Namaste has written a timely and engaging book, perfect for courses on gender, sexuality, and feminist methods, theorizing, and activism. The combination of critical feminism, the explication/application of the concept of ‘oversight,’ and the discussion of work/research with trans people and on trans issues clearly set this book apart from other works that might, at most, grapple with one of these areas. This book is unique in the sheer breadth of topics covered and perspectives considered; it stands out for the strength of the research, lucidity of the arguments, and accessibility of the writing. - Fiona Nelson, Department of Sociology, University of Calgary<br /><br />""Viviane Namaste’s latest work matters not just for trans people, activists, and scholars but also for anyone interested in public sector issues around gender, sexuality, and health, particularly in relation to HIV, history, memory, and activism, and especially in Canadian and French-language contexts. This collection is an important contribution to a growing body of literature that critically engages with a range of tough questions and issues about which we should all be thinking carefully."" - Nicholas Matte, Mark S. Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies, University of Toronto
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Oversight: How and Why Feminist Thinking Matters
- Further Reading
- Notes
- References
- Chapter One
- Montréal by Night: Critical Thoughts on Radical Health Research
- Introduction
- Montréal as a City of Leisure, Sex, and Sexuality
- Histories of Public Health and Infectious Disease in Montréal
- Conclusion
- Questions for Discussion and Reflection
- Further Reading
- Notes
- References
- Chapter Two
- Labour, the State, and Global Capitalism: Challenges for Archiving Trans Lives
- Cabarets
- Clinical Health
- Conclusion
- Questions for Discussion and Reflection
- Further Reading
- Notes
- References
- Chapter Three
- Reflections on a Changing City: Heritage, the Transformation of Montréal's Downtown Core, and the Economic Dimensions of Oversight
- The Quartier des spectacles and the Revitalisation of Saint-Laurent Boulevard
- Methodological Issues in Our Reflections on Québec Heritage
- Data and Evidence Presented by the Promoters
- The General Orientations of the Quartier des spectacles
- Summary of the Situation
- Recommendations
- Epilogue
- Questions for Discussion and Reflection
- Further Reading
- References
- Chapter Four
- The Impact of HIV in Parisian Trans Communities, 1980-2000: The Relevance of History for Critical Epistemologies on HIV/AIDS 77 Histories of HIV/AIDS
- Overview of the Research Study
- Main Study Findings
- Conclusion: The Contributions of History in the Analysis of HIV/AIDS
- Questions for Discussion and Reflection
- Further Reading
- Notes
- References
- Chapter Five
- Critiquing the AIDS Bureaucracy: An Open Letter to the Canadian AIDS Society (CAS), with Nora Butler Burke and Zack Marshall History of This Issue at CAS
- Meetings and Communications with CAS
- Principles in Practice?
- Questions We Still Ask Ourselves
- Why This Letter?
- What Can You Do?
- Epilogue
- Questions for Discussion and Reflection
- Further Reading
- References
- Chapter Six
- But What About the B? Elision of Bisexualities in Scholarship and Activisms on Sexuality
- Questions for Discussion and Reflection
- Further Reading
- References
- Chapter Seven
- Reflections on Pronouns, Activists, and Funerals
- Introduction
- The Limits of Confession: Constituting the Settler Subject
- Preferred Pronouns: Activists Speak and Centre Themselves
- Beyond Binary Gender: Marginalizing Transsexuals?
- Enter ""Trans People,"" Exit Trans Women
- Privilege: But I Want it!
- Reflections on ""Safe Space""
- On Funerals
- Conclusion
- Questions for Discussion and Reflection
- Further Reading
- Notes
- References
- Conclusion
- References