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Transvestic fetishism

Transvestism, also known as paraphilic transvestism, transvestic fetishism, heterosexual transvestism, or erotic crossdressing, among other synonyms, is a paraphilia in which a person, generally a heterosexual male, experiences sexual arousal and enjoyment with crossdressing as the opposite sex.[1][10][3][4] Men with transvestism experience pleasurable feelings with crossdressing and often also view themselves in the mirror and masturbate and orgasm when they crossdress.[1][3][11][12] They usually crossdress episodically, for instance once a week in most individuals.[1] Although typically done privately and in secret at least at first, some progress to crossdressing in public or crossdressing all the time.[1][3][13] When excessive or problematic, for instance causing distress or impairment, transvestism is defined as a mental disorder and can be diagnosed as transvestic disorder.[1][2]

Transvestism/transvestic disorder
Other namesFetishistic transvestism, paraphilic transvestism, heterosexual transvestism, erotic crossdressing, transvestic autogynephilia, sartorial autogynephilia, automonosexuality, cross-gender fetishism, femmiphilia, eonism, sexo-aesthetic inversion
SpecialtyPsychiatry
SymptomsExcessive or problematic urges to crossdress, sexual arousal with crossdressing, masturbation and orgasm with crossdressing, cross-gender feelings, sometimes gender dysphoria[1][2]
ComplicationsSocial, sexual, relationship, and occupational difficulties, cycles of purging and reacquisition of women's clothing[1][2]
Usual onsetChildhood or early adolescence[1][3][4][2]
DurationChronic and lifelong[1]
TypesFetishistic and autogynephilic[1][5][2]
CausesUnknown[1][3][6]
Diagnostic methodClinical interview[3]
Differential diagnosisFetishism, dual-role transvestism, gender dysphoria, transgenderism[1][7][2]
TreatmentMedications, psychotherapy, psychological support[3][8][9][1]
MedicationSerotonergic antidepressants, dopamine antagonists, antiandrogens[3][8][9]
PrognosisChronic and lifelong[1]
FrequencyVariable, but at least once a week in most[1]

Transvestism is a paraphilia.[1] Two distinct and often difficult-to-distinguish subtypes of transvestism exist: one involving fetishism (sexual arousal with certain items of female clothing) and the other involving autogynephilia (sexual arousal with the thought or image of being female).[1][5][2] These two types often occur together and seem to be closely related.[1][12][5] They are both erotic target location errors, and when transvestism is related to autogynephilia, it is additionally defined as an erotic target identity inversion.[12][14][15] Most cases of transvestism involve autogynephilia.[1][5][2] Transvestism often co-occurs with other paraphilias, for instance fetishism and sadomasochism.[1][2] It can also sometimes be associated with gender dysphoria and can evolve into being transgender and transitioning.[1][12][13][2] While various theories exist, the causes of transvestism are unknown.[1][3] The onset of transvestism is usually in childhood or adolescence.[1][2][16]

Data and information on treatment of transvestism are very limited and treatment of the condition is not necessarily indicated.[1][3] In any case, management strategies can include psychotherapy and certain kinds of medications to reduce sex drive.[3][8][9][4] These medications can include serotonergic antidepressants, dopamine antagonists, and antiandrogens, among others.[3][8][9][4] Medications for transvestism can have side effects and risks.[8][9][3] Transvestism is thought to be unchangeable, analogously to normal sexual orientations, and is considered to be a chronic and lifelong disposition.[1][12] The condition can result in sexual, relationship, familial, and occupational difficulties.[1][2]

Transvestism has been observed and documented since ancient times.[3] The term transvestism was coined by German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld in 1910.[17][3][18][19] The concept of autogynephilia, which is believed to underlie most cases of transvestism, was introduced in 1989 by Canadian sexologist Ray Blanchard.[1][17][2] It is thought that around 2 to 3% of men have transvestism.[1][12][20] Transvestism, and paraphilias in general, are rare in women, although cases of transvestism in women have been reported.[1][14][12][2][21][22] Rare cases of homeovestism (sexual arousal to wearing same-sex clothing) in gay men have also been reported.[14][12][11] A subculture surrounding transvestism has existed for many decades, for instance the crossdressing magazine Transvestia and the crossdressing organization Tri-Ess (Society for the Second Self).[13][23] A number of famous individuals with transvestism or heterosexual crossdressing are known, such as Virginia Prince and Louise Lawrence.[24][25][13][26][27] Many crossdressers would identify or be referred to as (non-transitioning) transgender today.[28][29][27][30][31]

Signs, symptoms, and characteristics edit

Men with transvestism experience sexual arousal and enjoyment from crossdressing and have desires or urges to crossdress.[1][32][2] They report that crossdressing results not only in sexual excitement, but also feelings of well-being, calm, comfort, relaxation, thrill, coziness, and ease.[33][1][3][11] Feelings of sensuality, elegance, and beauty are also reported.[34] Adolescent and adult males with transvestism crossdress in a number of different ways.[1] They wear female clothes episodically and/or masturbate, they sometimes wear female clothes, such as undergarments, under their male clothes, and they often crossdress more fully when they are able to do so.[1][2] Men with transvestism may crossdress with only one or two items of female clothing, for instance undergarments, or crossdress with complete female outfits.[2] They can also use wigs, makeup, and accessories in addition to clothes to more fully simulate the appearance of being a woman.[34][33][2] In one study, 83% of men with transvestism crossdressed at least once a week.[1][35]

Most males with transvestism started crossdressing in private and secret.[1] The clothes they wore usually belonged to a female relative.[1] Female undergarments were frequently the first types of clothes that were worn.[1] Prior to puberty, crossdressing is not necessarily experienced as sexual or sexually arousing but as exciting and pleasurable in a more generalized way.[1][3][2] It often starts as strong fascination with a certain item of women's clothing or with women's clothing in general.[3][2] After the onset of puberty, crossdressing usually results in sexual arousal and often leads to masturbation and orgasm.[1][3][2] With puberty, crossdressing may result in the first ejaculation in some cases.[2] In a large survey of men with transvestism, crossdressing resulted in sexual excitement and orgasm nearly always in 21%, often in 19%, occasionally in 32%, rarely in 12%, and never in 9%.[16] However, most men with transvestism still enjoy crossdressing when masturbation is not possible.[16] Some may avoid masturbation to prolong crossdressing sessions and positive feelings.[3][2] Following orgasm, men with transvestism often temporarily lose their desire to crossdress.[1] There is frequently a strong desire to remove the clothing following orgasm.[7] Feelings of disgust and revulsion with respect to their crossdressing may occur at this time.[1] Men with transvestism will often progress to crossdressing in public.[11][13] In large surveys, 71% had crossdressed in public, 8 to 14% frequently crossdressed in public, 23 to 48% did so occasionally, and 38 to 69% did so rarely.[16] In one study, 21% had progressed to crossdressing in public prior to 20 years of age and most had been crossdressing for at least several years.[11][13] A small number of men with transvestism may progress to wearing female clothes full-time or for extended intervals.[13][13]

Transvestism usually onsets during childhood before puberty.[1][2] There are case reports of boys as young as 2 years old who have desired to wear female clothes and have developed penile erections upon doing so.[1] In large surveys of American men with transvestism, 54 to 66% reported starting crossdressing before age 10, 29 to 37% between the age of 10 to 20, and 5 to 8% after the age of 20.[1][16] In other smaller studies of crossdressing men, about 50% have reported crossdressing before age 7, a majority before age 9, and almost all before age 13.[1] Their first episodes of crossdressing were usually undertaken by their own initiative, whereas less commonly they were undertaken at the suggestion of female relatives or caregivers.[1] The peak of transvestic interests, behavior, and sexual arousal occurs during early adulthood.[3][2] The severity of pathological transvestism is greatest in adulthood, when the disposition conflicts with other-directed sexuoromantic relations and with desires to marry and/or start a family.[2]

Men with transvestism frequently report that the sexual arousal with crossdressing gradually decreases in intensity and frequency with time and older age.[1][3][13][2] The initially intense sexual excitement is said to be replaced only by feelings of comfort, well-being, and relaxation.[3][11][2] Some men with transvestism report that the sexual arousal eventually goes away completely.[1][3][2] However, sexual arousal can often still be measured in men with transvestism who deny sexual arousal using clinical phallometry.[1][15][36] Despite sexual arousal diminishing with time, the desire to crossdress often remains the same or becomes even stronger.[2] Sexual arousal with crossdressing is often experienced as unacceptable, unwanted, ego-dystonic, and/or bothersome in men with transvestism.[12][3][37][4][34] Men with transvestism very often downplay or deny experiencing sexual arousal with crossdressing, likely due to shame and desire to look better socially.[38][12][15][34] In one study, more than half of individuals reporting sexual arousal with crossdressing found this to be unacceptable for themselves.[1][37] Oftentimes men with transvestism downplay eroticism as a motive for crossdressing and instead assert that it is a way to express the feminine sides of their personalities or identities (i.e., the "girl within").[12][13]

Men with transvestism usually have one or more full female outfits.[1] Some men with transvestism can have more than 20 full female outfits.[34] The average time to owning a full female outfit after starting crossdressing was 15 years in one study.[11][13] Men with transvestism tend to prefer clothing styles worn by younger women, that are sexually provocative, or that were in fashion during their own youth.[1][33] Examples include lingerie/bras and panties, sleepwear, short skirts and dresses, low-cut blouses, girdles, garter belts, nylon stockings/pantyhose, and high heels.[33] Many can take 1 to 2 hours to crossdress and apply makeup during a session.[34] Men with transvestism will often attempt to abandon crossdressing and will purge their collections of female clothing.[1][34][2] As many as 60 to 80% of men with transvestism report having purged their clothes.[34][16] Attempts at ceasing crossdressing are generally unsuccessful, and these men will eventually obtain new female clothing and start crossdressing again.[1][2] Reports of shame and guilt related to crossdressing are significant, with a rate of 22% in one study, yet most do not wish to stop crossdressing, with a rate of only 1% in the same study.[34] Cycles of purging and reacquisition of women's clothing is often a signal of clinically significant distress.[2]

Crossdressing in men with transvestism may be precipitated by psychological tension, stress, or boredom, and may be used to help improve feelings of depression and anxiety.[1][5][4] In this way, crossdressing may be viewed as a coping strategy.[4] It is plausible that some non-paraphilic individuals may use regular sex in similar ways.[1] Episodes of crossdressing can also be triggered by seeing preferred women's clothing.[35]

In large studies, 80 to 83% of women whose husbands had transvestism were aware of it, although only 27 to 32% knew before marriage.[3][4][16] Attitudes towards their husband's transvestism varied, with "completely antagonistic" in 19 to 20%, "mixed view" in 47 to 57%, and "completely accepting" in 23 to 28%.[3][4][16] Wives may complain that the solitary sexual satisfaction of their crossdressing husbands can be detrimental to their marital sexual fulfillment.[4][16][2] This can lead to relationship difficulties.[2] Men with transvestism who have accepting female partners will sometimes have sexual intercourse with their partners while crossdressed.[1][2] In one study, rates of sex with women while crossdressed ranged from 36 to 62%.[35] Some men may have difficulties sustaining an erection during sex with a woman unless crossdressed.[3][2] Sometimes men with transvestism fantasize that they are in a lesbian relationship with their female partners.[1] When men with transvestism fall in love and enter relationships with new female partners, their desire to crossdress sometimes temporarily diminishes or disappears, though it eventually returns later.[1][15][39][2]

Men with transvestism often develop cross-gender feelings and identities.[1][15][13][16][40] They often develop gender-related self-representations that are multifaceted or consist of multiple coexisting selves; that is, both masculine and feminine sides.[15][13] Most men with transvestism report experiencing a partial, preferential, or even complete cross-gender female identity, especially when crossdressed.[1][41] In large surveys, 69 to 74% felt like they were a "man with a feminine side" and 12 to 17% felt like a "woman trapped in a man's body", whereas 9 to 12% attributed their crossdressing merely to "fetishism".[20][16][40] Additionally, 28 to 56% reported preferring their feminine self and 12 to 60% equally preferred their masculine and feminine selves, whereas 11 to 29% preferred their masculine self.[41][16][40] Men with transvestism sometimes adopt a feminine name for their feminine selves or for when they are crossdressed.[11][13] There is indication of considerable time being required for development of cross-gender identity in men with transvestism.[11][38] In one study, adoption of a feminine name happened after an average of 21 years of crossdressing.[11][13] In addition to crossdressing, many men with transvestism are interested in physical feminization and use or express a desire to use feminizing hormone therapy.[1][12][7] In large surveys, 9 to 25% of men with transvestism were currently on hormone therapy or had previously taken hormone therapy and 43 to 50% wanted to use hormone therapy in the future, whereas 41 to 48% were not interested in taking hormones.[1][12][41][16] Besides cross-gender feelings and identification, transvestism can sometimes progress to gender dysphoria and more substantial gender transition.[1][38][41][2]

In terms of behavioral traits, men with transvestism rarely describe themselves as having been feminine in childhood or adolescence and few report having been called "sissies".[1][2] They generally have male-typical hobbies and interests, engage in rough-and-tumble play, participate in sports, and prefer boys rather than girls as friends.[1] Many of them have however reported envying girls.[1] In adulthood, men with transvestism are typically unremarkably masculine when not crossdressed.[4][13] However, 78% of men with transvestism have self-described themselves as having "marked femininity".[13] Men with transvestism are usually heterosexual and report sexual attraction to women.[4][14] In large surveys, 86 to 89% identified as heterosexual and sexual interest in women was average or above average in 74 to 86%.[41][3][13][40][16][37] Conversely, 7 to 9% identified as bisexual and 1% identified as homosexual, while 1 to 5% identified as asexual.[16] In a survey of almost 2,500 Swedish adults, there were no instances of main or exclusive focus on men with respect to sexual attraction or intercourse.[37]

Although most men with transvestism identify as heterosexual, a subset of men with the disposition occasionally engage in sexual activity with other men while crossdressed or fantasize about doing so.[1][11][39][7][4] In large studies, 17 to 32% of men with transvestism reported homosexual experiences or engaging in sex with men while crossdressed, despite only 8 to 10% identifying as bisexual or homosexual.[11][35][13][16][40][37] Men with transvestism who have same-sex sexual experiences are grouped under the umbrella term "men who have sex with men" (MSM) and are at increased risk for sexually transmitted infections from unprotected anal sex such as the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).[42][43]

In terms of demographic features, men with transvestism resemble other men in most respects.[1] This includes number of siblings, number of children, relationship rates, socioeconomic status, and overall life satisfaction, all of which have been unremarkably different from those of other men.[1] In one study, 78% were currently married or had been married.[13][40] However, men with transvestism have been found to be more likely to report separation from parents in childhood, be easily sexually aroused, masturbate and use pornography more often, and have same-sex sexual experiences.[1][3] Higher education levels and professional and technical occupations appear to be overrepresented in men with transvestism.[1]

Many men with transvestism enjoy forced feminization, fantasy scenarios or narratives in which a person is forced to undergo feminization, for example being forced to wear feminine clothes or develop feminine physical characteristics.[1][13] Forced feminization is often encountered in fiction written by and for men with transvestism.[1][13] Other themes include being transformed into a woman full-time, having reasons that justify a need to become a beautiful or seductive female, and engaging in sexual or romantic relationships with lesbians and men.[13] Such themes provide insight into what men with transvestism find most rewarding and erotic.[13]

Transvestism differs from certain other paraphilias in that there is a lack of harm, a lack of dysfunction, and a relative acceptance of the disposition.[4]

Classification edit

Transvestism can be divided into two subtypes, with fetishism (sexually aroused by "fabrics, materials, or garments") and with autogynephilia (sexually aroused by "thoughts or images of self as female").[1][5][2] In those with fetishism, for instance for bras and panties, the interest and focus is on specific articles of feminine clothing themselves and the properties of those items, although the items may still be worn.[1][5][12][2] Conversely, in those with autogynephilia, the key aim is in becoming a woman or simulating the appearance of a woman, with the clothing merely acting as an aid to this fantasy.[1][38][12][33][5][2] Transvestism can also occur with both fetishism and autogynephilia simultaneously, and this is in fact the case for roughly half of men with transvestism.[1] In a study of men with transvestism, 11% acknowledged fetishism but denied autogynephilia, 32% acknowledged autogynephilia but denied fetishism, 49% acknowledged both fetishism and autogynephilia, and 7% denied both.[1][5] Hence, in terms of total rates in this study, 81% acknowledged autogynephilia and 60% acknowledged fetishism, while 7% acknowledged neither.[1][5] In other studies, 33 to 59% of fetishists also had transvestism and 20 to 78% of those with transvestism also had fetishism.[12] Fetishists who use female clothes in a fetishistic way but are not genuinely transvestic have sometimes been referred to as "pseudo-transvestites" or "pseudo-crossdressers".[12]

Fetishism is an erotic target location error similarly to transvestism.[12][44] Fetishism and transvestism are thought to be closely related and present together on an etiological continuum.[1][12] In fetishism, among the most common fetish objects are extensions of the human body, such as items of women's clothing or footwear.[12] Others common fetish objects include specific female body parts, like breasts, and objects of a particular texture or special material, like rubber, plastic, or leather.[12] It has been noted that the latter fetish objects tend to have a texture similar to that of human skin.[12] In one study of male fetishists, the most frequent fetish objects were clothing (58%), rubber items (23%), footwear (15%), and body parts (15%).[12] Fetishists treat their fetish objects much the same way they would treat human sexual partners.[12] As examples, fetishists seek close physical contact with their fetish objects by wearing them or lying on them, gaze at them, fondle them, rub themselves against them, suck on them, and insert them into body cavities.[12] Some men with transvestism who also have fetishism may be inclined to damage or destroy their clothes after use, for instance cutting them, burning them, or ripping them up.[12][5] Paraphilias tend to cluster, and this may be a manifestation of co-occurring sexual sadism towards their fetishistic objects (and hence sexuoromantic targets) in some individuals.[12] Kurt Freund compared men with transvestism with men with fetishism proper and found that the two groups did not differ in their fetishistic interests or their responses to preferred fetishistic stimuli.[12][45][46] He concluded that men with transvestism are truly fetishistic and that men with transvestism and fetishists proper are difficult to distinguish.[45][12][46]

