The Herald (South Africa)

‘Transgende­r is having a moment’

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IN almost every respect, Aydian Dowling is a typical cover star for a men’s fitness magazine. With his defined abs, stylish facial hair, puppy-dog eyes and set of tattoos across his right shoulder, it is not hard to see why the 27-year-old is the strong favourite to win the popular vote in Men’s Health’s “Ultimate Guy” competitio­n – an annual contest that turns a member of the public into a profession­al male model.

Only the mastectomy scars beneath his pecs reveal that the New Yorker was, in fact, born female, beginning the transition from woman to man five years ago.

“I started bodybuildi­ng because I wanted my outer body to feel more masculine, like my inner soul does,” Dowling, who runs his own clothing company and is married to a woman, says.

“I definitely was not expecting all the support, but I’m so happy and proud of the [transgende­r] community for using its loud voice [to vote me on to the cover] and realising that we could really do it.”

This voice, it seems, is growing ever louder, with a host of news stories in recent months focusing on transgende­r people.

Bruce Jenner, 65, the Olympic gold medalist and TV star in Keeping Up with the Kardashian­s, has given interviews about his plans to transition into a woman, a process he has been “getting ready for” all his life.

Former British boxing promoter Frank Maloney, 61, announced last year that he was undergoing a sex change and wished to be known as Kellie, while Chelsea Manning — formerly Bradley Manning, the American soldier jailed following the WikiLeaks scandal – has spoken from behind bars about her transition.

A recent issue of British Vogue includes a full-page article headed: “Man, woman, neither, both?“, which goes on to claim that “trans is having a moment”.

Though some might balk at the suggestion a transgende­r identity is the new must-have accessory – especially in the light of reports of transgende­r teens’ suicides following rejection by their families – the idea that we have reached a watershed in terms of rights for the group has been echoed elsewhere.

Last year, Time magazine ran a cover story headlined “The transgende­r tipping point: America’s next civil rights frontier“, featuring an interview with Laverne Cox, a trans actress and star of the hit TV show Orange Is the New Black, in which she plays a transgende­r inmate in a women’s prison.

“We are in a place now where more and more trans people want to come forward and say, ‘This is who I am’,” Cox said in the article.

“Social media has been a huge part of it . . . We’re able to have a voice in a way that we haven’t been able before. We are setting the agenda in a different way.”

Other screen treatments include the 2014 series Transparen­t, which took a light-touch approach to the story of a family adjusting to the idea of Dad becoming Mum, while Oscar-winner Eddie Redmayne will star in The Danish Girl, a film about the first man to undergo gender-reassignme­nt surgery in the 1920s. – The Daily Telegraph

 ??  ?? PLAYING THE PART: Oscar-winning actor Eddie Redmayne in character as Lili Elbe in ‘The Danish Girl’
PLAYING THE PART: Oscar-winning actor Eddie Redmayne in character as Lili Elbe in ‘The Danish Girl’

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