning earlier in life,[24] : 162  generally before turning 30, which accounts for their supposedly better adjustment. They are also more likely to come from poorer, non-white, or socially marginalized backgrounds,[24] : 183–184  and, by definition, are exclusively attracted to men. Autogynephilic transsexuals are either attracted to women, exclusively or not, or asexual.[24] : 162  Bailey also argues that autogynephilia tends to appear along with other paraphilias.[24] : 171–172 

Sexologist Anne Lawrence, a proponent of the concept,[1] has proposed that autogynephilic transsexuals are more excited about sexual reassignment surgery than homosexual transsexuals. She finds that homosexual transsexuals are typically ambivalent or indifferent about SRS, while autogynephilic transsexuals want to have surgery as quickly as possible, are happy to be rid of their penis, and proud of their new genitals.[29] Michael Bailey argued that homosexual transsexuals are unlikely to transition if their appearance as women would be very unattractive.[24] : 181 

According to Bailey and Lawrence, transsexuals who are active on the internet are overwhelmingly autogynephilic;[30] the two kinds of transsexuals rarely interact with each other or appear in the same spaces.[24] : 146 

According to Blanchard, most homosexual transsexuals describe themselves as having been very feminine from a young age.[23] Bailey and Zucker write that non-transgender gay men are also often very feminine when young, but usually learn to live in a more masculine role when they grow up. They argue that homosexual transsexuals differ because they encounter early adversity that prevented them from defeminizing.[24] : 178–179  Gay men find the femininity of homosexual transsexuals very unattractive,[24] : 76–79  and the homosexual transsexuals themselves are very attracted to masculinity that they have trouble finding in gay men. As a result, homosexual transsexuals may be partially motivated by a desire to attract straight men.

Autogynephilia

Autogynephilia is the term Blanchard coined[3][31]: 47  to express the view that the many late-transitioning trans women were driven to transition not by gender dysphoria, but an extreme paraphilia characterized by an erotic interest in oneself as a woman.[31]: 47  The term replaced earlier ones such as automonosexual, eonism, sexo-aesthetic inversion, and false transsexualism. Blanchard describes autogynephilia as "a man's paraphilic tendency to be sexually aroused by the thought or image of himself as a woman",[21] intending for the term to refer to the full range of erotically arousing cross-gender behaviors and fantasies and that he intended the term to subsume transvestism, including sexual ideas in which feminine clothing plays only a small or no role at all.[28] Blanchard attributed the notion of some cross-dressing men being sexually aroused by the image of themselves as female to Magnus Hirschfeld, who stated, "They [automonosexuals] feel attracted not by the women outside them, but by the woman inside them."[8][21]

The concept of autogynephilia received little public interest until the publication of sexologist J. Michael Bailey's The Man Who Would Be Queen in 2003, which was followed by peer-reviewed articles critiquing the methodology used by Blanchard.[31]: 48  Follow-up research has not found an empirical basis for autogynephilia as a sexual identity.[2]: 1249  Blanchard's findings have been questioned as not having been replicated by other researchers and as failing to control for the same traits occurring in cisgender women.[32][5] Thomas E. Bevan writes that the concept is insufficiently operationalizable and therefore fails as a scientific theory or hypothesis.[33]

The concept has been criticized for assuming that only trans women experience sexual desire mediated by their own gender identity.[2]: 1249–50  Julia Serano states that autogynephilia is not limited to trans women, being similar to sexual arousal in cisgender women.[1]

Development

Blanchard was able to identify autogynephilia by developing a formal scale to measure it. His database included patients' responses to questionnaire items that all clinic patients submitted. These included questions such as Have you ever become aroused while picturing yourself having a nude female body or with certain features of the nude female form? and Have you ever become sexually aroused while picturing yourself as a fully dressed woman being admired by another person? Using a statistical technique called factor analysis, Blanchard showed that such questions aligned according to three factors, which he labelled the Core Autogynephilia Scale, the Autogynephilic Interpersonal Fantasy Scale, and an Alloeroticism Scale. The Core Autogynephilia Scale confirmed the hypothesis that each of the heterosexual, bisexual, and analloerotic transsexuals experienced autogynephilia, whereas the homosexual transsexual group did not.[21][non-primary source needed]

Following controversy over the portrayal of transgender women in The Man Who Would Be Queen, Blanchard stated that the truth or falsity of the autogynephilia concept still required further research to resolve.[3][34]

Description

Blanchard provides specific case examples to illustrate the autogynephilic sexual fantasies that people reported:[6]

Philip was a 38-year-old professional man referred to the author's clinic for assessment....Philip began masturbating at puberty, which occurred at age 12 or 13. The earliest sexual fantasy he could recall was that of having a woman's body. When he masturbated, he would imagine that he was a nude woman lying alone in her bed. His mental imagery would focus on his breasts, his vagina, the softness of his skin, and so on—all the characteristic features of the female physique. This remained his favorite sexual fantasy throughout his life.