Crossdressing in men with transvestism is usually, though not always, accompanied by the fantasy of being female; that is, with autogynephilia.[1][2] It is thought that autogynephilia is the motivation for crossdressing in these men and that autogynephilia underlies most cases of transvestism.[14][1][11] The women's clothes used are sexually arousing primarily as symbols of one's femininity rather necessarily than as specific fetishes.[4] Transvestism is the most common manifestation of autogynephilia.[14][11][47] This is likely related to the fact that crossdressing is an easy, temporary, and inexpensive means of making oneself look more like a woman.[14] Some men with transvestism additionally fantasize about having female physical features, for instance breasts or a vagina, which is termed anatomic autogynephilia.[14][11][2] Men with transvestism sometimes have other types of autogynephilia as well, such as behavioral autogynephilia and physiological autogynephilia.[11][2] It is thought, however, that transvestic autogynephilia is the predominant type of autogynephilia in men with transvestism.[11] The desire of some men with transvestism for physical feminization via hormone therapy without undergoing sex reassignment surgery or living full-time as a woman has been referred to as partial autogynephilia.[12][48][49] Aside from their obvious sexual or erotic component, autogynephilia and transvestism can also be conceptualized as encompassing feelings and elements of romantic love, such as desire for closeness and bonding, much the same as normal other-directed sexual orientations like gynephilia (attraction to females).[41][20][39]

Sex with men in men with transvestism is theorized not to be due to true or genuine androphilia (as in homosexuality or bisexuality), but instead to be a manifestation of behavioral autogynephilia and by extension of pseudoandrophilia or autogynephilic interpersonal fantasy—that is, fulfilling the autogynephilic sexual fantasy of having sex as a woman with a man.[11][38][39][47][50][51] In people with autogynephilia, attraction to men is frequently limited or absent despite sexual interest in men, and sex with men is often arousing in fantasy but experienced as unappealing in practice.[52] In terms of relations with women, the phenomenon of temporarily diminished interest in transvestism when entering relationships with new female partners is believed to relate to the fact that autogynephilia and alloerotic (other-focused) gynephilia appear to compete in men with transvestism.[15][39]

A further two-type categorization of men with transvestism based on frequency and intensity has been proposed by Neil Buhrich and Neil McConaghy, and this categorization has been widely adopted.[1][13] The categories are nuclear crossdressers and marginal crossdressers.[1][13] Nuclear crossdressers crossdress episodically and do not seek physical feminization, whereas marginal crossdressers crossdress more extensively and either desire or undergo physical feminization with hormone therapy or surgery.[1][13] Nuclear crossdressers are described as psychologically satisfied with their gender and sexual identity as males, whereas marginal crossdressers are not.[3][13] Nuclear crossdressers crossdress less frequently, crossdress completely at a later age, and are less likely to crossdress in public compared to marginal crossdressers.[1][13] They also report less childhood feminine behaviors, earlier and more sexual activity with female partners, and are taller and higher in social status than marginal crossdressers.[1][13] It has been suggested that these differences may represent a selection effect, wherein marginal crossdressers go further in their efforts based on how convincingly they believe they could pass as female and the amount of social status they could lose if they became noticeably feminized.[1]

Comorbidity edit

Paraphilias tend to co-occur or cluster, and transvestism is often comorbid with one or more other paraphilias.[1][38][12][41][2] More than 100 different paraphilias have been described in the literature.[53][54][55][56][57][58] Transvestism has been found to be strongly associated with other paraphilias, like fetishism, sadomasochism, exhibitionism, and voyeurism.[3][41] In studies, co-occurring fetishism has been reported in 55 to 59%, sadomasochism in 14 to 35%, voyeurism in 33%, frotteurism in 28%, toucherism in 22%, exhibitionism in 17 to 36%, sexual contact with prepubertal girls (not necessarily due to pedophilia) in 11 to 20%, and rape (not necessarily due to biastophilia) in 6%.[1][12][13][37] Other co-occurring paraphilias have included gynandromorphophilia, zoophilia, obscene phone calling, and autoerotic asphyxiation, among others.[12][4][13][59][39][2][60] Transvestism has also been reported to co-occur with other erotic target location errors and identity inversions, such as pedovestism, autopedophilia, and apotemnophilia.[12][1][15][61][14] In one study, about half of the men with transvestism had one or more co-occurring paraphilias.[1] Some of these comorbid paraphilias may involve behavior that is potentially illegal.[1] Aside from other paraphilias, transvestism has also been associated with hypersexuality.[3]

Information about comorbid psychiatric disorders in men with transvestism is limited and conflicting.[1] One study found that men with transvestism were no more likely to report a current psychiatric disorder than other men and their mental health ratings were similar.[1] There was however a non-significant trend toward a higher degree of illicit drug use (though not necessarily indicating substance abuse).[1] In a study of men with transvestism from clinical samples, personality and sexual functioning scores were unremarkable, but neuroticism was elevated.[1] In another study, one of men with transvestism who had not sought treatment for their condition, elevated rates of depression and alcohol dependence were observed.[1] In addition to psychiatric disorders, paraphilias, including transvestism, have been reported at higher-than-expected rates in people with autistic spectrum disorders in a number of studies, suggesting a potential association with autistic characteristics as well.[62][63][64]

Most men with transvestism develop some form of cross-gender feelings and identification, for instance dual masculine and feminine selves or more extensive feminine identity, analogously to the cross-gender identities in transgender people.[1][38][15][13][16][40] Moreover, transvestism can sometimes progress to feelings of gender dysphoria, full gender transition, and transgender identity.[1][38][41][2] Distinguishing between isolated transvestism and transvestism with gender dysphoria can be difficult, and the diagnoses of transvestism and gender dysphoria are not mutually exclusive.[1][2] When both are present, both diagnoses should be given.[2] It is difficult to predict which men with transvestism will progress to gender dysphoria.[2] Oftentimes such men are indistinguishable in childhood or adolescence from other men with transvestism.[2] Middle-aged and older men with transvestism are more likely to present with gender dysphoria.[2] The presence of autogynephilia, especially anatomic autogynephilia (e.g., desire for breasts or a vagina),[14][11] has been strongly positively associated with unwavering female identity, gender dysphoria, and desire for gender transition in men with transvestism, whereas the presence of fetishism has been negatively associated with gender dysphoria.[5][65][2] Those that experience sexual arousal with crossdressing as unwanted or bothersome also show higher levels of gender dysphoria.[4] In large surveys of men with transvestism, 14 to 17% said they would elect for sex reassignment surgery if it were possible, 34% would elect for sex reassignment surgery if they were younger,[34][16] and 11% were presenting full-time as women.[12][41] No definitive statistics are available, but it has been estimated, based on observations of men with transvestism who have participated in crossdressing clubs, that fewer than 5% ultimately progress to fully transitioning and being transgender or transsexual.[13]

In addition to a small subset of men with transvestism progressing to transitioning and transgender identity, a number of other findings also link men with transvestism with a subset of transgender women.[38][12][41] According to the DSM-5, late-onset gender dysphoria in adolescent and adult natal males is preceded by "transvestic behavior with sexual excitement" in many cases.[66] In studies of transgender women, majorities of individuals report sexual arousal with crossdressing and/or cross-gender fantasy.[39][38] This includes rates of 73 to 89% among non-androphilic transgender women and rates of 10 to 40% among transgender women who are androphilic (exclusively attracted to males).[39][38] It has been theorized that non-androphilic transgender women are often miscategorized as androphilic and this accounts for the elevated rates in androphilic groups.[38][11] In line with all of the preceding, many transgender women could also meet diagnostic criteria for transvestism, and many transgender women previously identified as crossdressers or transvestites.[41][47][7] With hormonal transition and reduction of sex drive in transgender women, sexual arousal to crossdressing or cross-gender fantasy usually diminishes or disappears.[39][38] Transvestism and gender dysphoria have also been reported to co-occur in families.[14][67]

Although the notions that autogynephilia is a paraphilia and is the underlying motivation of most cases of transvestism in men are widely accepted and limitedly controversial, the situation is different in the case of transgender women.[1][38][2][6] It has been said that no one denies the existence of autogynephilic arousal (i.e., sexual arousal with crossdressing or cross-gender fantasy) in transgender women or that some transgender women transition due to autogynephilia.[38][11][68] However, the notion that autogynephilia serves as the motive for transitioning in all non-androphilic transgender women, as proposed by Ray Blanchard's etiological typology of transgender women and supporters like Anne Lawrence and J. Michael Bailey, is extremely controversial and heavily contested by many transgender women and academics.[38][69][70][71][68] Critiques have been lobbied at this theory on a variety of grounds, and alternative theories of autogynephilic arousal have been proposed by some academics.[70][71][68] Examples of such critiques and theories include those by Charles Allen Moser,[68] Jaimie Veale and colleagues' identity–defense model of gender variance,[72][73] and Julia Serano's embodiment fantasies model.[70][71] In any case, some transgender women, as well as some non-transitioning autogynephiles, identify with the concept of autogynephilia and feel that it accurately describes their experiences.[39][38][69][74][75][73][76] In a 2012 online survey of transgender women asked about Blanchard's typology and autogynephilia, 16% responded positively, 32% gave neutral responses, and 52% responded negatively.[38][75] It is important for clinical professionals of transgender women to be aware of the highly controversial and potentially offensive nature of autogynephilia.[41]

Causes edit

Transvestism is defined as a paraphilia; that is, as an atypical sexual propensity.[1][41] It is considered to be a form of autogynephilia, to be an erotic target location error and erotic target identity inversion, and to be a self-directed form of male heterosexuality or gynephilia (sexual attraction to women).[41][1][14] Transvestism has been defined as a paraphilia and/or paraphilic disorder in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) and the World Health Organization's International Classification of Diseases (ICD).[1][41]

Various theories about the etiology of transvestism exist.[3][1] Many theorists have proposed psychological origins, like behavioral and reinforcement theory (as in classical conditioning), familial and parental considerations and relationships, sexual abuse in childhood, and psychoanalytical explanations largely related to castration anxiety.[3][12] Robert Stoller suggested that transvestism was often due to mothers or other female caregivers who forced their boys to crossdress in order to humiliate them or undermine their masculinity.[1][12] Richard L. Schott theorized that transvestism might in part be due to an especially close mother–child relationship, together with an absent father and often no older brothers.[1][12][77] These theories are contradicted by data and/or are no longer widely accepted.[1] Behavioral theorists have proposed that the development of fetishism is due to classical conditioning, wherein an inanimate object is paired with the experience of sexual stimulation, and something similar may be happening in transvestism.[12] Experimental studies have found that fetishism-like responses for women's boots can be conditioned and extinguished in a laboratory study, which lends a degree of support to this view.[12][78][79]

Knowledge about possible biological causes of transvestism is lacking.[3] Transvestism and related conditions like gender dysphoria have been reported to co-occur in families, which is consistent with potential genetic predisposition to transvestism, but this has not been clearly demonstrated.[1][12] High co-occurrence of transvestism in monozygotic and dizygotic twin pairs has been reported, but this could be either due to genetic or psychosocial influences.[1] There have been case reports of transvestism with temporal lobe epilepsy and head injury.[12]

Some academics, such as Charles Allen Moser, have denied that transvestism and autogynephilia are paraphilias or have dismissed the concept of paraphilias altogether.[41][68][80][81] Additionally, some crossdressers and theorists have proposed alternative models in which disturbances in gender identity or gender variance primarily underlie transvestism and autogynephilia.[12][72] Under this model, it is maintained that the associated erotic desires and behaviors in people with transvestism and autogynephilia are secondary to and a byproduct of gender variance.[12][72] Moreover, some of these academics, such as Jaimie Veale and Julia Serano, have contended that people with gender variance related to transvestism and autogynephilia are on an etiological continuum with gender variance related to homosexual men and androphilic transgender women.[72][70][71][73] However, alternative theories have difficulty explaining why transvestism and autogynephilia co-occur at high rates with other paraphilias, among other issues.[47][38][41]

Consequent to inadequate studies and evidence, there is presently no scientific consensus about the etiology of transvestism, and no theoretical explanations for the condition have been widely accepted.[1][6]

Diagnosis edit

When excessive or problematic, transvestism has been defined as a psychiatric diagnosis, including in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (as transvestic disorder) and the International Classification of Diseases, 10th Edition (ICD-10) (as fetishistic transvestism).[1][2] The diagnosis can be given regardless of sex or sexual orientation.[1] In the ICD-10, it can be given regardless of clinically significant distress or functional impairment, whereas in the DSM-5, significant distress or functional impairment is required.[1] In the ICD-10, the diagnoses of transvestism and transsexualism are not mutually exclusive.[1] There is no firm division between these diagnoses, and it is thought that there is a continuous spectrum of symptomatology between them.[1][38]

The diagnostic criteria for transvestic disorder in the DSM-5 (2013) and DSM-5-TR (2022) are as follows:[3][82][2]

Criterion A: Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent and intense sexual arousal from cross-dressing, as manifested by fantasies, urges, or behaviors.

Criterion B: The fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational or other important areas of functioning.

Specify if:

With fetishism: If sexually aroused by fabrics, materials, or garments.
With autogynephilia: If sexually aroused by thoughts or images of self as female.

Specify if:

In controlled environment: This specifier is primarily applicable to individuals living in institutional or other settings where opportunities to engage in voyeuristic behavior are restricted.
In full remission: [DSM-5-only: The individual has not acted on the urges with a nonconsenting person, and] [t]here has been no distress or impairment in social, occupational or other areas of functioning, for at least 5 years while in an uncontrolled environment.

Transvestism is diagnosed via thorough clinical interview and other psychological assessment methods.[3][4] This focuses on crossdressing and its relationship with sexual arousal.[3] Past personal history should also be reviewed.[3] No specific diagnostic tests for transvestism exist.[3] Physiological measures of sexual arousal such as phallometry may be useful in the evaluation of transvestism,[4] although the usefulness in diagnosis has not been clearly established.[3] The essential diagnostic features of transvestism are recurrent, intensely arousing sexual fantasies, urges, or behaviors involving crossdressing.[1][2] The diagnosis is not warranted if transvestism is not accompanied by clinically significant distress or impairment.[2]

Two subtypes of transvestism have been defined in the DSM-5, including with fetishism, when sexual arousal is to "fabrics, materials, or garments", and with autogynephilia, when sexual arousal is to "thoughts or images of self as female".[1] It can be difficult to distinguish between transvestism and fetishism for items of women's clothing.[1][12][5] The with autogynephilia specifier is only applied to males; the female analogue, autoandrophilia (sexual arousal and attraction to the thought of oneself as male), has been reported rarely and is thought to be less common.[1][14] The autogynephilic and autoandrophilic subtypes are considered to be erotic target location errors, conditions in which a person is sexually attracted to oneself as the sex they are oriented towards.[12][14] Ray Blanchard, who was chair of the DSM-5 paraphilias working group, said that he doesn't think autoandrophilia in women actually exists, and that if sexual arousal in women with crossdressing does exist, it's rare.[83][5] He remarked that the diagnosis of transvestism allowing women to be diagnosed was simply to avoid accusations of sexism.[83]

The ICD-10 diagnosis of fetishistic transvestism, as well as the ICD-10 diagnoses of sadomasochism, fetishism, and dual-role transvestism, were all removed in the ICD-11.[84][65] This was towards the aim of depathologization.[65] These conditions are consensual or solitary activities, do not inherently result in harm to oneself or others, and are not necessarily distressing or impairing.[65] Hence, they were deemed to lack clinical relevance and public health significance.[85][65] Instead of being defined as mental disorders, they may be more accurately viewed as variants in sexuality and/or gender expression.[65] In any case, the new diagnostic category of "other paraphilic disorder involving solitary behaviour or consenting individuals" in the ICD-11 can be used instead of fetishistic transvestism if the condition is associated with marked distress or functional impairment.[85][84] The distress should however not be exclusively based on rejection or fear of rejection by other people, in which psychotherapy is instead indicated.[84]

Differential diagnoses for transvestism include simple fetishism for women's clothing and gender dysphoria or transgenderism.[1] However, these diagnoses are not distinctly separated, and may be viewed as points on a continuous spectrum of symptomatology.[1] Another differential diagnosis is dual-role transvestism, which is not a paraphilia and explicitly excludes sexual arousal.[1][7] Dual-role transvestism involves crossdressing to temporarily experience membership of being the opposite sex but without sexual arousal or desire for gender transition.[1] However, many men with transvestism may be misdiagnosed as having dual-role transvestism.[1] This is because men with transvestism often deny experiencing sexual arousal with crossdressing, yet this arousal is frequently still detectable with phallometry.[1][36] It has been stated that dual-role transvestism is rarely, if ever, actually applicable to non-homosexual males.[39]

Changes over time edit

The formal diagnosis of transvestism has changed over time.[3][5][6] Transvestism was included in the DSM-I (1952) under the diagnosis "sexual deviation", with "transvestism" as a type specifier,[86][6] and then in the DSM-II (1968) under the category "sexual deviations", with the subdvision "transvetitism".[87][6] Transvestism was included in the "Psychosexual Disorders" chapter of the DSM-III (1980) under the paraphilias category.[88][6] As with other diagnoses in the DSM, this was the first time that the diagnosis of transvestism was thoroughly described or given explicit diagnostic criteria.[88] Whereas the DSM-III used the term "transvestism", the DSM-III-R introduced the term "transvestic fetishism", but otherwise there was very little change in the diagnosis between these versions.[89][5][3][6] The term "transvestic fetishism" was also used in the DSM-IV[90][3] and the DSM-IV-TR.[91] The name change was likely made to help disambiguate the term "transvestism", which had also been used to refer to crossdressing in homosexual men (drag queens) and had historically been used to refer to transsexuals (now transgender people).[5][3]

The DSM-5 returned to using the term "transvestism" and also distinguished between transvestism and transvestic disorder, similarly to the case for other paraphilias.[82][3] Transvestism is defined as a paraphilia, whereas transvestic disorder is defined as a paraphilic disorder (i.e., a paraphilia that is excessive and/or problematic and rises to the level of being a disorder). [...][5] However, one of the DSM-5 specifiers denotes whether transvestism occurs with fetishism.[3] The previous term "transvestic fetishism" had been criticized as conflating two distinct paraphilias (transvestism and fetishism) and emphasizing one (fetishism) at the expense of the other (transvestism).[5][3] The diagnosis of transvestism was largely unchanged in the DSM-5-TR compared to the DSM-5.[2]

In the DSM-IV, transvestism was limited to heterosexual men, but this restriction was removed in the DSM-5 and the diagnosis was opened up to men and women with the disposition and regardless of sexual orientation.[1] However, individuals with transvestism are almost always male and heterosexual.[4][92][13][16] In the DSM-III, transvestism and gender identity disorder of adolescence or adulthood were mutually exclusive, and the latter diagnosis was given to cases of transvestism that had progressed to exhibiting gender dysphoria.[6] Conversely, in the DSM-IV, transvestism was given a new specifier of with gender dysphoria.[6] The specifiers with autogynephilia and with fetishism for transvestism in the DSM-5 replaced the earlier specifier of with gender dysphoria in the DSM-IV and DSM-IV-TR.[5] It was however also previously noted in the DSM-IV-TR that the diagnosis of transvestic fetishism was often due to autogynephilia.[4] The inclusion of the with autogynephilia specifier in the DSM-5 was opposed by the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH).[6][93][94]

