In many cultures,
given names are considered either masculine (e.g.
John), feminine (e.g.
Jane), or
unisex (e.g.
Jamie), and chosen according to an infant's
assigned sex at birth. Transgender people have a
gender identity which differs from their assigned sex, and thus, may choose to go by a different name. In the 2010s,
transgender activists popularized the term
deadname to refer to such a former name. The
Oxford English Dictionary attests the use of
deadname on
Twitter in 2010, and
deadnaming in 2013. The term generally carries a negative connotation, with the implication that referring to a transgender person by their former name is unacceptable. Transgender activists consider the deadnaming of homicide victims and high-profile celebrities by news media to be a violation of privacy, and a contributing factor to
transphobia. Deadnaming may also be done accidentally by people who are otherwise
supportive of trans individuals, such as supportive family members or friends who have not yet become accustomed to using a trans person's new name. Repeated failures to avoid deadnaming, however, can be considered disrespectful. Journalistic
style guides, health-practitioner manuals, and LGBTQ advocacy groups advise adopting transgender people's names and pronouns, even when referring to them in the past, prior to transitioning. A 2021 survey by
The Trevor Project found a lower rate of suicide attempts from trans and nonbinary youth who had their name or gender marker changed birth certificates, driver's licenses, or other legal documents. Queer scholar Lucas Crawford has theorized that some transgender people insist on preventing deadnaming in part as a strategy of prospective self-assertion: "by insisting on the primacy of the present, by seeking to erase the past, or even by emotionally locating their 'real self' in the future, that elusive place where access (to transition, health care, housing, a livable wage, and so on) and social viability tend to appear more abundant." Correcting deadnaming by third parties is cited as a way to support trans people. == Obstacles to name changes ==