Blanchard identified four types of autogynephilic sexual fantasy, but noted that "All four types of autogynephilia tend to occur in combination with other types rather than alone."[28]

  • Transvestic autogynephilia: arousal to the act or fantasy of wearing typically feminine clothing
  • Behavioral autogynephilia: arousal to the act or fantasy of doing something regarded as feminine
  • Physiologic autogynephilia: arousal to fantasies of body functions specific to people regarded as female
  • Anatomic autogynephilia: arousal to the fantasy of having a normative woman's body, or parts of one

Blanchard found that anatomic autogynephilia was more associated with gender dysphoria than transvestic autogynephilia.[35][36] A different pattern was found in a sample of non-transgender autogynephilic men, where higher degrees of anatomic autogynephilia were associated with less gender dysphoria; here, it was instead interpersonal and physiological autogynephilia that predicted gender dysphoria. The men in this sample were significantly more gender dysphoric than the non-transgender male baseline.[37]

According to Blanchard, "An autogynephile does not necessarily become sexually aroused every time he pictures himself as female or engages in feminine behavior, any more than a heterosexual man automatically gets an erection whenever he sees an attractive woman. Thus, the concept of autogynephilia—like that of heterosexuality, homosexuality, or pedophilia—refers to a potential for sexual excitation"[28] [emphasis in original].

There also exist natal males who report being sexually aroused by the image or idea of having some but not all normative female anatomy, such as having breasts but retaining their penis and testicles; Blanchard referred to this phenomenon as partial autogynephilia.[38][39]

Autogynephilia has also been suggested to pertain to romantic love as well as to sexual arousal patterns.[29] Blanchard himself wrote that although autogynephilia is reflected by penile responses to erotic stimuli, it "also includes the capacity for pair-bond formation".[21] : 616 

Other authors have also distinguished between behavioral autogynephilia and interpersonal autogynephilia, with the latter being arousal to being seen or admired as a woman or to having sex with men.[37]

Autogynephilia is associated with gynandromorphophilia, the sexual interest in people with both male and female anatomy.[36][40] Autogynephilic men are usually attracted to women and not to men.[40] Lawrence proposes that autogynephiles who report being attracted to men are instead experiencing "pseudo-bisexuality" or "pseudo-androphilia," an interpersonal autogynephilic desire for men as part of the fantasy about being a woman.[36]

Erotic target location errors

Blanchard conjectured that sexual interest patterns could have inwardly instead of outwardly directed forms, which he called erotic target location errors (ETLE). Autogynephilia would represent an inwardly directed form of gynephilia, with the attraction to women being redirected towards the self instead of others. These forms of erotic target location errors have also been observed with other base orientations, such as pedophilia, attraction to amputees, and attraction to plush animals.

Anne Lawrence argued that these phenomena provide further support for autogynephilia typology:[36]

I believe that the existence of these analogs of autogynephilic transsexualism calls into question the most influential biological and psychoanalytic theories of nonhomosexual MtF transsexualism, because such theories should also be able to account for these analogous phenomena but cannot easily do so. For example: It is plausible that hormonal abnormalities during prenatal development could result in a male-bodied person with a brain that had developed in a female-typical direction. It is less plausible that a prenatal developmental disturbance could result in a male-bodied person with a brain that had developed like that of an amputee or a plush animal. ...

I consider it more parsimonious to theorize that autogynephilic MtF transsexualism and the analogous conditions that exist in men who are sexually attracted to children, amputees, plush animals, and perhaps real animals, all represent manifestations of an unusual type of paraphilia in which affected men feel sexually aroused by the idea of impersonating or becoming whatever category of person or thing they find sexually attractive. Their paraphilic desires, in turn, often give rise to strongly held, highly valued alternative identities that ultimately become their dominant identities.

Autopedophiles have been found to be more likely than other pedophiles to have considered whether they would be better off as a child, and more likely to have considered hormones or surgery to look more like a child.[41]

Autogynephilia in cisgender women

Two studies have tested the possibility that cisgender women can also experience autogynephilia. Veale and colleagues (2008) found that an online sample of cisgender women commonly endorsed items on adapted versions of Blanchard's autogynephilia scales.[42] Moser (2009) created an Autogynephilia Scale for Women based on items used to categorize MtF transsexuals as autogynephilic in other studies. A questionnaire that included the ASW was distributed to a sample of 51 professional women employed at an urban hospital; 29 completed questionnaires were returned for analysis. By the common definition of ever having erotic arousal to the thought or image of oneself as a woman, 93% of the respondents would be classified as autogynephilic. Using a more rigorous definition of "frequent" arousal to multiple items, 28% would be classified as autogynephilic.[43] However, Anne Lawrence criticized these studies' methodology and conclusions and asserted that genuine autogynephilia occurs very rarely, if ever, in cisgender women as their experiences are "superficially" similar but the erotic responses are ultimately markedly different.[44] Her comment was rebutted by Moser who said that she had made multiple errors by comparing the wrong items.[45]