Treatment edit

Information about treatment of transvestism is very scarce.[1][3] Most men with transvestism do not seek nor desire treatment for their condition.[1][3][4][13] Treatment is also not necessarily indicated.[1] When treatment is sought, it is often due to pressure from others, for example family members and sometimes employers.[13]

Psychotherapy has been suggested for treatment of transvestism, including relapse prevention, harm reduction, mindfulness, emotional regulation, dialectical behavior therapy, psychodynamic therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, and supportive therapy.[3][1][4] However, these treatments for transvestism are not currently evidence-based, largely lacking even supporting case reports.[3][4] It has been stated that attempts to remove the desire to crossdress with psychotherapy have invariably been unsuccessful.[1] In any case, psychotherapy to help control the frequency of crossdressing, negative thinking and feelings related to crossdressing, or social consequences may be useful.[1] Including spouses and family members in psychotherapy, alone or in group therapy, may also be valuable.[1][3] Psychoeducation by clinicians may be helpful.[3] Self-help, support groups, and social support organizations and societies for people with transvestism or crossdressing may be helpful as well.[3][1][4] One such example is Tri-Ess (Society for the Second Self), the largest such organization.[3][4] Self-help books for transvestism are mostly unavailable.[3][4]

A limited number of case reports and series exist of treating problematic transvestism with medications.[3][8][9][4] These include serotonergic antidepressants like fluoxetine, sertraline, escitalopram, clomipramine, and phenelzine, the anxiolytic buspirone, the mood stabilizer lithium, the antidopaminergic antipsychotic pimozide,[95] the progestogenic antiandrogens cyproterone acetate and medroxyprogesterone acetate at very high doses, the gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist leuprorelin, and the estrogen diethylstilbestrol.[3][8][9][4] Combination therapy, for instance with a serotonergic antidepressant and a progestogenic antiandrogen, can also be tried.[8] Hormonal agents should be reserved for extreme cases.[3] Many of these treatments are thought to work by suppressing sex drive and sexual arousal.[8][9] However, reports of effectiveness are anecdotal.[1] Moreover, medication treatments can have side effects and risks, sometimes serious, like decreased bone strength with antiandrogens.[8][9][3]

Dopaminergic medications have been reported to induce or worsen transvestism and other paraphilias in case reports.[96] In the case of transvestism, this has included levodopa, ropinirole, lisuride, selegiline, pergolide, and pramipexole.[96] In one instance, a man with Parkinson's disease was treated with the dopamine-elevating MAO-B inhibitor selegiline and developed transvestism and hypersexuality.[3][4][97] He had no prior history of crossdressing or desire to do so.[3][97] His transvestism resolved upon discontinuation of selegiline.[3][4][97] Other paraphilias and hypersexuality have also been found to be induced or exacerbated with dopamine agonists and other dopaminergic agents in men with Parkinson's disease.[97][96] Dopamine antagonists have been reported to be effective in ameliorating symptoms of such paraphilic exacerbations in case reports.[96][97] Besides dopamine agonists, dopamine releasing agents, like amphetamines, have been reported to induce or worsen transvestism in case instances.[34][98][99]

Although men with transvestism don't usually seek treatment, those who develop gender dysphoria and a transgender identity frequently seek treatment in the form of medical gender transition with hormone therapy and surgical procedures.[1]

Prognosis edit

Transvestism is a chronic and lifelong condition.[1] Paraphilias like transvestism, as with normal other-directed sexual orientations, appear to be immutable in adulthood.[12] The course of transvestism can be continuous or episodic.[2] In episodic cases, the intensity of transvestism fluctuates and occasionally there may be temporary remissions.[1][2] Transvestism often has a progressive course, resulting in the desire for crossdressing more frequently, extensively, and/or publicly.[1] In some cases, it can develop into gender dysphoria and being transgender.[1] Men with transvestism often report social consequences and difficulties.[1] These include divorce, marital problems, opposition by family, relationship problems with men and women, and occupational challenges.[1]

Epidemiology edit

The vast majority of people with transvestism are male.[1][2] In a population-based study in Sweden, 2.8% of men reported at least one episode of sexual arousal with crossdressing.[1][2][37] In another study, of German male volunteers, 7.4% of individuals reported a history of sexual arousal with crossdressing acts or fantasies.[1] In this sample, only 1.9% described these experiences as intensely arousing, and almost all denied distress.[1] A review of the data from 10 additional studies concluded that likely 2 to 3% of men (with a range of 2.0 to 10.9%) have experienced sexual arousal with crossdressing.[1][12][20]

With the exception of masochism, paraphilias are thought to be very rare in women and are much less common than in men.[21][22][12][14] In the Swedish population-based study in which 2.8% of men reported at least one episode of sexual arousal with crossdressing, 0.4% of women also did so.[1][37] Other population studies have also found small numbers of women reporting transvestism.[14] However, it is unclear whether these instances in women represent genuine transvestism rather than something superficially similar.[1][14] Transvestism in women is extremely rare and almost unknown, with only a few published case reports existing.[1][14][12][3][2][50][76]

Ray Blanchard has said that autogynephilia does not occur in cisgender women or occurs rarely in these individuals.[17][68] However, two surveys, by Charles Allen Moser and Jaimie Veale and colleagues, claimed that autogynephilia (including autogynephilic homeovestism) occurs at high rates in cisgender women.[38][39][14][68][100][101] In the study by Moser, almost all of the women (90%) were heterosexual.[100] These studies have been criticized as having methodological limitations, and, owing to lack of measurement sophistication, obtaining responses that may have merely superficially resembled autogynephilia.[38][11][39][102] Rather than measuring autogynephilia, it has been argued that they may have measured sexual arousal caused by anticipation from a romantic evening or sexual encounter.[38][11][39][102][14] A subsequent study by J. Michael Bailey and colleagues using Blanchard's original Core Autogynephilia Scale found low scores for autogynephilia in cisgender women and men compared to crossdressers and other autogynephiles.[103] The findings have been challenged and criticized by certain academics including Moser, Veale, and Julia Serano however, and more research is needed to further clarify the question of whether genuine autogynephilia occurs or not in cisgender women.[104][105][106]

Transvestism has principally been described in Western cultures.[1] It is unknown whether the phenomenon is more prevalent in Western cultures or if it is merely more visible in these cultures.[1]

History and terminology edit

The term transvestism, from the Latin "trans" (across, over) and "vestitus" (dress, dressed, clothed), literally means crossdressing.[3] The terms transvestism and transvestite (crossdresser) were introduced by gay German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld in his 1910 book, Die Transvestiten: Eine Untersuchung über den Erotischen Verkleidungstrieb (Transvestites: The Erotic Drive to Cross-Dress).[17][3][18][19] However, records of transvestic behavior and crossdressing date back to the Bible and Ancient Greece.[3] The terms transvestism and transvestite, as coined by Hirschfeld, were originally not specific to erotic crossdressing, but were applied to all individuals who crossdressed, as well as to transsexuals or transgender people.[17][13] He sometimes used the terms extreme transvestites or total transvestites to refer to what would subsequently be called transsexuals.[107][108][109] Hirschfeld briefly coined the term transsexual in 1923, but it was not widely used until later on.[65][110] Transvestism and transsexualism were not distinguished as separate diagnostic categories until the 1950s, which occurred through the work of German-American endocrinologist and sexologist Harry Benjamin.[13][65][111][112][113]

Hirschfeld, in 1918, was the first to observe that some male crossdressers are sexually aroused by the thought or image of themselves as women.[17][114][115] He referred to this phenomenon as automonosexuality (sexual arousal strictly from oneself), and referred to individuals with the disposition as automonosexuals or automonosexual transvestites.[17][114][116][115] Hirschfeld was also the first to distinguish these individuals from homosexual men.[17][50] The English-French sexologist Havelock Ellis subsequently observed this phenomenon and referred to it as sexo-aesthetic inversion in 1913 and as eonism (after 18th-century French crossdresser Chevalier d'Éon) in 1928.[114][17][65][117][118][119] Other researchers, such as Otto Fenichel and H. Taylor Buckner, observed the phenomenon as well.[17] The full-time heterosexual male erotic crossdresser Virginia Prince coined and used the term femmiphilia, or love of the feminine, to refer to the phenomenon and described herself and others as femmiphiles by the mid-1960s.[24][120][121][40][122] She preferred the term femmiphile over transvestite as the latter term had been used too indiscriminately, for instance to refer to crossdressing for any reason.[24][121] Prince wished to highlight the motive for crossdressing in erotic heterosexual crossdressers like herself, as well as the differences between these crossdressers and others like homosexual men, drag queens, and transgender women who crossdressed for different reasons.[24][120][121][122] However, Prince also had the central explanation that crossdressing was to express the feminine self and maintained that sexual factors played only a minor role.[13]

In 1982, the Czech-Canadian sexologist Kurt Freund distinguished between two types of cross-gender identity, one related to homosexuality and another preceded by transvestism and related to what he referred to as cross-gender fetishism.[17][123] In 1989, Canadian sexologist Ray Blanchard, a protégé of Freund, coined the term autogynephilia (Greek "auto" (self), "gyne" (woman), "philia" (love) and literally "love of oneself as a woman") to describe the phenomenon of sexual arousal to oneself as a woman.[17][114] Blanchard conceptualized autogynephilia as a paraphilia representing self-directed male heterosexuality.[17][114] He decided to coin the term after encountering a gender dysphoric patient named Philip, who was sexually aroused by the fantasy of having a female body (including breasts, a vagina, and soft skin), but unlike most of Blanchard's similar patients, was not sexually interested in dressing in female clothes.[17] Blanchard realized that prior terms, like transvestism and cross-gender fetishism, were inadequate or poorly descriptive, so he introduced autogynephilia as a new term to use instead.[17] Subsequently, in 1991, Blanchard defined four distinct types of autogynephilia that he had observed clinically—transvestic, behavioral, physiologic, and anatomic.[47][124] Consequently, transvestism became defined as a subtype of autogynephilia, and is now also known as transvestic autogynephilia.[47][124][33] The term autogynephilia was subsequently included as a descriptor and specifier for the diagnosis of transvestism or transvestic fetishism in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,[1][5] including in the DSM-IV-TR (2000),[91] the DSM-5 (2013),[82] and the DSM-5-TR (2022).[2]

Virginia Prince conducted major studies into men with transvestism, which were published in 1972 and 1997.[24][25][40][16] Her first publication in this area was in 1957.[24][125][126] She also founded the Foundation for Full Personality Expression (FPE), which eventually became Tri-Ess (Society for the Second Self), started the magazine Transvestia in 1960, and was an activist for promoting understanding and destigmatization of men with transvestism.[24][25][13]

The first literature use of the term autoandrophilia was in 1995.[12][127] Homeovestism, sexual interest in wearing certain kinds of same-gender clothing, and a phenomenon consistent with the concept of autoandrophilia, was observed in homosexual men and first described in the 1970s by George Zavitzianos.[14][12][11][61][128][129] The first clear report of autoandrophilia, a case report of anatomic autoandrophilia in a homosexual man without mention of homeovestism, was reported by Anne Lawrence in 2009.[14][130] The first and among the only, published cases of transvestism in women were reported by Emil Gutheil in 1930 and Robert Stoller in 1982.[12][50][76][131][132]

Transvestism has also been referred to under a variety of other names besides transvestism, including transvestitism, transvestic fetishism, fetishistic transvestism, transvestic disorder, paraphilic transvestism, femmiphilic transvestism, heterosexual transvestism, transvestic autogynephilia, sartorial autogynephilia, erotic crossdressing, and sexual crossdressing, among others.[1][10][3][5][6][133][76] Today, the term transvestite is considered derogatory, and has fallen out of fashion in favor of the word crossdresser.[134][135][136][137][138][139] However, some crossdressers have reclaimed the word transvestite.[139] Some people who would previously be called "transvestites" or "crossdressers" would be referred to as (non-transitioning) transgender people today.[28][29][27][30][31]

Society and culture edit

Notable cases edit

Virginia Prince was a full-time heterosexual male crossdresser and one of the most famous such individuals of the 20th century.[25][27] She founded the crossdressing magazine Transvestia, the crossdressing organization Tri-Ess (Society for the Second Self), and conducted major studies of men with transvestism.[25] Other famous heterosexual male crossdressers involved in the crossdressing community include Louise Lawrence and Edythe Ferguson.[26][27]

Some individuals who have described a history of sexual arousal with crossdressing, for instance in autobiographies, have gone on to transition and become transgender women.[44][69][140] Some of these cases have been reviewed by Anne Lawrence.[44] They include Lawrence herself,[39][141] Deirdre McCloskey[142] Kate Bornstein,[44] Renée Richards,[44][143] and Katherine Cummings,[44][144] among others.[44]

A number of paraphilic serial killers have been reported to have transvestism, including Dennis Rader[59] Ed Gein,[145][146][147] Gerard John Schaefer[59] Jerry Brudos,[145][148] and Richard Speck,[149][150] as well as others.[151][152]

Media representations edit

Transvestism has been portrayed in the media and popular culture, often in highly stigmatizing ways.[153][154][155][156][157]

Media representations of transvestism include Denise Bryson (David Duchovny) in Twin Peaks (1991),[154] Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins) in Psycho (1960),[146] Paul Smecker (Willem Dafoe) in The Boondock Saints (1999),[154][153] and Galaxia (Woody Harrelson) in Anger Management (2003).[155][156]

