Violent Authenticity: Trans woman’s experiences of authentication

ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThis chapter examines violence experienced by trans women navigating systems designed to authenticate their gender identities. Drawing on qualitative research with trans women from England and Wales (2015-2019), it introduces 'violent authenticity' as a theoretical framework identifying three core dimensions through which institutions simultaneously validate and subject trans women to systematic harms: temporal violence (extended waiting and evaluation), epistemic violence (institutional authority superseding self-knowledge), and embodied violence (cartographic scrutiny of trans bodies). Focusing on healthcare experiences, the chapter demonstrates how these dimensions operated during 1996-2013 (when participants engaged with healthcare services) and have since been institutionalised through the 2024 Cass Review and 2025 Supreme Court ruling prioritising biological sex definitions. Participants with varied gender identities demonstrate how violent authenticity operates systematically to enforce binary gender norms rather than targeting specific identities. First-person narratives illuminate how trans women strategically navigate institutional demands while developing resistance. Positioning these experiences within violence against women and girls frameworks reveals how trans women's experiences illuminate broader mechanisms of patriarchal gender regulation affecting all who transgress normative boundaries. Recognising violent authenticity's systematic operation is essential for developing comprehensive approaches to gender-based violence.

Publication Date

2025-11-25

Publication Title

Handbook of Violence Against Women and Girls

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan Ltd.

Acceptance Date

2025-11-25

Deposit Date

2026-03-03

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