Andrea James
Andrea James | |
---|---|
Born | January 16, 1967 |
Education | Wabash College (BA) University of Chicago (MA) |
Occupation(s) | Producer, writer, activist |
Website | Official website |
Andrea Jean James (born January 16, 1967) is an American transwoman, known for her trans activism, film production, and blogging in the early 2000's.[1][2][3][4]
Education
James grew up in Franklin, Indiana,[5] and attended Wabash College, where she majored in English, Latin, and Greek. After graduating in 1989, she obtained an M.A. in English language and literature from the University of Chicago.[6]
Career
After college, James worked in advertising, first for several years at the Chicago Tribune, then for a decade at DDB Chicago. It was while working there that she transitioned.[5] She became involved in consumer activism, with an interest in medical and academic fraud.[7][8] In 1996 she created Transsexual Road Map, a consumer website for the transgender community,[citation needed] and later set up HairFacts and HairTell, a website and discussion forum about hair removal.[9][10][11]
James moved to Los Angeles in 2003 and co-founded Deep Stealth Productions with her roommate, author and entertainer Calpernia Addams, to create content marketed to transgender people.[7][12][13] They filmed an instructional video, Finding Your Female Voice, to offer voice coaching to trans women,[14] and in 2004 produced and performed in the first all-transgender cast of The Vagina Monologues, debuting a new piece created by Eve Ensler for the occasion.[15][16] James was also a co-producer of and appeared in Beautiful Daughters, a documentary film about the event.[17]
In 2004 James founded the nonprofit GenderMedia Foundation.[18] The following year she was a script consultant for Transamerica (2005), helping actress Felicity Huffman prepare for her role as a trans woman.[19][20][21] She appeared in the HBO documentary Middle Sexes: Redefining He and She (2005), and in 2007 directed a 7-minute film, Casting Pearls.[22] She was a consulting producer for, and appeared in, the reality-dating television series Transamerican Love Story on the Logo digital channel in 2008.[23][24] In 2009 she directed another short film, Transproofed.[25]
James was appointed in 2007 to the Board of Directors of TransYouth Family Allies, a nonprofit that supports transgender youth and their families,[26][27] and in 2008 to the Board of Directors of Outfest, where she was involved in the restoration of the documentary Queens at Heart.[28][29] In 2012 she co-founded Thought Moment Media.[30] She directed the 2015 Showtime concert film Alec Mapa: Baby Daddy.[31]
Writing and activism
James writes about consumer rights, technology, pop culture, and LGBT rights. She has contributed to Boing Boing, QuackWatch, eMedicine, The Advocate, The Huffington Post and Wikipedia.[7][11][32][4]
Together with Lynn Conway and Deirdre McCloskey, James was a driving figure in protests—described in 2007 as "one of the most organized and unified examples of transgender activism seen to date"[2]—against J. Michael Bailey's book The Man Who Would Be Queen (2003). In the book, Bailey argues that there are two forms of transsexualism: one a variant of male homosexuality, and the other a male sexual interest in having a female body, a taxonomy critics see as inaccurate and damaging.[33] James argued that the book is a cure narrative, framed by one case report about a six-year-old child, that exemplifies the academic exploitation of transgender people.[34][35][36]
The dispute became heated when James posted a page on her website containing photographs of Bailey's children, alongside sexually explicit captions that quoted or parodied material in Bailey's book. Bailey accused her of harassment, as did Alice Dreger, a colleague of Bailey's at Northwestern University; Dreger tried to stop James from speaking at the campus about the controversy.[37][38][39][40] James responded that the page was intended to echo what she saw as Bailey's disrespect toward gender-variant children.[33]
See also
References
- ^ Lam, Steven (June 20, 2006). "What's 'gay' now: we are everywhere indeed". The Advocate, June 20, 2006.
- ^ a b Surkan, Kim (2007). "Transsexuals protest academic exploitation", in Lillian Faderman (ed). Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender events, 1848–2006. Ipswich, MA: Salem Press, pp. 700–702.
- ^ Anderson-Minshall, Jacob (June 6, 2017). "Don't Forget the Long, Proud History of Transgender Activism". The Advocate.
- ^ a b Nichols, James Michael (4 July 2016). "This Trans Pioneer Has Been Fighting For The Trans Community For Decades". The Huffington Post.
- ^ a b Bartner, Amy (June 3, 2016). "Transgender activist amid Hollywood's transition", IndyStar.
- ^ "Andrea James to Give Talk at Wabash". Wabash College, October 21, 2008.
- ^ a b c Jardin, Xeni (December 28, 2009). "Welcome to the Boing Boing guestblog, Andrea James!", Boing Boing.
- ^ James, Gary (October 28, 2008). "Alum Shares Earned Wisdom With the Wabash Community", Wabash College.
- ^ Painter, K. (March 26, 2006). "Who qualifies to zap hairs?", USA Today.