Books about transvestism have been published, for instance Helen Boyd's My Husband Betty: Love, Sex, and Life with a Crossdresser (2003), Boyd's She's Not The Man I Married: My Life with a Transgender Husband (2007),[158][159] and Richard J. Novic's Alice in Genderland: A Crossdresser Comes of Age (2005), among others.[160]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey ez fa Lawrence, Anne A. (2017). "Transvestism". In Puri, Basant; Treasaden, Ian (eds.). (PDF) (1 ed.). London: CRC Press. doi:10.1201/9781315380797-48. ISBN 9781315380797. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2024-03-23.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo DSM-5 Task Force and Work Groups (2022). "Paraphilic Disorders". Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition Text Revision (DSM-5-TR) (5 (TR) ed.). Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Association. pp. 779–801. ISBN 9780890425756. Transvestic Disorder. Diagnostic Criteria. F65.1. [...] Specify if: With fetishism: If sexually aroused by fabrics, materials, or garments. With autogynephilia: If sexually aroused by thoughts or images of self as a woman. [...] Specifiers: The presence of fetishism decreases the likelihood of gender dysphoria in men with transvestic disorder. The presence of autogynephilia increases the likelihood of gender dysphoria in men with transvestic disorder. [...] Associated Features: Transvestic disorder in men is often accompanied by autogynephilia (i.e., a man's paraphilic tendency to be sexually aroused by the thought or image of himself as a woman). Autogynephilic fantasies and behaviors may focus on the idea of exhibiting female physiological functions (e.g., lactation, menstruation), engaging in stereotypically feminine behavior (e.g., knitting), or possessing female anatomy (e.g., breasts). [...]{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br Balon, Richard (2016). "Transvestic Disorder". Practical Guide to Paraphilia and Paraphilic Disorders. Cham: Springer International Publishing. p. 171–185. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-42650-1_12. ISBN 978-3-319-42648-8.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Newring, Kirk A. B.; Wheeler, Jennifer; Draper, Crissa (2008). "Transvestic Fetishism: Assessment and Treatment". In Laws, D. Richard; O'Donohue, William T. (eds.). Sexual Deviance: Theory, Assessment, and Treatment (2 ed.). Guilford Publications. pp. 285–304. ISBN 978-1-4625-0669-9. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Blanchard R (April 2010). "The DSM diagnostic criteria for transvestic fetishism". Arch Sex Behav. 39 (2): 363–372. doi:10.1007/s10508-009-9541-3. PMID 19757010.
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  10. ^ a b Fedoroff, J. Paul (2020). "Transvestic Disorder". The Paraphilias: Changing Suits in the Evolution of Sexual Interest Paradigms. Oxford University Press. pp. 195–208. ISBN 9780190466329.
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  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Blanchard R (August 2005). "Early history of the concept of autogynephilia" (PDF). Arch Sex Behav. 34 (4): 439–46. doi:10.1007/s10508-005-4343-8. PMID 16010466.
  18. ^ a b Hirschfeld, Magnus. Die Transvestiten: Eine Untersuchung über den erotischen Verkleidungstrieb [Transvestites: The Erotic Drive to Cross-Dress] (in German). Berlin: Medicinischer Verlag Alfred Pulvermacher & Co. OCLC 14774739. OL 26208471M.
  19. ^ a b Hirscshfeld, Magnus (1991) [1910]. Transvestites: The Erotic Drive to Cross-Dress. Translated by Lombardi-Nash, Michael A. Buffalo: Prometheus Books. ISBN 9780879756659. LCCN 90024827. OCLC 22812111. OL 1866706M.
  20. ^ a b c d Lawrence, Anne A. (2007). (PDF). Perspect. Biol. Med. 50 (4): 506–520. doi:10.1353/pbm.2007.0050. PMID 17951885. S2CID 31767722. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2023-12-11. Retrieved 2024-05-15.
  21. ^ a b Thibaut, Florence; Barra, Flora De La; Gordon, Harvey; Cosyns, Paul; Bradford, John M. W.; the WFSBP Task Force on Sexual Disorders (2010). "The World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry (WFSBP) Guidelines for the biological treatment of paraphilias". The World Journal of Biological Psychiatry. 11 (4): 604–655. doi:10.3109/15622971003671628. ISSN 1562-2975. In total, more than 50 types of paraphilias have been described, most of them being far more common in men (about 99% in Europe) than in women, but the percentage of women is increasing in the US (Abel and Harlow 2001; Hall and Hall 2007, for review). Except for sexual masochism, which is about 20 times less likely to affect men than women, paraphilias are quite unlikely to be diagnosed in women.
  22. ^ a b Cortoni, Franca; Gannon, Theresa A. (31 October 2016). "The Assessment of Female Sexual Offenders". In Boer, Douglas P. (ed.). The Wiley Handbook on the Theories, Assessment and Treatment of Sexual Offending. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 1017–1036. doi:10.1002/9781118574003.wattso046. ISBN 978-1-118-57266-5. Given the relative importance of inappropriate sexual interests in sexual offending behaviour among males (Hanson & Morton-Bourgon, 2005), this area is surprisingly meagre in the female sexual offender research. Studies conducted have tended to be case study based or obtained from clinical practice self-report data (Cooper, Swaminath, Baxter, & Poulin, 1990; Saradjian & Hanks, 1996). In general, the research literature suggests that—compared to males—a relatively small proportion of females appear to hold inappropriate sexual interests of some degree (Green & Kaplan, 1994; Nathan & Ward, 2002; Saradjian & Hanks, 1996). Certainly, there appears to be a much lower prevalence of paedophilia and associated paraphilia diagnoses in women when compared to their male counterparts (Abel & Osborn, 2000; Davin, Hislop, & Dunbar, 1999; Federoff, Fishell, & Federoff, 1999).
  23. ^ Lev, Arlene Istar (2007). "Transgender Communities: Developing Identity Through Connection". In Bieschke, K. J.; Perez, R. M.; DeBord, K. A. (eds.). Handbook of Counseling and Psychotherapy With Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Clients (2 ed.). Washington: American Psychological Association. p. 147–175. doi:10.1037/11482-006. ISBN 978-1-59147-421-0.
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  25. ^ a b c d e Ekins, R.; King, D. (2006). Virginia Prince: Pioneer of Transgendering. International journal of transgenderism. Taylor & Francis. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-7890-3055-9. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  26. ^ a b Hill, Robert S. (2007). "Telling Gender Stories". 'As a Man I Exist; as a Woman I Live': Heterosexual Transvestism and the Contours of Gender and Sexuality in Postwar America. pp. 45–116. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  27. ^ a b c d e Lair, Liam Oliver (2015). "Interrogating Trans* Identities in the Archives". In Stone, A.L.; Cantrell, J. (eds.). Out of the Closet, Into the Archives: Researching Sexual Histories. SUNY series in Queer Politics and Cultures. State University of New York Press. pp. 233–254. ISBN 978-1-4384-5905-9. Retrieved 19 May 2024. I am committed to expanding the available narratives of transvestites and transsexuals beyond a linear "born in the wrong body" narrative. Many trans* people, even today, are coerced into telling a very linear narrative to claim a medically legitimized trans* identity, a narrative about "being born in the wrong body" and "having always felt this way." While this narrative is true for some, for many it is not. Yet it continues to influence how trans* people understand themselves, and what doctors expect to hear from those seeking medical intervention. Virginia Prince, one of the best-known transvestites of the mid to late twentieth century, critiqued this formulaic narrative as early as the late 1970s, arguing that it was often provided to doctors based on the hope that if it worked for one person, it might work for another.30 [...] In the reading room at the [Kinsey Institute], I touched and held letters by transwomen I had read about for years: Christine Jorgensen, Virginia Prince, and Louise Lawrence.
  28. ^ a b Vicente, Marta V. (10 July 2023). "Transgender: A Useful Category?: Or, How the Historical Study of "Transsexual" and "Transvestite" Can Help Us Rethink "Transgender" as a Category". Unequal Sisters. New York: Routledge. p. 126–138. doi:10.4324/9781003053989-12. ISBN 978-1-003-05398-9.
  29. ^ a b Bevan, Dana Jennett (2019). Transgender Health and Medicine: History, Practice, Research, and the Future. Essentials of Psychology and Health. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 16–17. ISBN 979-8-216-15713-7. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  30. ^ a b Chiang, H. (2021). Transtopia in the Sinophone Pacific. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-54917-2. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  31. ^ a b Simone, Caleb (2024). "Archival Kinship: Mid-Century Male Transvestism, Transvestia Newsletter, and Trans Community Building Across Time". ProQuest. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  32. ^ Moser, Charles; Kleinplatz, Peggy J. (2002). "Transvestic fetishism: Psychopathology or iatrogenic artifact?" (PDF). New Jersey Psychologist. 52 (2): 16–17.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Lawrence, Anne A. (2012). "Manifestations of Autogynephilia". Men Trapped in Men's Bodies (PDF). New York, NY: Springer New York. p. 95–110. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-5182-2_6. ISBN 978-1-4614-5181-5.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k McConaghy, Nathaniel (1993). "Transvestism and Transsexualism: Sex Identity Disorders". Sexual Behavior. Boston, MA: Springer US. p. 143–181. doi:10.1007/978-1-4899-1133-9_4. ISBN 978-1-4899-1135-3. Ferrando, McCorvey, Simon, and Stewart (1988) reported transvestism in a 32-year-old man that occurred only on the occasions he ingested the contents of inhalants containing levo-methamphetamine and other volatile substances. They postulated several biochemical brain mechanisms whereby the drug could induce transvestism; however, they pointed out that other amphetamine congeners had been associated with bizarre sexual activities that did not include transvestism. They did not appear to have considered the possibility that the subject they reported may have had transvestite impulses that he controlled when not disinhibited by the drug.
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  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Lawrence, Anne A. (2009). "Transgenderism in Nonhomosexual Males As a Paraphilic Phenomenon: Implications for Case Conceptualization and Treatment" (PDF). Sexual and Relationship Therapy. 24 (2): 188–206. doi:10.1080/14681990902937340. ISSN 1468-1994.
  42. ^ Calazans, Gabriela; Facchini, Regina (2022). ""But the category of exposure also has to respect identity": MSM, classifications and disputes in AIDS policy". Ciência & Saúde Coletiva. 27 (10): 3913–3922. doi:10.1590/1413-812320222710.08142022. ISSN 1678-4561.
  43. ^ Beyrer, Chris; Baral, Stefan D.; Walker, Damian; Wirtz, Andrea L.; Johns, Benjamin; Sifakis, Frangiscos (2010). "The Expanding Epidemics of HIV Type 1 Among Men Who Have Sex With Men in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Diversity and Consistency". Epidemiologic Reviews. 32 (1): 137–151. doi:10.1093/epirev/mxq011. ISSN 1478-6729.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g Lawrence, Anne A. (2012). "Theory and Case Histories". Men Trapped in Men's Bodies (PDF). New York, NY: Springer New York. p. 19–35. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-5182-2_2. ISBN 978-1-4614-5181-5. McCloskey ( 1999 ) , a MtF transsexual whose history is consistent with a nonhomosexual orientation—she was not effeminate in childhood, married a woman and fathered two children, and underwent SRS at age 53—authored an autobiography in which she described her lengthy history of cross-gender fetishism. Prior to gender transition, she had identi fi ed as "just a heterosexual cross-dresser" (p. 48), "just a guy who gets off dressing occasionally as a woman" (p. 50). Until about a year before she underwent SRS in 1996, her cross-dressing had routinely been associated with sexual arousal and, presumably, masturbation: "Until the spring of 1995, each of the fi ve thousand episodes [of cross-dressing] was associated with quick male sex. (p. 16)" [...] In an autobiographical essay, Bornstein ( 1995 ) , a nonhomosexual MtF transsexual who had undergone SRS, repeatedly quoted from erotica written for heterosexual cross-dressers and con fi ded that "I never stopped reading those porno books. I still have a small collection of them." (p. 232). Bornstein also observed that, 7 years after undergoing SRS, she continued to be aroused by the image of herself as a female: "It's been 7 years, and y'know what? I still get a thrill when I look at myself in the mirror and I see girl not boy. (p. 238)"
  45. ^ a b Lowenstein, L. F. (2002). "Fetishes and Their Associated Behavior". Sexuality and Disability. 20 (2): 135–147. doi:10.1023/A:1019882428372. Categorising of transvestite type fetishism was attempted by Freund et al. (1996). The study attempted to differentiate two clinical types of fetishism, fetishism proper and transvestism, and to determine if transvestites were truly fetishistic. Transvestites were further divided into gender-conforming and gender-nonconforming groups according to their score on gender identity scale. These groups were compared using a self-report scale measuring true fetishistic behaviour and interests, and a set of questionnaires regarding their childhood history, parental characteristics, and emotional closeness with their parents. In addition, the penile responses of a subtest of fetishes and transvestites were recorded while they were presented with visual depictions of female and male pubic regions and potentially fetishistic objects such as nylon stockings, female and male shoes, panties, male underwear, female and male feet. The fetishists proper and the transvestite subgroups did not differ from each other in terms of self-reported fetishism interests or childhood and family histories. Moreover, there were no differences between these groups and their penile responses to the potentially fetishistic stimuli they were most aroused by. The results suggest that transvestites were in fact fetishists and they were difficult to distinguish from other fetishists.
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  82. ^ a b c DSM-5 Task Force (2013). "Paraphilic Disorders". Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5). Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Association. pp. 685–705. ISBN 978-0-89042-554-1. Transvestic Disorder. Diagnostic Criteria. 302.3 (F65.1). [...] Specify if: With fetishism: If sexually aroused by fabrics, materials, or garments. With autogynephilia: If sexually aroused by thoughts or images of self as female. [...] Specifiers: The presence of fetishism decreases the likelihood of gender dysphoria in men with transvestic disorder. The presence of autogynephilia increases the likelihood of gender dysphoria in men with transvestic disorder. [...] Associated Features Supporting Diagnosis: Transvestic disorder in men is often accompanied by autogynephilia (i.e., a male's paraphilic tendency to be sexually aroused by the thought or image of himself as a woman). Autogynephilic fantasies and behaviors may focus on the idea of exhibiting female physiological functions (e.g., lactation, menstruation), engaging in stereotypically feminine behavior (e.g., knitting), or possessing female anatomy (e.g., breasts).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  83. ^ a b Cameron, Laura (11 April 2013). "How the Psychiatrist Who Co-Wrote the Manual on Sex Talks About Sex". VICE. Retrieved 16 May 2024. Do you think autoandrophelia, where a woman is aroused by the thought of herself as a man, is a real paraphelia? No, I proposed it simply in order not to be accused of sexism, because there are all these women who want to say, "women can rape too, women can be pedophiles too, women can be exhibitionists too." It's a perverse expression of feminism, and so, I thought, let me jump the gun on this. I don't think the phenomenon even exists.
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  86. ^ The Committee on Nomenclature and Statistics of the American Psychiatric Association (1952). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual: Mental Disorders. Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Association. pp. 38–39. 000-x63 Sexual deviation. This diagnosis is reserved for deviant sexuality which is not symptomatic of more extensive syndromes, such as schizophrenic and obsessional reactions. The term includes most of the cases formerly classed as "psychopathic personality with pathologic sexuality." The diagnosis will specify the type of the pathologic behavior, such as homosexuality, transvestism, pedophilia, fetishism and sexual sadism (including rape, sexual assault, mutilation).
  87. ^ The Committee On Nomenclature and Statistics of the American Psychiatric Association (1968). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Second Edition (DSM-II) (2 ed.). Washington, D. C.: American Psychiatric Association. pp. 44, 52. LCCN 68-26515. 302 Sexual deviations: This category is for individuals whose sexual interests are directed primarily toward objects other than people of the opposite sex, toward sexual acts not usually associated with coitus, or toward coitus performed under bizarre circumstances as in necrophilia, pedophilia, sexual sadism, and fetishism. Even though many find their practices distasteful, they remain unable to substitute normal sexual behavior for them. This diagnosis is not appropriate for individuals who perform deviant sexual acts because normal sexual objects are not available to them. 302.0 Homosexuality. 302.1 Fetishism. 302.2 Pedophilia. 302.3 Transvestitism. 302.4 Exhibitionism. 302.5* Voyeurism*. 302.6* Sadism*. 302.7* Masochism*. 302.8 Other sexual deviation. [302.9 Unspecified sexual deviation].
  88. ^ a b Task Force on Nomenclature and Statistics of the American Psychiatric Association (February 1980). "Psychosexual Disorders". Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition (3 ed.). Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Association. pp. 261–285. LCCN 79-055868.
  89. ^ Work Group to Revise DSM-III of the American Psychiatric Association (1987). "Sexual Disorders". Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (Third Edition - Revised) (DSM-III-R) (3 (revised) ed.). Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Association. pp. 279–296. 302.30 Transvestic Fetishism. The essential feature of this disorder is recurrent, intense, sexual urges and sexually arousing fantasies, of at least six months' duration, involving cross-dressing. The person has acted on these urges, or is markedly distressed by them. Usually the person keeps a collection of women's clothes that he intermittently uses to cross-dress when alone. While cross-dressed, he usually masturbates and imagines other males' being attracted to him as a woman in his female attire. [...]
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  100. ^ a b Moser, Charles (30 June 2009). "Autogynephilia in Women". Journal of Homosexuality. 56 (5): 539–547. doi:10.1080/00918360903005212. ISSN 0091-8369.
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  103. ^ Bailey, J. Michael; Hsu, Kevin J. (2022). "How Autogynephilic Are Natal Females?". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 51 (7): 3311–3318. doi:10.1007/s10508-022-02359-8. ISSN 0004-0002.
  104. ^ Moser, Charles (2023). "A Response to Bailey and Hsu (2022): It Helps If You Stop Confusing Gender Dysphoria and Transvestism". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 52 (2): 469–471. doi:10.1007/s10508-022-02418-0. ISSN 0004-0002.
  105. ^ Serano, Julia M.; Veale, Jaimie F. (2023). "Autogynephilia Is a Flawed Framework for Understanding Female Embodiment Fantasies: A Response to Bailey and Hsu (2022)". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 52 (2): 473–477. doi:10.1007/s10508-022-02414-4. ISSN 0004-0002.
  106. ^ Bailey, J. Michael (2023). "Autogynephilia and Science: A Response to Moser (2022) and Serano and Veale (2022)". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 52 (2): 479–481. doi:10.1007/s10508-022-02482-6. ISSN 0004-0002.
  107. ^ Holmes, Morgan (2016). Critical Intersex. Routledge. p. 176. ISBN 978-1-317-15730-4. The term 'transvestism' was coined by Berlin sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld (1868–1935) in 1910 for individuals compelled to wear the typical clothes of the 'opposite' sex; Hirschfeld later used the term 'extreme transvestism' for those who wanted to pass physically as a person of the gender to which they felt they truly belonged. For these subjects he also used, albeit unsystematically, the term 'transsexual' (Hirschauer 1993: 96, Hirschfeld 1923: 15). Beginning in 1912 the first sex-change operations were carried out in Berlin under Hirschfeld's supervision (Herrn 2005).
  108. ^ Mak, Geertje (2022). "The Sex of the Self and Its Ambiguities, 1899–1964". In McCallum, David (ed.). The Palgrave Handbook of the History of Human Sciences. Springer Nature. pp. 423–433. doi:10.1007/978-981-15-4106-3. ISBN 978-981-16-7255-2. S2CID 242987098. From 1910 to 1933, Hirschfeld and his colleagues at the Institute for Sexual Science were thus able to collect an increasingly rich collection of cases around the sexological category of "transvestite." From this category, a subcategory was carved out, the "homosexual transvestiate" and (later) "extreme transvestite" – with demarcation lines both in the transvestite community and in therapeutic treatment (Herrn 2005; Sutton 2012). [...] Hirschfeld had always advised against such surgeries, until he learned that some "extreme transvestites" would otherwise commit suicide (Herrn 2005, 184–85). [...]
  109. ^ Beachy, R. (2015). Gay Berlin: Birthplace of a Modern Identity. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. pp. 177–178. ISBN 978-0-307-47313-4. Retrieved 18 May 2024. What Levy-Lenz, Hirschfeld, and others at the institute effectively pioneered was a primitive diagnosis with corresponding treatments for what is now described as gender dysphoria. As historian Rainer Herrn has noted, Hirschfeld used the term Transsexualismus but ultimately recurred to his model of "transvestititism."56 In 1926 Hirschfeld introduced the term "total transvestitism": "We find the strongest form of total transvestitism among those who want to transform not only their sartorial but also their biological appearance....These strive for a complete transformation of their genitalia....This means the elimination of menstruation by removing the ovaries for female transvestites, and for men castration. The number of cases is much greater than one had anticipated before."57
