''.
Representations in literature of transgender people have existed for millennia, with
Ovid's
Metamorphoses (written in the year 8 CE) containing some of the earliest accounts.
The Routledge Handbook of Trans Literature, edited by
Douglas A. Vakoch and Sabine Sharp, surveys core topics in transgender literary theory and criticism, such as performativity, visibility, temporality, and monstrosity, as well as diverse genres ranging from life writing and science fiction to comics and manga. The handbook includes overviews of trans literature from six periods: Medieval, Renaissance, Enlightenment, Romantic, Victorian, and Modernist.
Susan Stryker’s
Transgender History: The Root’s of Today’s Revolution, revised edition published 2017, is a guide to the general history of American transgender culture. Both the original and revised editions are short books, but they provide a good overview of
transgender history. Stryker covers topics from terminology to social movements. This book can be a good introduction to transgender culture and a guide for those unfamiliar with the LGBTQIA+ community and culture.
20th century In the twentieth century, it is notable that the novel
Orlando (1928), by
Virginia Woolf, is considered one of the first transgender novels in English and whose plot follows a
bisexual poet who changes gender from male to female and lives for hundreds of years. Before Orlando,
The Marvelous Land of Oz by
L. Frank Baum was published in 1904. Its main character,
Ozma, was born female but turned into a boy named Tippetarius/Tip as an infant, and raised male until at the end of the book discovering their true identity as the princess of Oz. Beyond
Orlando, the twentieth century saw the appearance of other fiction works with transgender characters that saw commercial success. Among them is
Myra Breckinridge (1968), a
satirical novel written by
Gore Vidal that follows a trans woman hellbent on
world domination and bringing down
patriarchy. The book sold more than two million copies after publication, but was panned by critics. Trans literature was heavily marginalized and mostly shared underground during the 1900s.
Red Jordan Arobateau self-published many forms of literature on trans subjects throughout the 1900s. Underground
zines like
gendertrash and
TransSisters were sources of some trans fiction during the 1990s. In 1993,
Leslie Feinberg published a seminal work in trans literature and culture,
Stone Butch Blues.
Transgender memoirs Many of the first publications that foregrounded transgender individuals and their experiences were
memoirs. Perhaps the earliest example is
Man into Woman (1933), by
Lili Elbe. The older
Autobiography Of an Androgyne (1918), by Victorian/Edwardian era activist
Jennie June/Ralph Werther is also an important but often muddy insight into the lives of what he/her called "Ultra-Androgynes", a gender identity of which closest modern equivalent borders closely with
transgender woman or
effeminate-leaning
non-binary. For many decades, trans literature released by large mainstream publishers was very limited, and took the form of memoirs explaining a trans writer's life to an assumed
cisgender audience. According to Kuchenga Shenjé, the shared structure and themes of these books were due to their political intentions. Commonly, the books focused on white trans women and followed a prescribed narrative: they were
assigned male at birth, realized they were women, endured
violence or
discrimination before leaving for a big city, undertook
medical transition, and thus finished their journey by "becoming woman". These tropes are further discussed by
Jonathan Ames in
Sexual Metamorphosis: An Anthology of Transsexual Memoirs. Trans memoirs during the 1990s grew more diverse in their exploration of gender experiences than the model set by earlier memoirs like
Jan Morris's
Conundrum. Early acclaimed
memoirs written by trans people include
Gender Outlaw (1994), by
Kate Bornstein;
Man Enough to be a Woman (1996), by
Jayne County; and
Redefining Realness (2014), by
Janet Mock. Shenjé found that the trans memoir genre started to allow Black trans narratives during the 2010s, following
Redefining Realness. Still, many of these books had to be self-published. They include
Dominique Jackson's
The Transsexual from Tobago, Ts Madison's
A Light Through The Shade: An Autobiography of a Queen and
Hope Giselle's
Becoming Hope: Removing the Disguise. Many academic writings on transgender topics are gathered in
Transgender Studies, a set of volumes edited by
Susan Stryker and Aren Aizura. Publication of trans literature grew as small and indie presses enabled trans authors to traditionally publish authentic narratives. Self-published works also sustained the genre's growth. Tom Léger, Julie Blair, Riley Macleod, and Red Durkin founded
Topside Press in 2011 to support trans publishing. Their press supported the careers of many new trans authors of the 2010s, pushed mainstream presses to support trans writers, and inspired further indie publishers of trans literature. They published
Imogen Binnie's
Nevada in 2013, which became a cult classic and breakthrough work of trans literature. Other writers associated with Topside included
Ryka Aoki, Sybil Lamb,
Casey Plett, and Kokumo. In 2015,
Roz Kaveney published
Tiny Pieces of Skull, a novel centering on a trans protagonist. Kaveney wrote the book in 1988 but could not get a publisher for years, even after other authors pushed for the book to be published. In 2020, Dutch-born
Lucas Rijneveld, who is
non-binary, won the
International Booker Prize with his novel
The Discomfort of Evening.
Torrey Peters' 2021
Detransition, Baby achieved immense popular and critical success. Scholar Bethany Karsten found very few Black
transfeminine novelists upon a survey of the field in 2024. Novels published in the 2020s included
Shola von Reinhold's
LOTE, Alexandrine Ogundimu's
The Longest Summer, Kuchenga Shenjé's
The Library Thief, and Denne Michele Norris's
When the Harvest Comes. Kuchenga Shenjé praised the nuanced intersectional
transmasculine narrative within the 2020 novel
The Vanishing Half, by cisgender author
Brit Bennett. == In Spanish ==