One case of anatomic autoandrophilia has been reported in an adult male.[46]

DSM

In 1980 in the DSM-III, a new diagnosis was introduced, that of "302.5 Transsexualism" under "Other Psychosexual Disorders". This was an attempt to provide a diagnostic category for gender identity disorders.[47] The diagnostic category, transsexualism, was for gender dysphoric individuals who demonstrated at least two years of continuous interest in transforming their physical and social gender status.[48] The subtypes were asexual, homosexual (same "biological sex"), heterosexual (other "biological sex") and unspecified.[47] This was removed in the DSM-IV, in which gender identity disorder replaced transsexualism. Previous taxonomies, or systems of categorization, used the terms classic transsexual or true transsexual, terms once used in differential diagnoses.[16]

The DSM-IV-TR included autogynephilia as an "associated feature" of gender identity disorder[32] and as a common occurrence in the transvestic fetishism disorder, but does not classify autogynephilia as a disorder by itself.[49] The World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) objected to its inclusion as an unproven theory.[50] The paraphilias working group on DSM 5, which included Ray Blanchard, included autogynephilia and autoandrophilia as subtypes of transvestic disorder, a proposal that was opposed by WPATH, stating the lack of empirical evidence for the typology.[51][52][5]

In DSM-5, published in 2013, With autogynephilia (sexual arousal by thoughts, images of self as a female) is a specifier to 302.3 Transvestic disorder (intense sexual arousal from cross-dressing fantasies, urges or behaviors); the other specifier is With fetishism (sexual arousal to fabrics, materials or garments).[53]

Criticism

General

The concept received attention when sex researcher and trans woman Anne Lawrence described it on her website in the late 1990s.[54][non-primary source needed] J. Michael Bailey's 2003 book The Man Who Would Be Queen, which based its portrayal of male-to-female transsexual people on Blanchard's taxonomy, attracted intense criticism.[3][31]: 48 [55] Bailey argued that both "homosexual transsexuals" and "autogynephilic transsexuals" were driven to transition mainly for sexual gratification, as opposed to gender-identity reasons.[3] Transgender activists and scholars have disputed the taxonomy used by Blanchard and Bailey, arguing that the theory unduly sexualizes trans women's gender identity.[56]: 1729 

Jaimie Veale and colleagues gathered a convenience sample over the Internet of trans women's impressions of and opinions on Blanchard's typology. Of the 170 people answering the survey, 47.5% said they experienced autogynephilia, 33% said the typology was too narrow and restrictive, 15% said it did not apply to their experiences, and 5% said that the typology was driven by questionable motives such as "to encourage 'elitist divisionism'".[57] Veale published an alternative typology in 2010 which proposes that variances in gender identity are driven by personality and social factors which determine whether psychological defense mechanisms are employed to avoid or repress gender nonconformity, resulting in the later expression of this gender nonconformity.[58]

Criticism of the typology of "homosexual transsexuals" is generally focused in two categories: the use of the terms "homosexual" and "non-homosexual" to refer to transsexuals by their assigned sex[59][16]: Chapter 2, Paragraph 16  and the data underlying the typology itself.[43][42] Harry Benjamin, in his seminal work The Transsexual Phenomenon, opined that the question "is a transsexual homosexual?" had both "yes" and "no" answers depending on whether sexual anatomy or gender identity was prioritised, and in cases of post-operative male-to-female transsexuals, describing them as "homosexual men" was against "common sense and reason".[16]

Charles Allen Moser, a trans health specialist and sex researcher, criticized Blanchard's typology, stating that it uses an overly-broad definition of autogynephilia, is not sufficiently relevant to MtF transsexual patients, fails to account for all information on sexual and romantic interests of homosexual and transsexual people, and lacks supporting data.[34]

The concept of autogynephilia has also been criticized as transphobic.[2]: 1249  Transgender advocates have challenged Blanchard's and Lawrence's claim that surgical gender transitioning is usually sought for erotic, rather than gender-identity reasons.[60] Julia Serano, a trans activist and biologist by training, writes in the International Journal of Transgenderism that there were flaws in Blanchard's original papers, including that they were conducted among overlapping populations primarily at the Clarke Institute in Toronto without nontranssexual controls, that the subtypes were not empirically derived but instead were "begging the question that transsexuals fall into subtypes based on their sexual orientation," and that further research had found a non-deterministic correlation between cross-gender arousal and sexual orientation.[5] She states that Blanchard did not discuss the idea that cross-gender arousal may be an effect, rather than a cause, of gender dysphoria, and that Blanchard assumed that correlation implied causation.[5]

