Media, Identity, and Representation
The Medical Construction of Gender
Whiteness, Respectability, and Power
Systems of Control and Authority
Skidmore (2011)
100

Who was the first famous American trans woman featured in the media in the 1950s?

Christine Jorgensen 

100

According to Gonsalves, who decided if someone was transgender? 

Doctors and psychiatrists.

100

What qualities made Jorgensen the ideal trans woman for 1950s audiences?

Her whiteness, beauty, and traditional femininity.

100

Which two big systems shaped how people saw gender?

The media and medicine.

100

What was one positive result of Jorgensen’s fame?

She helped people start talking about gender identity.

200

Why did the media describe Jorgensen as a “perfect lady”?

Because she looked and acted like the ideal white, middle-class woman.

200

What was the problem with letting doctors define trans identity?

It gave medical institutions control instead of the person themselves.

200

What does respectability politics mean?

Trying to gain acceptance by behaving according to mainstream moral and social standards.

200

What does it mean that gender is socially constructed?

it’s shaped by culture and society, not just biology.

200

What problem did Jorgensen's story also create?

It made people think only perfect trans women could be accepted.

300

What nickname did Skidmore give to people like Jorgensen who fit society’s comfort zone?

The Good Transsexual

300

Why did people seeking transition often have to prove their gender to doctors?

Because medical systems demanded people fit traditional gender expectations.

300

How were trans women of colour like Delisa Newton treated differently by the press? 

They were either ignored or portrayed as scandalous, immoral, or exotic.

300

How did doctors and journalists both control trans stories?

They decided who got to be seen as real or acceptable.

300

How do we still see the good transsexual idea today?

Trans people who look or act traditionally are praised more.

400

Trans women of colour were often shown as exotic or immoral. What does that tell us about media bias?

That the media accepted trans people only if they were white and respectable.

400

How did the medical world and media both limit trans acceptance?

Both rewarded conformity to white, heterosexual, and gender-normative ideals.

400

How did Gonsalves link whiteness to authority in medical science?

Medical knowledge was based on white, Western bodies and ignored racial diversity.

400

Why did many trans people have to hide parts of their identity?

Because being open could mean losing respect or being judged.

400

How does race still affect media coverage of trans people?

White trans people are shown more often and more positively.

500

If you were a journalist in the 1950s, what kind of story about a trans woman would have been published , and why?

Stories that made her seem traditional, polite, and not threatening to gender roles.

500

How does the medicalization of gender help trans people access gender care ? 

Reinforces the narrative of born this way for trans individuals and has also generated surgical options. 

500

How do Skidmore and Gonsalves show that respectability reinforces inequality?

By rewarding those who conform to white, middle-class ideals while excluding others.

500

What question should we ask when thinking about gender rules?

Who gets to make the rules, and who gets left out?

500

What lesson do both Skidmore and Gonsalves want us to remember?

That gender is shaped by systems of power, and equality means seeing all experiences.