  110. ^ Hirschfeld, Magnus (1923). "Die Intersexuelle Konstitution" [The Intersexual Constitution]. Jahrbuch für sexuelle Zwischenstufen [Yearbook for Intermediate Sexual Types] (PDF). Vol. 23. pp. 3–27.
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  112. ^ Benjamin H (April 1954). "Transsexualism and Transvestism as Psycho–Somatic and Somato–Psychic Syndromes". Am J Psychother. 8 (2): 219–230. doi:10.1176/appi.psychotherapy.1954.8.2.219. PMID 13148376.
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  115. ^ a b Hirschfeld, Magnus (1918). Sexualpathologie: Ein Lehrbuch für Ärzte und Studierende, Zweiter Teil [Sexual Pathology: A Textbook for Doctors and Students, Part Two]. Bonn: Marcus & Weber. OCLC 41101568. OL 51680148M.
  116. ^ Janssen, Diederik F. (2020). "Transgenderism Before Gender: Nosology from the Sixteenth Through Mid-Twentieth Century". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 49 (5): 1415–1425. doi:10.1007/s10508-020-01715-w. ISSN 0004-0002. Recent pertinent terms such as autogynephilia underscore the need for historical circumspection. Blanchard's term, coined in this journal 30+ years ago, revisited Hirschfeld's (1910) duly hesitant invocation (see pp. 199–202) of the notion of automonosexualism (Rohleder, 1907), or erotic arousal strictly from oneself. In 1914, it found its way into Hirschfeld's more formal typological distinction of the automonosexual transvestite deriving arousal from the idea or image of oneself as opposite-sexed. New terms would be needed by 1989 "because of the inconsistent history of this term [automonosexualism] […] and its nondescriptive derivation" (Blanchard, 1989, p. 323).
  117. ^ Bullough, Vern L (12 June 1991). "Transvestism: A Reexamination". Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality. 4 (2): 53–67. doi:10.1300/J056v04n02_05. ISSN 0890-7064.
  118. ^ Ellis, Havelock (1 August 1913). "Sexo-Aesthetic Inversion". Alienist and Neurologist. 34 (3): 156–167.
  119. ^ Ellis, Havelock (1928). Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume VII: Eonism and Other Supplementary Studies. Philadelphia: F. A. Davis Company. OCLC 547136. OL 26431702M.
  120. ^ a b Buhrich N (February 1978). "Motivation for cross-dressing in heterosexual transvestism". Acta Psychiatr Scand. 57 (2): 145–152. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0447.1978.tb06882.x. PMID 636906. Prince, a transvestite with a wide experience of transvestism, considers that sexual arousal to female clothes is a relatively unimportant aspect of transvestism (Prince (1967), Prince & Bentler (1972)). Prince believes that a major component of the transvestites' urge to cross-dress is their desire to emulate women. He suggested the term femmiphilic transvestism be used to describe the common form of cross-dressing in view of the transvestites' love of feminine things.
  121. ^ a b c Bentler, P. M.; Sherman, Richard W.; Prince, Charles (1970). "Personality characteristics of male transvestites". Journal of Clinical Psychology. 26 (3): 287–291. doi:10.1002/1097-4679(197007)26:3<287::AID-JCLP2270260308>3.0.CO;2-G.
  122. ^ a b Prince, Virginia (19 December 2005). "The "Transcendents" or "Trans" People". International Journal of Transgenderism. 8 (4): 39–46. doi:10.1300/J485v08n04_07. ISSN 1553-2739.
  123. ^ Freund K, Steiner BW, Chan S (February 1982). "Two types of cross-gender identity". Arch Sex Behav. 11 (1): 49–63. doi:10.1007/BF01541365. PMID 7073469.
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  126. ^ Prince, C. V. (19 December 2005). "Homosexuality, Transvestism and Transsexuality: Reflections on Their Etiology and Differentiation". International Journal of Transgenderism. 8 (4): 17–20. doi:10.1300/J485v08n04_03. ISSN 1553-2739.
  127. ^ Dickey, Robert; Stephens, Judith (1995). "Female-to-male transsexualism, heterosexual type: Two cases". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 24 (4): 439–445. doi:10.1007/BF01541857. ISSN 0004-0002. PMID 7661657.
  128. ^ Zavitzianos G (1972). "Homeovestism: perverse form of behaviour involving wearing clothes of the same sex". Int J Psychoanal. 53 (4): 471–477. PMID 4664943.
  129. ^ Zavitzianos G (1977). "The object in fetishism, homeovestism and transvestism". Int J Psychoanal. 58 (4): 487–495. PMID 598975.
  130. ^ Lawrence, Anne A. (2009). "Anatomic Autoandrophilia in an Adult Male". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 38 (6): 1050–1056. doi:10.1007/s10508-008-9446-6. ISSN 0004-0002.
  131. ^ Stoller RJ (April 1982). "Transvestism in women". Arch Sex Behav. 11 (2): 99–115. doi:10.1007/BF01541978. PMID 7125888.
  132. ^ Gutheil, E. "An Analysis of a Case of Transvestitism". In Stekel, Wilhelm (ed.). Sexual Aberrations: The Phenomenon of Fetishism in Relation to Sex. New York: Liverright. pp. 281–318.
  133. ^ Buhrich N, McConaghy N (September 1977). "The clinical syndromes of femmiphilic transvestism". Arch Sex Behav. 6 (5): 397–412. doi:10.1007/BF01541183. PMID 921524.
  134. ^ David A. Gerstner (2006). Routledge International Encyclopedia of Queer Culture. Routledge. p. 568. ISBN 0313393680. Retrieved October 21, 2016. A variety of derogatory terms are still used to describe any aspect of the transgender condition. [...] The term transvestite being older [than cross-dresser] and associated with the medical community's negative view of the practice, has come to be seen as a derogatory term. [...] The term cross-dresser, in contrast, having come from the transgender community itself, is a term seen as not possessing these negative connotations.
  135. ^ Vaccaro, Annemarie; August, Gerri; Kennedy, Megan S.; Newman, Barbara M. (2011). Safe Spaces: Making Schools and Communities Welcoming to LGBT Youth. ABC-CLIO. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-313-39368-6. Retrieved October 21, 2016. Cross-dresser/cross-dressing. (1) The most neutral word to describe a person who dresses, at least partially or part of the time, and for any number of reasons, in clothing associated with another gender within a particular society. Carries no implications of 'usual' gender appearance, or sexual orientation. Has replaced transvestite, which is outdated, problematic, and generally offensive since it was historically used to diagnose medical/mental health disorders.
  136. ^ Capuzza, Jamie C.; Spencer, Leland G., eds. (2015). Transgender Communication Studies: Histories, Trends, and Trajectories. Lexington Books. p. 174. ISBN 978-1-4985-0006-7. Retrieved October 21, 2016. Eventually, the transvestite label fell out of favor because it was deemed to be derogatory; cross-dresser has emerged as a more suitable replacement (GLAAD, 2014b).
  137. ^ Zastrow, Charles (2016). Empowerment Series: Introduction to Social Work and Social Welfare: Empowering People. Cengage Learning. p. 239. ISBN 978-1-305-38833-8. Retrieved October 21, 2016. The term transvestite is often considered an offensive term.
  138. ^ Kattari, Shanna K.; Kinney, M. Killian; Kattari, Leonardo; Walls, N. Eugene, eds. (2021). "Glossary". Social Work and Health Care Practice With Transgender and Nonbinary Individuals and Communities: Voices for Equity, Inclusion, and Resilience (1st ed.). New York, NY: Routledge. p. xxxviii. ISBN 978-1138336223. Transvestite: Outdated term previously used to describe a cross-dresser. Now considered pejorative.
  139. ^ a b Richards, Christina; Barker, Meg (2013). Sexuality and Gender for Mental Health Professionals: A Practical Guide. SAGE Publications. p. 162. ISBN 978-1-44628716-3. Retrieved October 21, 2016. The term transvestite should not be considered to be a safe term, and should certainly not be used as a noun, as in 'a transvestite'. Instead, and only when relevant, the term trans person should be used. [...] There are some people who have reclaimed the word transvestite and may also use the word tranny or TV to refer to themselves and others. [...] The term cross-dressing too is somewhat outdated and problematic as not only do many fashions allow any gender to wear them -- at least in many contemporary Western societies -- but it also suggests a strict dichotomy being reinforced by the person who uses it.
  140. ^ Joyce, H. (2021). "Sissy Boys and the Woman Inside". Trans: When Ideology Meets Reality. Oneworld Publications. pp. 31–52. ISBN 978-0-86154-050-1. Retrieved 13 May 2024. She presented copious evidence that three transwomen had orchestrated the campaign: Andrea James; Lynn Conway, a computer scientist; and Dierdre McCloskey, an economist. Strikingly, one had previously acknowledged autogynephilia, and another described what sounded awfully like it in an autobiography. [...] In McCloskey's autobiography, Crossing, she writes that her teenage self, Donald, experienced 'a rush of sexual pleasure' when dressing in his mother's underwear, and used to break into neighbours' houses in search of girls' clothes. She also specifies his preference for autogynphilic pornography: 'There are two kinds of cross-dressing magazines, those that portray the men in dresses with private parts showing and those that portray them hidden. [Donald] could never get aroused by the ones with private parts showing. His fantasy was of complete transformation...'.
  141. ^ Stella O'Malley and Sasha Ayad (18 March 2022). "67 - Pioneers Series: Men Trapped in Men's Bodies, with Anne Lawrence". Gender: A Wider Lens (Podcast). Substack. Retrieved 12 May 2024. You asked me whether I would be willing to discuss my personal history, and perhaps that will be useful or illustrative. I remember at age six being fascinated by the clothing of a little girl who lived close to me and who I often played with. She had a ballerina's tutu that I just, I really wanted to wear that. I didn't know why, but I did. And I remember that distinctly. [...] So this interest in wearing girls' clothes, or the idea of it, and its fascination for me was kind of a puzzle. [...] I certainly remember by age eight that when I thought of being a girl or looking like a girl, I would get erections. And I didn't know what to make of that. It was puzzling. It was shameful. But I didn't know what to do with it. [...] I remember at age eight, my parents asked me, well, what do you want for Christmas? And I wanted to say, oh, would you buy me a dress? But I didn't know how to say that. My desire felt incomprehensible. It was shameful. I didn't dare to say it. [...] Well, it was actually happening in a dorm room at the University of Chicago. I did cross-dress publicly occasionally during those times. I had some friends among gay men and I occasionally would go out to a concert or some sort of an event dressed in women's clothes, but somehow it couldn't be more than episodic.
  142. ^ McCloskey, D.N. (1999). Crossing: A Memoir. University of Chicago Press. pp. 19–20. ISBN 978-0-226-55668-0. Retrieved 19 May 2024. Donald's preoccupation with gender crossing showed up in an ugly fact about the pornographic magazines he used. There are two kinds of crossdressing magazines, those that portray the men in dresses with private parts showing and those that portray them hidden. He could never get aroused by the ones with private parts showing. His fantasy was of complete transformation, not a peek-a-boo, leering masculinity. He wanted what he wanted. [...] Then it occurred to him that he might find something on crossdressing, and on the local Net he did find an on-line conversation that included it. After some weeks he figured out how to access "alt.sex," which contained materials for his fantasies in an abundance that startled him. It aroused him, too. For weeks of spending a couple of hours a day on the Internet, whenever he could make time in a doubly crowded semester of teaching, he would focus on the pornographic bits. Here was a library expressly designed for sexual arousal of crossdressers, and aroused he was. [...] The sexual part started to fade, something new in his crossdressing, though he didn't notice.
  143. ^ Richards, R.; Ames, J.; Ames, J.M. (1983). Second Serve: The Renée Richards Story. G - Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series (in French). Stein and Day. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-8128-2897-9. Retrieved 19 May 2024. My forays into my sister's wardrobe were happening with greater frequency. It would be natural to think that this cross-dressing must have been associated with some sexual activity. In fact it was not. I would sometimes get an erection as I pulled on some silky underthing, but this was pretty much a response to the soft touch of the fabric. It was not associated with the transformation to a girl. The same thing might happen as I dried myself with a soft towel after a bath. It is peculiar indeed that I could control the desire to masturbate but not the desire to dress in my sister's clothes. I did have wet dreams; so the mechanism was in perfectly good shape.
  144. ^ Cummings, K. (2007). Katherine's Diary: The Story of a Transsexual : a Transgender Journey from First Awareness to Self-determination and Beyond. Beaujon Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-1-4392-1545-6. Retrieved 19 May 2024. Was there a sexual component to this dressing up? Yes and no. I was ambushed by orgasm in a way I found quite antipathetic. Because my routine involved dressing up and standing in front of the mirror while I admired my feminised reflection, I wanted the image to be as female as possible and would, as most transvestites learn to do, pull my genitals back and clamp them between my thighs. Adolescence combined with friction tended to create an erection, quite the reverse of what I wanted and this in turn often resulted in orgasm and ejaculation. Contrary to what one might imagine, this ruined my enjoyment. Of course the moment of orgasm was pleasurable but it was only a moment and the consequent ejaculation called an immediate halt to my activity, partly because I had to prevent any semen from soiling my sister's clothes and partly because I disliked intensely the presence of the sticky fluid on my body. I would hastily undress and wash myself.
  145. ^ a b Aggrawal, A. (2010). Necrophilia: Forensic and Medico-legal Aspects. Taylor & Francis. p. 113. ISBN 978-1-4200-8913-4. Retrieved 19 May 2024. Jerry Brudos suffered from multiple paraphilias. He may be seen primarily as a fetishist, with additional paraphilias (transvestism and necrophilia). [...] Ed Gein (1906–1984) suffered from multiple paraphilias; most notable were fetishism, transvestism, and necrophilia.
  146. ^ a b Kerswell, J.A. (2018). The Teenage Slasher Movie Book, 2nd Revised and Expanded Edition. Fox Chapel Publishing. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-62008-308-6. Retrieved 19 May 2024. HITCHCOCK'S PSYCHO Released in 1960, Psycho was Hitchcock's 49th picture and one that very nearly didn't happen. The director, stinging from the commercial and critical failure of Vertigo (1958), noticed that low-budget horror thrillers were making money at the box office. Accordingly, Hitchcock bought the rights to the 1959 novel Psycho by writer Robert Bloch. The events in the book — and in turn the film — were loosely inspired by the real-life murders by Ed Gein in 1950s' Wisconsin (which involved transvestism, necrophilia, cannibalism, and Gein dressing in the skins of women). Although Bloch and Hitchcock, without a doubt, stretched the boundaries of what was acceptable with audiences at the time, only the quasi-transvestism and murder were utilized in Psycho. Unfortunately, equating tranvestism with mental illness in Psycho serves to date the film. [...] And this is why she's screaming: Anthony Perkins (as Norman Bates) dons his dead mother's attire.
  147. ^ Miller, Laurence (2014). "Serial killers: I. Subtypes, patterns, and motives". Aggression and Violent Behavior. 19 (1): 1–11. doi:10.1016/j.avb.2013.11.002. For example, Ed Gein wore the skin of his victims during his autoerotic transvestite rituals: this became the inspiration for the "Buffalo Bill" character in Silence of the Lambs (LaBrode, 2007).
  148. ^ White, John H. (2007). "Evidence of Primary, Secondary, and Collateral Paraphilias Left at Serial Murder and Sex Offender Crime Scenes". Journal of Forensic Sciences. 52 (5): 1194–1201. doi:10.1111/j.1556-4029.2007.00523.x. ISSN 0022-1198. Jerry Brudos, a serial killer in Washington state, collected women's high heeled shoes and women's underwear. He even amputated the foot of his first murder victim (15). [...] It appears that some sexual serial killers, such as Jeffrey Dahmer, did engage in numerous paraphilias that are both primary ⁄secondary, cumuative, and collateral (see below). In the well documented case of Jerry Brudos (15), he developed a shoe fetish early in life and later killed to fulfill his fantasies concerning women and highheeled shoes. Even though he raped, took pictures of his victims, stole their underwear, and mutilated them, his primary paraphilia, at least at one point in time, was the shoe fetish. An underwear fetish then developed, adding to the shoe fetish, later followed by the addition of paraphilic rape, pictophilia, triolism (he positioned mirrors so that he could see himself with his victims), and then mutilation. [...]
  149. ^ Breo, D.L.; Martin, W.J.; Kunkle, B. (2016). The Crime of the Century: Richard Speck and the Murders That Shocked a Nation. Skyhorse. p. 553. ISBN 978-1-5107-0887-7. Retrieved 19 May 2024. The interview contains several colloquies in which Speck brags about how many homosexual encounters he has had in Stateville. Speck frequently boasted about how much he enjoys having sex with black men and how he wants to have sex every day. I: About how many people have you had sex with since you have been locked up? S: Oh God, I can't count that high. (Laughter) [...] I: Someone said you have real titties. Do you? S: Yeah. I: Let me see them. [...] Speck stood up and removed the layers of his house painter clothes, stripping down to blue silk women's panties. His naked chest revealed that he had grown nearly full-size women's breasts. [...] In 1988 Stateville, contraband of every kind was not hard to sneak into the institution by visitors and bribed guards. If the interviewer could get a hand-held video/audio camera into the joint and find a room to film a video without fear of interruption, how difficult would it have been for Speck to get the hormones that would enable him to sprout female breasts? [...] I: Can't stand them titties. S: No, I love them. I pet them every night before I go to sleep. I got nothing I'm ashamed of. [...] I: Do you have panties and a bra in prison? S: Yeah. L: You got lots of that shit.
  150. ^ "Columbia Chronicle (05/20/1996)". Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. 20 May 1996. Retrieved 19 May 2024. In another part of the tape. Speck stood in front of the camera to reveal breasts that were unusually large for a male. The committee concluded that Speck had female hormones. Sitting in women's underwear, Speck told Larimore. "If they only knew how much fun I was having. they would turn me loose."
  151. ^ Knoll, James L.; Hazelwood, Robert R. (2009). "Becoming the victim: Beyond sadism in serial sexual murderers". Aggression and Violent Behavior. 14 (2): 106–114. doi:10.1016/j.avb.2008.12.003. In a study of 20 sexually sadistic serial murderers, five of them demonstrated paraphilic activities including transvestism (Warren et al., 1996). In addition, over half reported homosexual experiences. These findings led to the clinical hypothesis that these subjects were polymorphous (or variable) in their perversity, which may suggest an underlying disorganization of sexual development.
  152. ^ Stone, Michael H. (2001). "Serial Sexual Homicide: Biological, Psychological, and Sociological Aspects". Journal of Personality Disorders. 15 (1): 1–18. doi:10.1521/pedi.15.1.1.18646. ISSN 0885-579X. TABLE 1. Types of Paraphilias Noted in the Serial Killers: Paraphilia: Transvestism: Paraphilia. Frequencya: 5. aAs noted in the 98 biographies where information pertaining to paraphilias was adequate.
  153. ^ a b Woodward, Suzanne (2011). "Imagining possibilities: Trans representations in mainstream film". ResearchSpace@Auckland. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  154. ^ a b c Malinowska, Anna (2015). "Eonist Spies: Cross-Dressing and the Idea of Sartorial Camouflage". In Bemben, A.; Borysławski, R. (eds.). Cryptohistories. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 96. ISBN 978-1-4438-7565-3. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  155. ^ a b Ketchum, Daniel L. (25 September 2015). "Transmission: Premium Television Characters Outside of the Gender Binary". Digital Commons @ DU. Retrieved 19 May 2024. Woody Harrelson, a masculine, cisgender male actor plays a ridiculously-costumed, German, transvestite prostitute "Galaxia" trying to provoke Adam Sandler's character in Anger Management (Peter Segal, 2003). Sandler says "I actually like to spend most of my time in GirlsWithoutWeiners-ville," followed by an equally juvenile off-screen reveal of Galaxia's penis, "whoa, there it is!"
  156. ^ a b Abbott, Traci B. (2022). "The Comedic "Cis Surprise" (Romantic Partner Version)". The History of Trans Representation in American Television and Film Genres. Cham: Springer International Publishing. p. 101–130. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-97793-1_4. ISBN 978-3-030-97792-4. Later R-rated flms made this aggression sexually explicit, such as exposing her penis unsolicited: Anger Management (Segal, 2003), American Crude (Sheffer, 2008), Passenger Side (Bissonnette, 2009), and The Hangover, Part II (Phillips, 2011). Galaxia (cis male actor Woody Harrelson) in Anger Management is even more extreme, rubbing her nipples and gyrating against male characters.
  157. ^ Lenning, Emily; Guadalupe-Diaz, Xavier (19 July 2023). "Monsters with Mommy Issues". The (Mis)Representation of Queer Lives in True Crime. London: Routledge. p. 67–86. doi:10.4324/9781003279440-6. ISBN 978-1-003-27944-0.
  158. ^ Boyd, H. (2003). My Husband Betty: Love, Sex, and Life with a Crossdresser. Basic Books. ISBN 978-1-56025-515-4. Retrieved 22 May 2024.
  159. ^ Boyd, H. (2007). She's Not the Man I Married: My Life with a Transgender Husband. Basic Books. ISBN 978-1-58005-193-4. Retrieved 22 May 2024.
  160. ^ Novic, Richard J. (2005). Alice in Genderland: A Crossdresser Comes of Age. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0-595-76376-4. Retrieved 22 May 2024.