Serano also stated that the wider idea of cross-gender arousal was affected by the prominence of sexual objectification of women, accounting for both a relative lack of cross-gender arousal in transsexual men and similar patterns of autogynephilic arousal in non-transsexual women.[5] She criticised proponents of the typology, claiming that they dismiss non-autogynephilic, non-androphilic transsexuals as misreporting or lying while not questioning androphilic transsexuals, describing it as "tantamount to hand-picking which evidence counts and which does not based upon how well it conforms to the model",[5] either making the typology unscientific due to its unfalsifiability, or invalid due to the nondeterministic correlation that later studies found.[5] Further criticisms alleged that the typology undermined lived experience of transsexual women, contributed to pathologisation and sexualisation of transsexual women, and the literature itself fed into the stereotype of transsexuals as "purposefully deceptive", which could be used to justify discrimination and violence against transsexuals.[5] According to Serano, studies have usually found that some non-homosexual transsexuals report having no autogynephilia.[5]

When developing the typology, Blanchard found that gynephilic gender identity patients who reported never experiencing arousal to crossdressing were still measurably aroused by autogynephilic stimuli, and that autogynephilia among non-androphilic trans women was negatively associated with tendency to color their narrative to be more socially acceptable.[36] : 12–13  This led Blanchard to conclude that non-homosexual trans women who reported no autogynephilic interests were misrepresenting their stories. This conclusion has been criticized for being unfalsifiable[5] and for being based on an incorrect way of measuring autogynephilia.[34]

T. M. Bettcher, based on her own experience as a trans woman, has critiqued the notion of "autogynephilia," and "target errors" generally, within a framework of "erotic structuralism," arguing that the notion conflates essential distinctions between "source of attraction" and "erotic content," and "(erotic) interest" and "(erotic) attraction," thus misinterpreting what she prefers to call, following Serano, "female embodiment eroticism." She maintains that not only is "an erotic interest in oneself as a gendered being," as she puts it, a non-pathological and indeed necessary component of regular sexual attraction to others, but within the framework of erotic structuralism, a "misdirected" attraction to oneself as postulated by Blanchard is outright nonsensical.[61]

Misgendering language

The terminology has been described as confusing and controversial among transsexual people seeking sex reassignment surgery,[26] archaic,[62] and demeaning.[63] According to Leavitt and Berger (1990), "Transsexuals, as a group, vehemently oppose the homosexual transsexual label and its pejorative baggage (Morgan, 1978). As a rule, they are highly invested in a heterosexual life-style and are repulsed by notions of homosexual relations with males. Attention from males often serves to validate their feminine status."[26]

Trans man Aaron Devor wrote, "If what we really mean to say is attracted to males, then say 'attracted to males' or androphilic... I see absolutely no reason to continue with language that people find offensive when there is perfectly serviceable, in fact better, language that is not offensive."[64] Still other transsexual people are opposed to any and all models of diagnosis which allow medical professionals to prevent anyone from changing their sex, and seek their removal from the DSM.[65]

In 2008, sexologist John Bancroft expressed regret for having used this terminology, which was standard when he used it, to refer to transsexual women, and that he now tries to use words more sensitively.[66]

J. Michael Bailey argues that this terminology is appropriate because, according to Blanchard's typology, transgender women who are attracted to men are part of the same fundamental phenomenon as the most feminine gay men.[24]: 146 

Accusations of misconduct

Trans activist Lynn Conway blogged extensively about the publication of Bailey's book by the United States National Academy of Sciences and along with other activists accused Bailey of misconduct. Northwestern University investigated Bailey, but did not reveal the findings of that investigation and did not comment on whether or not Bailey had been exonerated.[67] According to a summary of the controversy written by Northwestern University bioethicist and historian Alice Dreger, the accusations were unfounded and comprised an attempt by those activists to silence Bailey for expressing views that contrasted with the public image they wanted. The accusations themselves did not hold up to scrutiny, according to Dreger's analysis. For example, two of the four transsexual women who accused Bailey of misusing their stories in the book were not mentioned in the book by name.[55]

Dreger studied the reactions of trans activists and other controversies in her 2015 book Galileo's Middle Finger.[68] She argued that although the science appears correct that eroticism is behind the typology of transgenderism, activists in the trans community preferred the simpler narrative of literally being one sex trapped in the body of the other. Dreger says, "Autogynephilia is perhaps best understood as a love that would really rather we didn’t speak its name",[68] in reference to the famous expression the love that dare not speak its name formerly used to refer to homosexuality.

See also

References

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