- ^ Grossman, A. J. (June 5, 2008). "Zapping teenage torment", The New York Times.
- ^ a b Bashour, Mounir and James, Andrea (July 2, 2009). "Laser Hair Removal", eMedicine.
- ^ Addams, Calpernia; James, Andrea (July 22, 2003). "Transformations". The Advocate, p. 12.
- ^ Nichols, James Michael (February 28, 2016). "The Incredible Story Of Trans Showgirl, Musician And Legend Calpernia Addams", The Huffington Post.
- ^ Hopper, Douglas (March 5, 2006). "Helping Transgender Women Find a New Voice", All Things Considered, National Public Radio.
- ^ Ensler, Eve and Tennyson, Joyce (2005). Vagina Warriors. New York: Bulfinch Press, p. 11. ISBN 978-0-8212-6183-5
- ^ "LesbianAlliance.com interviews DeepStealth's Andrea James", LesbianAlliance.com. Archived April 6, 2004.
- ^ "Teaching resources: Beautiful Daughters", Feminist Teacher, 18(2), 2008, pp. 179–180. JSTOR 40546067
- ^ Ensler, Eve, et al. (2004). "V-Day LA: Until the violence stops". Gender Media Foundation.
- ^ Nangeroni, Nancy and MacKenzie, Gordene O. (April 15, 2006). Episode #555, gendertalk.com.
- ^ Tucker, Duncan (2006). Transamerica: The Shooting Script. Newmarket Press, pp. 93, 133. ISBN 978-1-55704-732-8
- ^ Keck, William (November 21, 2005). "Felicity Huffman is sitting pretty", USA Today.
- ^ Adelman, Kim (July 18, 2007). "'Pariah' Leads The Pack of Outstanding Shorts at Outfest '07", Indiewire.
- ^ Pozner, Jennifer L. (2010). Reality bites back: the troubling truth about guilty pleasure TV. Seal Press. ISBN 978-1-58005-265-8
- ^ Kearns, Michael (2008). "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun". Frontiers, 26(20).
- ^ Everleth, Mike (January 10, 2011). "Echo Park Film Center: Transgender Short Films", Bad Lit: The Journal of Underground Film.
- ^ "I'm a TransYouth Family Advocate!", andreajames.com, 23 October 2007.
- ^ James, Andrea (January 25, 2008). "Life Without Puberty", The Advocate.
- ^ "Outfest Board of Directors", andreajames.com, 11 June 2008.
- ^ Kelly, Shannon (March 6, 2011). "Highlighting the Outfest Legacy Project: Three Films", UCLA Film and Television Archive.
- ^ "Partners", Thought Moment Media.
- ^ "Alec Mapa: Baby Daddy" Archived 2015-11-27 at the Wayback Machine, Showtime.
- ^ James, Andrea (December 18, 2007). "Don't Tick Off Trans". The Advocate.
- ^ a b Carey, Benedict (August 21, 2007). "Criticism of a Gender Theory, and a Scientist Under Siege", The New York Times.
- ^ James, Andrea (June 21, 2008). "Fair Comment, Foul Play: Populist Responses to J. Michael Bailey's Exploitative Controversies", paper presented to the National Women's Studies Association (courtesy link Archived 2016-07-31 at the Wayback Machine), pp. 3–4.
- ^ Also see "The Bailey Brouhaha", National Women's Association Conference, courtesy of YouTube, June 21, 2008.
- ^ James, Andrea (September 2004). "A defining moment in our history: Examining disease models of gender identity" Archived 2017-10-01 at the Wayback Machine, tsroadmap.com.
- ^ Bailey, Michael J. "Academic McCarthyism", Northwestern Chronicle, October 9, 2005.
- ^ Dreger, Alice D. (2008). "The Controversy Surrounding the Man Who Would Be Queen: A Case History of the Politics of Science, Identity, and Sex in the Internet Age," Archives of Sexual Behavior, 37(3), pp. 366–421. PMID 18431641 PMC 3170124
- ^ Nichols, Margaret (2008). "Dreger on the Bailey Controversy: Lost in the Drama, Missing the Big Picture", Archives of Sexual Behavior, 37(3), pp. 476–480. PMID 18431629
- ^ Singal, Jesse (December 30, 2015). "Why Some of the Worst Attacks on Social Science Have Come From Liberals". New York Magazine.
External links
- Official website
- Andrea James at IMDb
- "Andrea James", The Huffington Post.
- James, Andrea (December 3, 2007). "Don't Tick Off Trans". The Advocate.
- 1967 births
- American non-fiction writers
- LGBT producers
- Living people
- LGBT rights activists from the United States
- LGBT people from Indiana
- Transgender and transsexual actresses
- Transgender and transsexual writers
- University of Chicago alumni
- Wabash College alumni
- Wikipedia people
- Writers from Indiana
- People from Franklin, Indiana
- Film producers from Indiana