transvestic, fetishism, this, article, about, transvestism, paraphilia, crossdressing, general, crossdressing, transvestism, also, known, paraphilic, transvestism, transvestic, fetishism, heterosexual, transvestism, erotic, crossdressing, among, other, synonym. This article is about transvestism as a paraphilia For crossdressing in general see crossdressing Transvestism also known as paraphilic transvestism transvestic fetishism heterosexual transvestism or erotic crossdressing among other synonyms is a paraphilia in which a person generally a heterosexual male experiences sexual arousal and enjoyment with crossdressing as the opposite sex 1 10 3 4 Men with transvestism experience pleasurable feelings with crossdressing and often also view themselves in the mirror and masturbate and orgasm when they crossdress 1 3 11 12 They usually crossdress episodically for instance once a week in most individuals 1 Although typically done privately and in secret at least at first some progress to crossdressing in public or crossdressing all the time 1 3 13 When excessive or problematic for instance causing distress or impairment transvestism is defined as a mental disorder and can be diagnosed as transvestic disorder 1 2 Transvestism transvestic disorderOther namesFetishistic transvestism paraphilic transvestism heterosexual transvestism erotic crossdressing transvestic autogynephilia sartorial autogynephilia automonosexuality cross gender fetishism femmiphilia eonism sexo aesthetic inversionSpecialtyPsychiatrySymptomsExcessive or problematic urges to crossdress sexual arousal with crossdressing masturbation and orgasm with crossdressing cross gender feelings sometimes gender dysphoria 1 2 ComplicationsSocial sexual relationship and occupational difficulties cycles of purging and reacquisition of women s clothing 1 2 Usual onsetChildhood or early adolescence 1 3 4 2 DurationChronic and lifelong 1 TypesFetishistic and autogynephilic 1 5 2 CausesUnknown 1 3 6 Diagnostic methodClinical interview 3 Differential diagnosisFetishism dual role transvestism gender dysphoria transgenderism 1 7 2 TreatmentMedications psychotherapy psychological support 3 8 9 1 MedicationSerotonergic antidepressants dopamine antagonists antiandrogens 3 8 9 PrognosisChronic and lifelong 1 FrequencyVariable but at least once a week in most 1 Transvestism is a paraphilia 1 Two distinct and often difficult to distinguish subtypes of transvestism exist one involving fetishism sexual arousal with certain items of female clothing and the other involving autogynephilia sexual arousal with the thought or image of being female 1 5 2 These two types often occur together and seem to be closely related 1 12 5 They are both erotic target location errors and when transvestism is related to autogynephilia it is additionally defined as an erotic target identity inversion 12 14 15 Most cases of transvestism involve autogynephilia 1 5 2 Transvestism often co occurs with other paraphilias for instance fetishism and sadomasochism 1 2 It can also sometimes be associated with gender dysphoria and can evolve into being transgender and transitioning 1 12 13 2 While various theories exist the causes of transvestism are unknown 1 3 The onset of transvestism is usually in childhood or adolescence 1 2 16 Data and information on treatment of transvestism are very limited and treatment of the condition is not necessarily indicated 1 3 In any case management strategies can include psychotherapy and certain kinds of medications to reduce sex drive 3 8 9 4 These medications can include serotonergic antidepressants dopamine antagonists and antiandrogens among others 3 8 9 4 Medications for transvestism can have side effects and risks 8 9 3 Transvestism is thought to be unchangeable analogously to normal sexual orientations and is considered to be a chronic and lifelong disposition 1 12 The condition can result in sexual relationship familial and occupational difficulties 1 2 Transvestism has been observed and documented since ancient times 3 The term transvestism was coined by German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld in 1910 17 3 18 19 The concept of autogynephilia which is believed to underlie most cases of transvestism was introduced in 1989 by Canadian sexologist Ray Blanchard 1 17 2 It is thought that around 2 to 3 of men have transvestism 1 12 20 Transvestism and paraphilias in general are rare in women although cases of transvestism in women have been reported 1 14 12 2 21 22 Rare cases of homeovestism sexual arousal to wearing same sex clothing in gay men have also been reported 14 12 11 A subculture surrounding transvestism has existed for many decades for instance the crossdressing magazine Transvestia and the crossdressing organization Tri Ess Society for the Second Self 13 23 A number of famous individuals with transvestism or heterosexual crossdressing are known such as Virginia Prince and Louise Lawrence 24 25 13 26 27 Many crossdressers would identify or be referred to as non transitioning transgender today 28 29 27 30 31 Contents 1 Signs symptoms and characteristics 2 Classification 3 Comorbidity 4 Causes 5 Diagnosis 5 1 Changes over time 6 Treatment 7 Prognosis 8 Epidemiology 9 History and terminology 10 Society and culture 10 1 Notable cases 10 2 Media representations 11 ReferencesSigns symptoms and characteristics editMen with transvestism experience sexual arousal and enjoyment from crossdressing and have desires or urges to crossdress 1 32 2 They report that crossdressing results not only in sexual excitement but also feelings of well being calm comfort relaxation thrill coziness and ease 33 1 3 11 Feelings of sensuality elegance and beauty are also reported 34 Adolescent and adult males with transvestism crossdress in a number of different ways 1 They wear female clothes episodically and or masturbate they sometimes wear female clothes such as undergarments under their male clothes and they often crossdress more fully when they are able to do so 1 2 Men with transvestism may crossdress with only one or two items of female clothing for instance undergarments or crossdress with complete female outfits 2 They can also use wigs makeup and accessories in addition to clothes to more fully simulate the appearance of being a woman 34 33 2 In one study 83 of men with transvestism crossdressed at least once a week 1 35 Most males with transvestism started crossdressing in private and secret 1 The clothes they wore usually belonged to a female relative 1 Female undergarments were frequently the first types of clothes that were worn 1 Prior to puberty crossdressing is not necessarily experienced as sexual or sexually arousing but as exciting and pleasurable in a more generalized way 1 3 2 It often starts as strong fascination with a certain item of women s clothing or with women s clothing in general 3 2 After the onset of puberty crossdressing usually results in sexual arousal and often leads to masturbation and orgasm 1 3 2 With puberty crossdressing may result in the first ejaculation in some cases 2 In a large survey of men with transvestism crossdressing resulted in sexual excitement and orgasm nearly always in 21 often in 19 occasionally in 32 rarely in 12 and never in 9 16 However most men with transvestism still enjoy crossdressing when masturbation is not possible 16 Some may avoid masturbation to prolong crossdressing sessions and positive feelings 3 2 Following orgasm men with transvestism often temporarily lose their desire to crossdress 1 There is frequently a strong desire to remove the clothing following orgasm 7 Feelings of disgust and revulsion with respect to their crossdressing may occur at this time 1 Men with transvestism will often progress to crossdressing in public 11 13 In large surveys 71 had crossdressed in public 8 to 14 frequently crossdressed in public 23 to 48 did so occasionally and 38 to 69 did so rarely 16 In one study 21 had progressed to crossdressing in public prior to 20 years of age and most had been crossdressing for at least several years 11 13 A small number of men with transvestism may progress to wearing female clothes full time or for extended intervals 13 13 Transvestism usually onsets during childhood before puberty 1 2 There are case reports of boys as young as 2 years old who have desired to wear female clothes and have developed penile erections upon doing so 1 In large surveys of American men with transvestism 54 to 66 reported starting crossdressing before age 10 29 to 37 between the age of 10 to 20 and 5 to 8 after the age of 20 1 16 In other smaller studies of crossdressing men about 50 have reported crossdressing before age 7 a majority before age 9 and almost all before age 13 1 Their first episodes of crossdressing were usually undertaken by their own initiative whereas less commonly they were undertaken at the suggestion of female relatives or caregivers 1 The peak of transvestic interests behavior and sexual arousal occurs during early adulthood 3 2 The severity of pathological transvestism is greatest in adulthood when the disposition conflicts with other directed sexuoromantic relations and with desires to marry and or start a family 2 Men with transvestism frequently report that the sexual arousal with crossdressing gradually decreases in intensity and frequency with time and older age 1 3 13 2 The initially intense sexual excitement is said to be replaced only by feelings of comfort well being and relaxation 3 11 2 Some men with transvestism report that the sexual arousal eventually goes away completely 1 3 2 However sexual arousal can often still be measured in men with transvestism who deny sexual arousal using clinical phallometry 1 15 36 Despite sexual arousal diminishing with time the desire to crossdress often remains the same or becomes even stronger 2 Sexual arousal with crossdressing is often experienced as unacceptable unwanted ego dystonic and or bothersome in men with transvestism 12 3 37 4 34 Men with transvestism very often downplay or deny experiencing sexual arousal with crossdressing likely due to shame and desire to look better socially 38 12 15 34 In one study more than half of individuals reporting sexual arousal with crossdressing found this to be unacceptable for themselves 1 37 Oftentimes men with transvestism downplay eroticism as a motive for crossdressing and instead assert that it is a way to express the feminine sides of their personalities or identities i e the girl within 12 13 Men with transvestism usually have one or more full female outfits 1 Some men with transvestism can have more than 20 full female outfits 34 The average time to owning a full female outfit after starting crossdressing was 15 years in one study 11 13 Men with transvestism tend to prefer clothing styles worn by younger women that are sexually provocative or that were in fashion during their own youth 1 33 Examples include lingerie bras and panties sleepwear short skirts and dresses low cut blouses girdles garter belts nylon stockings pantyhose and high heels 33 Many can take 1 to 2 hours to crossdress and apply makeup during a session 34 Men with transvestism will often attempt to abandon crossdressing and will purge their collections of female clothing 1 34 2 As many as 60 to 80 of men with transvestism report having purged their clothes 34 16 Attempts at ceasing crossdressing are generally unsuccessful and these men will eventually obtain new female clothing and start crossdressing again 1 2 Reports of shame and guilt related to crossdressing are significant with a rate of 22 in one study yet most do not wish to stop crossdressing with a rate of only 1 in the same study 34 Cycles of purging and reacquisition of women s clothing is often a signal of clinically significant distress 2 Crossdressing in men with transvestism may be precipitated by psychological tension stress or boredom and may be used to help improve feelings of depression and anxiety 1 5 4 In this way crossdressing may be viewed as a coping strategy 4 It is plausible that some non paraphilic individuals may use regular sex in similar ways 1 Episodes of crossdressing can also be triggered by seeing preferred women s clothing 35 In large studies 80 to 83 of women whose husbands had transvestism were aware of it although only 27 to 32 knew before marriage 3 4 16 Attitudes towards their husband s transvestism varied with completely antagonistic in 19 to 20 mixed view in 47 to 57 and completely accepting in 23 to 28 3 4 16 Wives may complain that the solitary sexual satisfaction of their crossdressing husbands can be detrimental to their marital sexual fulfillment 4 16 2 This can lead to relationship difficulties 2 Men with transvestism who have accepting female partners will sometimes have sexual intercourse with their partners while crossdressed 1 2 In one study rates of sex with women while crossdressed ranged from 36 to 62 35 Some men may have difficulties sustaining an erection during sex with a woman unless crossdressed 3 2 Sometimes men with transvestism fantasize that they are in a lesbian relationship with their female partners 1 When men with transvestism fall in love and enter relationships with new female partners their desire to crossdress sometimes temporarily diminishes or disappears though it eventually returns later 1 15 39 2 Men with transvestism often develop cross gender feelings and identities 1 15 13 16 40 They often develop gender related self representations that are multifaceted or consist of multiple coexisting selves that is both masculine and feminine sides 15 13 Most men with transvestism report experiencing a partial preferential or even complete cross gender female identity especially when crossdressed 1 41 In large surveys 69 to 74 felt like they were a man with a feminine side and 12 to 17 felt like a woman trapped in a man s body whereas 9 to 12 attributed their crossdressing merely to fetishism 20 16 40 Additionally 28 to 56 reported preferring their feminine self and 12 to 60 equally preferred their masculine and feminine selves whereas 11 to 29 preferred their masculine self 41 16 40 Men with transvestism sometimes adopt a feminine name for their feminine selves or for when they are crossdressed 11 13 There is indication of considerable time being required for development of cross gender identity in men with transvestism 11 38 In one study adoption of a feminine name happened after an average of 21 years of crossdressing 11 13 In addition to crossdressing many men with transvestism are interested in physical feminization and use or express a desire to use feminizing hormone therapy 1 12 7 In large surveys 9 to 25 of men with transvestism were currently on hormone therapy or had previously taken hormone therapy and 43 to 50 wanted to use hormone therapy in the future whereas 41 to 48 were not interested in taking hormones 1 12 41 16 Besides cross gender feelings and identification transvestism can sometimes progress to gender dysphoria and more substantial gender transition 1 38 41 2 In terms of behavioral traits men with transvestism rarely describe themselves as having been feminine in childhood or adolescence and few report having been called sissies 1 2 They generally have male typical hobbies and interests engage in rough and tumble play participate in sports and prefer boys rather than girls as friends 1 Many of them have however reported envying girls 1 In adulthood men with transvestism are typically unremarkably masculine when not crossdressed 4 13 However 78 of men with transvestism have self described themselves as having marked femininity 13 Men with transvestism are usually heterosexual and report sexual attraction to women 4 14 In large surveys 86 to 89 identified as heterosexual and sexual interest in women was average or above average in 74 to 86 41 3 13 40 16 37 Conversely 7 to 9 identified as bisexual and 1 identified as homosexual while 1 to 5 identified as asexual 16 In a survey of almost 2 500 Swedish adults there were no instances of main or exclusive focus on men with respect to sexual attraction or intercourse 37 Although most men with transvestism identify as heterosexual a subset of men with the disposition occasionally engage in sexual activity with other men while crossdressed or fantasize about doing so 1 11 39 7 4 In large studies 17 to 32 of men with transvestism reported homosexual experiences or engaging in sex with men while crossdressed despite only 8 to 10 identifying as bisexual or homosexual 11 35 13 16 40 37 Men with transvestism who have same sex sexual experiences are grouped under the umbrella term men who have sex with men MSM and are at increased risk for sexually transmitted infections from unprotected anal sex such as the human immunodeficiency virus HIV 42 43 In terms of demographic features men with transvestism resemble other men in most respects 1 This includes number of siblings number of children relationship rates socioeconomic status and overall life satisfaction all of which have been unremarkably different from those of other men 1 In one study 78 were currently married or had been married 13 40 However men with transvestism have been found to be more likely to report separation from parents in childhood be easily sexually aroused masturbate and use pornography more often and have same sex sexual experiences 1 3 Higher education levels and professional and technical occupations appear to be overrepresented in men with transvestism 1 Many men with transvestism enjoy forced feminization fantasy scenarios or narratives in which a person is forced to undergo feminization for example being forced to wear feminine clothes or develop feminine physical characteristics 1 13 Forced feminization is often encountered in fiction written by and for men with transvestism 1 13 Other themes include being transformed into a woman full time having reasons that justify a need to become a beautiful or seductive female and engaging in sexual or romantic relationships with lesbians and men 13 Such themes provide insight into what men with transvestism find most rewarding and erotic 13 Transvestism differs from certain other paraphilias in that there is a lack of harm a lack of dysfunction and a relative acceptance of the disposition 4 Classification editTransvestism can be divided into two subtypes with fetishism sexually aroused by fabrics materials or garments and with autogynephilia sexually aroused by thoughts or images of self as female 1 5 2 In those with fetishism for instance for bras and panties the interest and focus is on specific articles of feminine clothing themselves and the properties of those items although the items may still be worn 1 5 12 2 Conversely in those with autogynephilia the key aim is in becoming a woman or simulating the appearance of a woman with the clothing merely acting as an aid to this fantasy 1 38 12 33 5 2 Transvestism can also occur with both fetishism and autogynephilia simultaneously and this is in fact the case for roughly half of men with transvestism 1 In a study of men with transvestism 11 acknowledged fetishism but denied autogynephilia 32 acknowledged autogynephilia but denied fetishism 49 acknowledged both fetishism and autogynephilia and 7 denied both 1 5 Hence in terms of total rates in this study 81 acknowledged autogynephilia and 60 acknowledged fetishism while 7 acknowledged neither 1 5 In other studies 33 to 59 of fetishists also had transvestism and 20 to 78 of those with transvestism also had fetishism 12 Fetishists who use female clothes in a fetishistic way but are not genuinely transvestic have sometimes been referred to as pseudo transvestites or pseudo crossdressers 12 Fetishism is an erotic target location error similarly to transvestism 12 44 Fetishism and transvestism are thought to be closely related and present together on an etiological continuum 1 12 In fetishism among the most common fetish objects are extensions of the human body such as items of women s clothing or footwear 12 Others common fetish objects include specific female body parts like breasts and objects of a particular texture or special material like rubber plastic or leather 12 It has been noted that the latter fetish objects tend to have a texture similar to that of human skin 12 In one study of male fetishists the most frequent fetish objects were clothing 58 rubber items 23 footwear 15 and body parts 15 12 Fetishists treat their fetish objects much the same way they would treat human sexual partners 12 As examples fetishists seek close physical contact with their fetish objects by wearing them or lying on them gaze at them fondle them rub themselves against them suck on them and insert them into body cavities 12 Some men with transvestism who also have fetishism may be inclined to damage or destroy their clothes after use for instance cutting them burning them or ripping them up 12 5 Paraphilias tend to cluster and this may be a manifestation of co occurring sexual sadism towards their fetishistic objects and hence sexuoromantic targets in some individuals 12 Kurt Freund compared men with transvestism with men with fetishism proper and found that the two groups did not differ in their fetishistic interests or their responses to preferred fetishistic stimuli 12 45 46 He concluded that men with transvestism are truly fetishistic and that men with transvestism and fetishists proper are difficult to distinguish 45 12 46 Crossdressing in men with transvestism is usually though not always accompanied by the fantasy of being female that is with autogynephilia 1 2 It is thought that autogynephilia is the motivation for crossdressing in these men and that autogynephilia underlies most cases of transvestism 14 1 11 The women s clothes used are sexually arousing primarily as symbols of one s femininity rather necessarily than as specific fetishes 4 Transvestism is the most common manifestation of autogynephilia 14 11 47 This is likely related to the fact that crossdressing is an easy temporary and inexpensive means of making oneself look more like a woman 14 Some men with transvestism additionally fantasize about having female physical features for instance breasts or a vagina which is termed anatomic autogynephilia 14 11 2 Men with transvestism sometimes have other types of autogynephilia as well such as behavioral autogynephilia and physiological autogynephilia 11 2 It is thought however that transvestic autogynephilia is the predominant type of autogynephilia in men with transvestism 11 The desire of some men with transvestism for physical feminization via hormone therapy without undergoing sex reassignment surgery or living full time as a woman has been referred to as partial autogynephilia 12 48 49 Aside from their obvious sexual or erotic component autogynephilia and transvestism can also be conceptualized as encompassing feelings and elements of romantic love such as desire for closeness and bonding much the same as normal other directed sexual orientations like gynephilia attraction to females 41 20 39 Sex with men in men with transvestism is theorized not to be due to true or genuine androphilia as in homosexuality or bisexuality but instead to be a manifestation of behavioral autogynephilia and by extension of pseudoandrophilia or autogynephilic interpersonal fantasy that is fulfilling the autogynephilic sexual fantasy of having sex as a woman with a man 11 38 39 47 50 51 In people with autogynephilia attraction to men is frequently limited or absent despite sexual interest in men and sex with men is often arousing in fantasy but experienced as unappealing in practice 52 In terms of relations with women the phenomenon of temporarily diminished interest in transvestism when entering relationships with new female partners is believed to relate to the fact that autogynephilia and alloerotic other focused gynephilia appear to compete in men with transvestism 15 39 A further two type categorization of men with transvestism based on frequency and intensity has been proposed by Neil Buhrich and Neil McConaghy and this categorization has been widely adopted 1 13 The categories are nuclear crossdressers and marginal crossdressers 1 13 Nuclear crossdressers crossdress episodically and do not seek physical feminization whereas marginal crossdressers crossdress more extensively and either desire or undergo physical feminization with hormone therapy or surgery 1 13 Nuclear crossdressers are described as psychologically satisfied with their gender and sexual identity as males whereas marginal crossdressers are not 3 13 Nuclear crossdressers crossdress less frequently crossdress completely at a later age and are less likely to crossdress in public compared to marginal crossdressers 1 13 They also report less childhood feminine behaviors earlier and more sexual activity with female partners and are taller and higher in social status than marginal crossdressers 1 13 It has been suggested that these differences may represent a selection effect wherein marginal crossdressers go further in their efforts based on how convincingly they believe they could pass as female and the amount of social status they could lose if they became noticeably feminized 1 Comorbidity editParaphilias tend to co occur or cluster and transvestism is often comorbid with one or more other paraphilias 1 38 12 41 2 More than 100 different paraphilias have been described in the literature 53 54 55 56 57 58 Transvestism has been found to be strongly associated with other paraphilias like fetishism sadomasochism exhibitionism and voyeurism 3 41 In studies co occurring fetishism has been reported in 55 to 59 sadomasochism in 14 to 35 voyeurism in 33 frotteurism in 28 toucherism in 22 exhibitionism in 17 to 36 sexual contact with prepubertal girls not necessarily due to pedophilia in 11 to 20 and rape not necessarily due to biastophilia in 6 1 12 13 37 Other co occurring paraphilias have included gynandromorphophilia zoophilia obscene phone calling and autoerotic asphyxiation among others 12 4 13 59 39 2 60 Transvestism has also been reported to co occur with other erotic target location errors and identity inversions such as pedovestism autopedophilia and apotemnophilia 12 1 15 61 14 In one study about half of the men with transvestism had one or more co occurring paraphilias 1 Some of these comorbid paraphilias may involve behavior that is potentially illegal 1 Aside from other paraphilias transvestism has also been associated with hypersexuality 3 Information about comorbid psychiatric disorders in men with transvestism is limited and conflicting 1 One study found that men with transvestism were no more likely to report a current psychiatric disorder than other men and their mental health ratings were similar 1 There was however a non significant trend toward a higher degree of illicit drug use though not necessarily indicating substance abuse 1 In a study of men with transvestism from clinical samples personality and sexual functioning scores were unremarkable but neuroticism was elevated 1 In another study one of men with transvestism who had not sought treatment for their condition elevated rates of depression and alcohol dependence were observed 1 In addition to psychiatric disorders paraphilias including transvestism have been reported at higher than expected rates in people with autistic spectrum disorders in a number of studies suggesting a potential association with autistic characteristics as well 62 63 64 Most men with transvestism develop some form of cross gender feelings and identification for instance dual masculine and feminine selves or more extensive feminine identity analogously to the cross gender identities in transgender people 1 38 15 13 16 40 Moreover transvestism can sometimes progress to feelings of gender dysphoria full gender transition and transgender identity 1 38 41 2 Distinguishing between isolated transvestism and transvestism with gender dysphoria can be difficult and the diagnoses of transvestism and gender dysphoria are not mutually exclusive 1 2 When both are present both diagnoses should be given 2 It is difficult to predict which men with transvestism will progress to gender dysphoria 2 Oftentimes such men are indistinguishable in childhood or adolescence from other men with transvestism 2 Middle aged and older men with transvestism are more likely to present with gender dysphoria 2 The presence of autogynephilia especially anatomic autogynephilia e g desire for breasts or a vagina 14 11 has been strongly positively associated with unwavering female identity gender dysphoria and desire for gender transition in men with transvestism whereas the presence of fetishism has been negatively associated with gender dysphoria 5 65 2 Those that experience sexual arousal with crossdressing as unwanted or bothersome also show higher levels of gender dysphoria 4 In large surveys of men with transvestism 14 to 17 said they would elect for sex reassignment surgery if it were possible 34 would elect for sex reassignment surgery if they were younger 34 16 and 11 were presenting full time as women 12 41 No definitive statistics are available but it has been estimated based on observations of men with transvestism who have participated in crossdressing clubs that fewer than 5 ultimately progress to fully transitioning and being transgender or transsexual 13 In addition to a small subset of men with transvestism progressing to transitioning and transgender identity a number of other findings also link men with transvestism with a subset of transgender women 38 12 41 According to the DSM 5 late onset gender dysphoria in adolescent and adult natal males is preceded by transvestic behavior with sexual excitement in many cases 66 In studies of transgender women majorities of individuals report sexual arousal with crossdressing and or cross gender fantasy 39 38 This includes rates of 73 to 89 among non androphilic transgender women and rates of 10 to 40 among transgender women who are androphilic exclusively attracted to males 39 38 It has been theorized that non androphilic transgender women are often miscategorized as androphilic and this accounts for the elevated rates in androphilic groups 38 11 In line with all of the preceding many transgender women could also meet diagnostic criteria for transvestism and many transgender women previously identified as crossdressers or transvestites 41 47 7 With hormonal transition and reduction of sex drive in transgender women sexual arousal to crossdressing or cross gender fantasy usually diminishes or disappears 39 38 Transvestism and gender dysphoria have also been reported to co occur in families 14 67 Although the notions that autogynephilia is a paraphilia and is the underlying motivation of most cases of transvestism in men are widely accepted and limitedly controversial the situation is different in the case of transgender women 1 38 2 6 It has been said that no one denies the existence of autogynephilic arousal i e sexual arousal with crossdressing or cross gender fantasy in transgender women or that some transgender women transition due to autogynephilia 38 11 68 However the notion that autogynephilia serves as the motive for transitioning in all non androphilic transgender women as proposed by Ray Blanchard s etiological typology of transgender women and supporters like Anne Lawrence and J Michael Bailey is extremely controversial and heavily contested by many transgender women and academics 38 69 70 71 68 Critiques have been lobbied at this theory on a variety of grounds and alternative theories of autogynephilic arousal have been proposed by some academics 70 71 68 Examples of such critiques and theories include those by Charles Allen Moser 68 Jaimie Veale and colleagues identity defense model of gender variance 72 73 and Julia Serano s embodiment fantasies model 70 71 In any case some transgender women as well as some non transitioning autogynephiles identify with the concept of autogynephilia and feel that it accurately describes their experiences 39 38 69 74 75 73 76 In a 2012 online survey of transgender women asked about Blanchard s typology and autogynephilia 16 responded positively 32 gave neutral responses and 52 responded negatively 38 75 It is important for clinical professionals of transgender women to be aware of the highly controversial and potentially offensive nature of autogynephilia 41 Causes editTransvestism is defined as a paraphilia that is as an atypical sexual propensity 1 41 It is considered to be a form of autogynephilia to be an erotic target location error and erotic target identity inversion and to be a self directed form of male heterosexuality or gynephilia sexual attraction to women 41 1 14 Transvestism has been defined as a paraphilia and or paraphilic disorder in the American Psychiatric Association s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM and the World Health Organization s International Classification of Diseases ICD 1 41 Various theories about the etiology of transvestism exist 3 1 Many theorists have proposed psychological origins like behavioral and reinforcement theory as in classical conditioning familial and parental considerations and relationships sexual abuse in childhood and psychoanalytical explanations largely related to castration anxiety 3 12 Robert Stoller suggested that transvestism was often due to mothers or other female caregivers who forced their boys to crossdress in order to humiliate them or undermine their masculinity 1 12 Richard L Schott theorized that transvestism might in part be due to an especially close mother child relationship together with an absent father and often no older brothers 1 12 77 These theories are contradicted by data and or are no longer widely accepted 1 Behavioral theorists have proposed that the development of fetishism is due to classical conditioning wherein an inanimate object is paired with the experience of sexual stimulation and something similar may be happening in transvestism 12 Experimental studies have found that fetishism like responses for women s boots can be conditioned and extinguished in a laboratory study which lends a degree of support to this view 12 78 79 Knowledge about possible biological causes of transvestism is lacking 3 Transvestism and related conditions like gender dysphoria have been reported to co occur in families which is consistent with potential genetic predisposition to transvestism but this has not been clearly demonstrated 1 12 High co occurrence of transvestism in monozygotic and dizygotic twin pairs has been reported but this could be either due to genetic or psychosocial influences 1 There have been case reports of transvestism with temporal lobe epilepsy and head injury 12 Some academics such as Charles Allen Moser have denied that transvestism and autogynephilia are paraphilias or have dismissed the concept of paraphilias altogether 41 68 80 81 Additionally some crossdressers and theorists have proposed alternative models in which disturbances in gender identity or gender variance primarily underlie transvestism and autogynephilia 12 72 Under this model it is maintained that the associated erotic desires and behaviors in people with transvestism and autogynephilia are secondary to and a byproduct of gender variance 12 72 Moreover some of these academics such as Jaimie Veale and Julia Serano have contended that people with gender variance related to transvestism and autogynephilia are on an etiological continuum with gender variance related to homosexual men and androphilic transgender women 72 70 71 73 However alternative theories have difficulty explaining why transvestism and autogynephilia co occur at high rates with other paraphilias among other issues 47 38 41 Consequent to inadequate studies and evidence there is presently no scientific consensus about the etiology of transvestism and no theoretical explanations for the condition have been widely accepted 1 6 Diagnosis editWhen excessive or problematic transvestism has been defined as a psychiatric diagnosis including in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fifth Edition as transvestic disorder and the International Classification of Diseases 10th Edition ICD 10 as fetishistic transvestism 1 2 The diagnosis can be given regardless of sex or sexual orientation 1 In the ICD 10 it can be given regardless of clinically significant distress or functional impairment whereas in the DSM 5 significant distress or functional impairment is required 1 In the ICD 10 the diagnoses of transvestism and transsexualism are not mutually exclusive 1 There is no firm division between these diagnoses and it is thought that there is a continuous spectrum of symptomatology between them 1 38 The diagnostic criteria for transvestic disorder in the DSM 5 2013 and DSM 5 TR 2022 are as follows 3 82 2 Criterion A Over a period of at least 6 months recurrent and intense sexual arousal from cross dressing as manifested by fantasies urges or behaviors Criterion B The fantasies sexual urges or behaviors cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social occupational or other important areas of functioning Specify if With fetishism If sexually aroused by fabrics materials or garments With autogynephilia If sexually aroused by thoughts or images of self as female Specify if In controlled environment This specifier is primarily applicable to individuals living in institutional or other settings where opportunities to engage in voyeuristic behavior are restricted In full remission DSM 5 only The individual has not acted on the urges with a nonconsenting person and t here has been no distress or impairment in social occupational or other areas of functioning for at least 5 years while in an uncontrolled environment Transvestism is diagnosed via thorough clinical interview and other psychological assessment methods 3 4 This focuses on crossdressing and its relationship with sexual arousal 3 Past personal history should also be reviewed 3 No specific diagnostic tests for transvestism exist 3 Physiological measures of sexual arousal such as phallometry may be useful in the evaluation of transvestism 4 although the usefulness in diagnosis has not been clearly established 3 The essential diagnostic features of transvestism are recurrent intensely arousing sexual fantasies urges or behaviors involving crossdressing 1 2 The diagnosis is not warranted if transvestism is not accompanied by clinically significant distress or impairment 2 Two subtypes of transvestism have been defined in the DSM 5 including with fetishism when sexual arousal is to fabrics materials or garments and with autogynephilia when sexual arousal is to thoughts or images of self as female 1 It can be difficult to distinguish between transvestism and fetishism for items of women s clothing 1 12 5 The with autogynephilia specifier is only applied to males the female analogue autoandrophilia sexual arousal and attraction to the thought of oneself as male has been reported rarely and is thought to be less common 1 14 The autogynephilic and autoandrophilic subtypes are considered to be erotic target location errors conditions in which a person is sexually attracted to oneself as the sex they are oriented towards 12 14 Ray Blanchard who was chair of the DSM 5 paraphilias working group said that he doesn t think autoandrophilia in women actually exists and that if sexual arousal in women with crossdressing does exist it s rare 83 5 He remarked that the diagnosis of transvestism allowing women to be diagnosed was simply to avoid accusations of sexism 83 The ICD 10 diagnosis of fetishistic transvestism as well as the ICD 10 diagnoses of sadomasochism fetishism and dual role transvestism were all removed in the ICD 11 84 65 This was towards the aim of depathologization 65 These conditions are consensual or solitary activities do not inherently result in harm to oneself or others and are not necessarily distressing or impairing 65 Hence they were deemed to lack clinical relevance and public health significance 85 65 Instead of being defined as mental disorders they may be more accurately viewed as variants in sexuality and or gender expression 65 In any case the new diagnostic category of other paraphilic disorder involving solitary behaviour or consenting individuals in the ICD 11 can be used instead of fetishistic transvestism if the condition is associated with marked distress or functional impairment 85 84 The distress should however not be exclusively based on rejection or fear of rejection by other people in which psychotherapy is instead indicated 84 Differential diagnoses for transvestism include simple fetishism for women s clothing and gender dysphoria or transgenderism 1 However these diagnoses are not distinctly separated and may be viewed as points on a continuous spectrum of symptomatology 1 Another differential diagnosis is dual role transvestism which is not a paraphilia and explicitly excludes sexual arousal 1 7 Dual role transvestism involves crossdressing to temporarily experience membership of being the opposite sex but without sexual arousal or desire for gender transition 1 However many men with transvestism may be misdiagnosed as having dual role transvestism 1 This is because men with transvestism often deny experiencing sexual arousal with crossdressing yet this arousal is frequently still detectable with phallometry 1 36 It has been stated that dual role transvestism is rarely if ever actually applicable to non homosexual males 39 Changes over time edit The formal diagnosis of transvestism has changed over time 3 5 6 Transvestism was included in the DSM I 1952 under the diagnosis sexual deviation with transvestism as a type specifier 86 6 and then in the DSM II 1968 under the category sexual deviations with the subdvision transvetitism 87 6 Transvestism was included in the Psychosexual Disorders chapter of the DSM III 1980 under the paraphilias category 88 6 As with other diagnoses in the DSM this was the first time that the diagnosis of transvestism was thoroughly described or given explicit diagnostic criteria 88 Whereas the DSM III used the term transvestism the DSM III R introduced the term transvestic fetishism but otherwise there was very little change in the diagnosis between these versions 89 5 3 6 The term transvestic fetishism was also used in the DSM IV 90 3 and the DSM IV TR 91 The name change was likely made to help disambiguate the term transvestism which had also been used to refer to crossdressing in homosexual men drag queens and had historically been used to refer to transsexuals now transgender people 5 3 The DSM 5 returned to using the term transvestism and also distinguished between transvestism and transvestic disorder similarly to the case for other paraphilias 82 3 Transvestism is defined as a paraphilia whereas transvestic disorder is defined as a paraphilic disorder i e a paraphilia that is excessive and or problematic and rises to the level of being a disorder 5 However one of the DSM 5 specifiers denotes whether transvestism occurs with fetishism 3 The previous term transvestic fetishism had been criticized as conflating two distinct paraphilias transvestism and fetishism and emphasizing one fetishism at the expense of the other transvestism 5 3 The diagnosis of transvestism was largely unchanged in the DSM 5 TR compared to the DSM 5 2 In the DSM IV transvestism was limited to heterosexual men but this restriction was removed in the DSM 5 and the diagnosis was opened up to men and women with the disposition and regardless of sexual orientation 1 However individuals with transvestism are almost always male and heterosexual 4 92 13 16 In the DSM III transvestism and gender identity disorder of adolescence or adulthood were mutually exclusive and the latter diagnosis was given to cases of transvestism that had progressed to exhibiting gender dysphoria 6 Conversely in the DSM IV transvestism was given a new specifier of with gender dysphoria 6 The specifiers with autogynephilia and with fetishism for transvestism in the DSM 5 replaced the earlier specifier of with gender dysphoria in the DSM IV and DSM IV TR 5 It was however also previously noted in the DSM IV TR that the diagnosis of transvestic fetishism was often due to autogynephilia 4 The inclusion of the with autogynephilia specifier in the DSM 5 was opposed by the World Professional Association for Transgender Health WPATH 6 93 94 Treatment editInformation about treatment of transvestism is very scarce 1 3 Most men with transvestism do not seek nor desire treatment for their condition 1 3 4 13 Treatment is also not necessarily indicated 1 When treatment is sought it is often due to pressure from others for example family members and sometimes employers 13 Psychotherapy has been suggested for treatment of transvestism including relapse prevention harm reduction mindfulness emotional regulation dialectical behavior therapy psychodynamic therapy cognitive behavioral therapy acceptance and commitment therapy and supportive therapy 3 1 4 However these treatments for transvestism are not currently evidence based largely lacking even supporting case reports 3 4 It has been stated that attempts to remove the desire to crossdress with psychotherapy have invariably been unsuccessful 1 In any case psychotherapy to help control the frequency of crossdressing negative thinking and feelings related to crossdressing or social consequences may be useful 1 Including spouses and family members in psychotherapy alone or in group therapy may also be valuable 1 3 Psychoeducation by clinicians may be helpful 3 Self help support groups and social support organizations and societies for people with transvestism or crossdressing may be helpful as well 3 1 4 One such example is Tri Ess Society for the Second Self the largest such organization 3 4 Self help books for transvestism are mostly unavailable 3 4 A limited number of case reports and series exist of treating problematic transvestism with medications 3 8 9 4 These include serotonergic antidepressants like fluoxetine sertraline escitalopram clomipramine and phenelzine the anxiolytic buspirone the mood stabilizer lithium the antidopaminergic antipsychotic pimozide 95 the progestogenic antiandrogens cyproterone acetate and medroxyprogesterone acetate at very high doses the gonadotropin releasing hormone agonist leuprorelin and the estrogen diethylstilbestrol 3 8 9 4 Combination therapy for instance with a serotonergic antidepressant and a progestogenic antiandrogen can also be tried 8 Hormonal agents should be reserved for extreme cases 3 Many of these treatments are thought to work by suppressing sex drive and sexual arousal 8 9 However reports of effectiveness are anecdotal 1 Moreover medication treatments can have side effects and risks sometimes serious like decreased bone strength with antiandrogens 8 9 3 Dopaminergic medications have been reported to induce or worsen transvestism and other paraphilias in case reports 96 In the case of transvestism this has included levodopa ropinirole lisuride selegiline pergolide and pramipexole 96 In one instance a man with Parkinson s disease was treated with the dopamine elevating MAO B inhibitor selegiline and developed transvestism and hypersexuality 3 4 97 He had no prior history of crossdressing or desire to do so 3 97 His transvestism resolved upon discontinuation of selegiline 3 4 97 Other paraphilias and hypersexuality have also been found to be induced or exacerbated with dopamine agonists and other dopaminergic agents in men with Parkinson s disease 97 96 Dopamine antagonists have been reported to be effective in ameliorating symptoms of such paraphilic exacerbations in case reports 96 97 Besides dopamine agonists dopamine releasing agents like amphetamines have been reported to induce or worsen transvestism in case instances 34 98 99 Although men with transvestism don t usually seek treatment those who develop gender dysphoria and a transgender identity frequently seek treatment in the form of medical gender transition with hormone therapy and surgical procedures 1 Prognosis editTransvestism is a chronic and lifelong condition 1 Paraphilias like transvestism as with normal other directed sexual orientations appear to be immutable in adulthood 12 The course of transvestism can be continuous or episodic 2 In episodic cases the intensity of transvestism fluctuates and occasionally there may be temporary remissions 1 2 Transvestism often has a progressive course resulting in the desire for crossdressing more frequently extensively and or publicly 1 In some cases it can develop into gender dysphoria and being transgender 1 Men with transvestism often report social consequences and difficulties 1 These include divorce marital problems opposition by family relationship problems with men and women and occupational challenges 1 Epidemiology editThe vast majority of people with transvestism are male 1 2 In a population based study in Sweden 2 8 of men reported at least one episode of sexual arousal with crossdressing 1 2 37 In another study of German male volunteers 7 4 of individuals reported a history of sexual arousal with crossdressing acts or fantasies 1 In this sample only 1 9 described these experiences as intensely arousing and almost all denied distress 1 A review of the data from 10 additional studies concluded that likely 2 to 3 of men with a range of 2 0 to 10 9 have experienced sexual arousal with crossdressing 1 12 20 With the exception of masochism paraphilias are thought to be very rare in women and are much less common than in men 21 22 12 14 In the Swedish population based study in which 2 8 of men reported at least one episode of sexual arousal with crossdressing 0 4 of women also did so 1 37 Other population studies have also found small numbers of women reporting transvestism 14 However it is unclear whether these instances in women represent genuine transvestism rather than something superficially similar 1 14 Transvestism in women is extremely rare and almost unknown with only a few published case reports existing 1 14 12 3 2 50 76 Ray Blanchard has said that autogynephilia does not occur in cisgender women or occurs rarely in these individuals 17 68 However two surveys by Charles Allen Moser and Jaimie Veale and colleagues claimed that autogynephilia including autogynephilic homeovestism occurs at high rates in cisgender women 38 39 14 68 100 101 In the study by Moser almost all of the women 90 were heterosexual 100 These studies have been criticized as having methodological limitations and owing to lack of measurement sophistication obtaining responses that may have merely superficially resembled autogynephilia 38 11 39 102 Rather than measuring autogynephilia it has been argued that they may have measured sexual arousal caused by anticipation from a romantic evening or sexual encounter 38 11 39 102 14 A subsequent study by J Michael Bailey and colleagues using Blanchard s original Core Autogynephilia Scale found low scores for autogynephilia in cisgender women and men compared to crossdressers and other autogynephiles 103 The findings have been challenged and criticized by certain academics including Moser Veale and Julia Serano however and more research is needed to further clarify the question of whether genuine autogynephilia occurs or not in cisgender women 104 105 106 Transvestism has principally been described in Western cultures 1 It is unknown whether the phenomenon is more prevalent in Western cultures or if it is merely more visible in these cultures 1 History and terminology editThe term transvestism from the Latin trans across over and vestitus dress dressed clothed literally means crossdressing 3 The terms transvestism and transvestite crossdresser were introduced by gay German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld in his 1910 book Die Transvestiten Eine Untersuchung uber den Erotischen Verkleidungstrieb Transvestites The Erotic Drive to Cross Dress 17 3 18 19 However records of transvestic behavior and crossdressing date back to the Bible and Ancient Greece 3 The terms transvestism and transvestite as coined by Hirschfeld were originally not specific to erotic crossdressing but were applied to all individuals who crossdressed as well as to transsexuals or transgender people 17 13 He sometimes used the terms extreme transvestites or total transvestites to refer to what would subsequently be called transsexuals 107 108 109 Hirschfeld briefly coined the term transsexual in 1923 but it was not widely used until later on 65 110 Transvestism and transsexualism were not distinguished as separate diagnostic categories until the 1950s which occurred through the work of German American endocrinologist and sexologist Harry Benjamin 13 65 111 112 113 Hirschfeld in 1918 was the first to observe that some male crossdressers are sexually aroused by the thought or image of themselves as women 17 114 115 He referred to this phenomenon as automonosexuality sexual arousal strictly from oneself and referred to individuals with the disposition as automonosexuals or automonosexual transvestites 17 114 116 115 Hirschfeld was also the first to distinguish these individuals from homosexual men 17 50 The English French sexologist Havelock Ellis subsequently observed this phenomenon and referred to it as sexo aesthetic inversion in 1913 and as eonism after 18th century French crossdresser Chevalier d Eon in 1928 114 17 65 117 118 119 Other researchers such as Otto Fenichel and H Taylor Buckner observed the phenomenon as well 17 The full time heterosexual male erotic crossdresser Virginia Prince coined and used the term femmiphilia or love of the feminine to refer to the phenomenon and described herself and others as femmiphiles by the mid 1960s 24 120 121 40 122 She preferred the term femmiphile over transvestite as the latter term had been used too indiscriminately for instance to refer to crossdressing for any reason 24 121 Prince wished to highlight the motive for crossdressing in erotic heterosexual crossdressers like herself as well as the differences between these crossdressers and others like homosexual men drag queens and transgender women who crossdressed for different reasons 24 120 121 122 However Prince also had the central explanation that crossdressing was to express the feminine self and maintained that sexual factors played only a minor role 13 In 1982 the Czech Canadian sexologist Kurt Freund distinguished between two types of cross gender identity one related to homosexuality and another preceded by transvestism and related to what he referred to as cross gender fetishism 17 123 In 1989 Canadian sexologist Ray Blanchard a protege of Freund coined the term autogynephilia Greek auto self gyne woman philia love and literally love of oneself as a woman to describe the phenomenon of sexual arousal to oneself as a woman 17 114 Blanchard conceptualized autogynephilia as a paraphilia representing self directed male heterosexuality 17 114 He decided to coin the term after encountering a gender dysphoric patient named Philip who was sexually aroused by the fantasy of having a female body including breasts a vagina and soft skin but unlike most of Blanchard s similar patients was not sexually interested in dressing in female clothes 17 Blanchard realized that prior terms like transvestism and cross gender fetishism were inadequate or poorly descriptive so he introduced autogynephilia as a new term to use instead 17 Subsequently in 1991 Blanchard defined four distinct types of autogynephilia that he had observed clinically transvestic behavioral physiologic and anatomic 47 124 Consequently transvestism became defined as a subtype of autogynephilia and is now also known as transvestic autogynephilia 47 124 33 The term autogynephilia was subsequently included as a descriptor and specifier for the diagnosis of transvestism or transvestic fetishism in the American Psychiatric Association s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 1 5 including in the DSM IV TR 2000 91 the DSM 5 2013 82 and the DSM 5 TR 2022 2 Virginia Prince conducted major studies into men with transvestism which were published in 1972 and 1997 24 25 40 16 Her first publication in this area was in 1957 24 125 126 She also founded the Foundation for Full Personality Expression FPE which eventually became Tri Ess Society for the Second Self started the magazine Transvestia in 1960 and was an activist for promoting understanding and destigmatization of men with transvestism 24 25 13 The first literature use of the term autoandrophilia was in 1995 12 127 Homeovestism sexual interest in wearing certain kinds of same gender clothing and a phenomenon consistent with the concept of autoandrophilia was observed in homosexual men and first described in the 1970s by George Zavitzianos 14 12 11 61 128 129 The first clear report of autoandrophilia a case report of anatomic autoandrophilia in a homosexual man without mention of homeovestism was reported by Anne Lawrence in 2009 14 130 The first and among the only published cases of transvestism in women were reported by Emil Gutheil in 1930 and Robert Stoller in 1982 12 50 76 131 132 Transvestism has also been referred to under a variety of other names besides transvestism including transvestitism transvestic fetishism fetishistic transvestism transvestic disorder paraphilic transvestism femmiphilic transvestism heterosexual transvestism transvestic autogynephilia sartorial autogynephilia erotic crossdressing and sexual crossdressing among others 1 10 3 5 6 133 76 Today the term transvestite is considered derogatory and has fallen out of fashion in favor of the word crossdresser 134 135 136 137 138 139 However some crossdressers have reclaimed the word transvestite 139 Some people who would previously be called transvestites or crossdressers would be referred to as non transitioning transgender people today 28 29 27 30 31 Society and culture editNotable cases edit Virginia Prince was a full time heterosexual male crossdresser and one of the most famous such individuals of the 20th century 25 27 She founded the crossdressing magazine Transvestia the crossdressing organization Tri Ess Society for the Second Self and conducted major studies of men with transvestism 25 Other famous heterosexual male crossdressers involved in the crossdressing community include Louise Lawrence and Edythe Ferguson 26 27 Some individuals who have described a history of sexual arousal with crossdressing for instance in autobiographies have gone on to transition and become transgender women 44 69 140 Some of these cases have been reviewed by Anne Lawrence 44 They include Lawrence herself 39 141 Deirdre McCloskey 142 Kate Bornstein 44 Renee Richards 44 143 and Katherine Cummings 44 144 among others 44 A number of paraphilic serial killers have been reported to have transvestism including Dennis Rader 59 Ed Gein 145 146 147 Gerard John Schaefer 59 Jerry Brudos 145 148 and Richard Speck 149 150 as well as others 151 152 Media representations edit Transvestism has been portrayed in the media and popular culture often in highly stigmatizing ways 153 154 155 156 157 Media representations of transvestism include Denise Bryson David Duchovny in Twin Peaks 1991 154 Norman Bates Anthony Perkins in Psycho 1960 146 Paul Smecker Willem Dafoe in The Boondock Saints 1999 154 153 and Galaxia Woody Harrelson in Anger Management 2003 155 156 Books about transvestism have been published for instance Helen Boyd s My Husband Betty Love Sex and Life with a Crossdresser 2003 Boyd s She s Not The Man I Married My Life with a Transgender Husband 2007 158 159 and Richard J Novic s Alice in Genderland A Crossdresser Comes of Age 2005 among others 160 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey ez fa Lawrence Anne A 2017 Transvestism In Puri Basant Treasaden Ian eds Forensic Psychiatry Fundamentals and Clinical Practice PDF 1 ed London CRC Press doi 10 1201 9781315380797 48 ISBN 9781315380797 Archived from the original PDF on 2024 03 23 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo DSM 5 Task Force and Work Groups 2022 Paraphilic Disorders Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fifth Edition Text Revision DSM 5 TR 5 TR ed Washington D C American Psychiatric Association pp 779 801 ISBN 9780890425756 Transvestic Disorder Diagnostic Criteria F65 1 Specify if With fetishism If sexually aroused by fabrics materials or garments With autogynephilia If sexually aroused by thoughts or images of self as a woman Specifiers The presence of fetishism decreases the likelihood of gender dysphoria in men with transvestic disorder The presence of autogynephilia increases the likelihood of gender dysphoria in men with transvestic disorder Associated Features Transvestic disorder in men is often accompanied by autogynephilia i e a man s paraphilic tendency to be sexually aroused by the thought or image of himself as a woman Autogynephilic fantasies and behaviors may focus on the idea of exhibiting female physiological functions e g lactation menstruation engaging in stereotypically feminine behavior e g knitting or possessing female anatomy e g breasts a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br Balon Richard 2016 Transvestic Disorder Practical Guide to Paraphilia and Paraphilic Disorders Cham Springer International Publishing p 171 185 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 42650 1 12 ISBN 978 3 319 42648 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Newring Kirk A B Wheeler Jennifer Draper Crissa 2008 Transvestic Fetishism Assessment and Treatment In Laws D Richard O Donohue William T eds Sexual Deviance Theory Assessment and Treatment 2 ed Guilford Publications pp 285 304 ISBN 978 1 4625 0669 9 Retrieved 16 May 2024 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Blanchard R April 2010 The DSM diagnostic criteria for transvestic fetishism Arch Sex Behav 39 2 363 372 doi 10 1007 s10508 009 9541 3 PMID 19757010 a b c d e f g h i j k l Gijs Luk Carroll Richard A 2 March 2010 Should Transvestic Fetishism Be Classified in DSM 5 Recommendations from the WPATH Consensus Process for Revision of the Diagnosis of Transvestic Fetishism International Journal of Transgenderism 12 4 189 197 doi 10 1080 15532739 2010 550766 ISSN 1553 2739 a b c d e f Lawrence Anne A 25 January 2008 Gender Identity Disorders in Adults Diagnosis and Treatment Handbook of Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders Wiley p 423 456 doi 10 1002 9781118269978 ch14 ISBN 978 0 471 76738 1 a b c d e f g h i j Guay DR January 2009 Drug treatment of paraphilic and nonparaphilic sexual disorders Clin Ther 31 1 1 31 doi 10 1016 j clinthera 2009 01 009 PMID 19243704 a b c d e f g h i Garcia Frederico D Thibaut Florence 2011 Current Concepts in the Pharmacotherapy of Paraphilias Drugs 71 6 771 790 doi 10 2165 11585490 000000000 00000 ISSN 0012 6667 a b Fedoroff J Paul 2020 Transvestic Disorder The Paraphilias Changing Suits in the Evolution of Sexual Interest Paradigms Oxford University Press pp 195 208 ISBN 9780190466329 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Lawrence Anne A 2011 Autogynephilia An Underappreciated Paraphilia PDF Advances in Psychosomatic Medicine 31 135 148 doi 10 1159 000328921 ISBN 978 3 8055 9825 5 ISSN 1662 2855 PMID 22005209 S2CID 16143265 Archived from the original PDF on 2024 03 23 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb Lawrence Anne A 2009 Erotic Target Location Errors An Underappreciated Paraphilic Dimension PDF Journal of Sex Research 46 2 3 194 215 doi 10 1080 00224490902747727 ISSN 0022 4499 JSTOR 20620414 PMID 19308843 S2CID 10105602 Archived from the original PDF on 2024 04 15 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao Docter Richard F 1988 Transvestites and Transsexuals Toward a Theory of Cross Gender Behavior Boston MA Springer US doi 10 1007 978 1 4613 0997 0 ISBN 978 1 4612 8284 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Hsu Kevin J Bailey J Michael 2022 Erotic Target Identity Inversions Gender and Sexuality Development PDF Cham Springer International Publishing p 589 612 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 84273 4 20 ISBN 978 3 030 84272 7 Archived from the original PDF on 2024 05 15 a b c d e f g h i Lawrence Anne A 2006 Clinical and Theoretical Parallels Between Desire for Limb Amputation and Gender Identity Disorder PDF Archives of Sexual Behavior 35 3 263 278 doi 10 1007 s10508 006 9026 6 ISSN 0004 0002 PMID 16799838 S2CID 17528273 Archived from the original PDF on 2024 03 23 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Docter RF Prince V December 1997 Transvestism a survey of 1032 cross dressers Arch Sex Behav 26 6 589 605 doi 10 1023 a 1024572209266 PMID 9415796 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Blanchard R August 2005 Early history of the concept of autogynephilia PDF Arch Sex Behav 34 4 439 46 doi 10 1007 s10508 005 4343 8 PMID 16010466 a b Hirschfeld Magnus Die Transvestiten Eine Untersuchung uber den erotischen Verkleidungstrieb Transvestites The Erotic Drive to Cross Dress in German Berlin Medicinischer Verlag Alfred Pulvermacher amp Co OCLC 14774739 OL 26208471M a b Hirscshfeld Magnus 1991 1910 Transvestites The Erotic Drive to Cross Dress Translated by Lombardi Nash Michael A Buffalo Prometheus Books ISBN 9780879756659 LCCN 90024827 OCLC 22812111 OL 1866706M a b c d Lawrence Anne A 2007 Becoming What We Love Autogynephilic Transsexualism Conceptualized as an Expression of Romantic Love PDF Perspect Biol Med 50 4 506 520 doi 10 1353 pbm 2007 0050 PMID 17951885 S2CID 31767722 Archived from the original PDF on 2023 12 11 Retrieved 2024 05 15 a b Thibaut Florence Barra Flora De La Gordon Harvey Cosyns Paul Bradford John M W the WFSBP Task Force on Sexual Disorders 2010 The World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry WFSBP Guidelines for the biological treatment of paraphilias The World Journal of Biological Psychiatry 11 4 604 655 doi 10 3109 15622971003671628 ISSN 1562 2975 In total more than 50 types of paraphilias have been described most of them being far more common in men about 99 in Europe than in women but the percentage of women is increasing in the US Abel and Harlow 2001 Hall and Hall 2007 for review Except for sexual masochism which is about 20 times less likely to affect men than women paraphilias are quite unlikely to be diagnosed in women a b Cortoni Franca Gannon Theresa A 31 October 2016 The Assessment of Female Sexual Offenders In Boer Douglas P ed The Wiley Handbook on the Theories Assessment and Treatment of Sexual Offending Chichester Wiley Blackwell pp 1017 1036 doi 10 1002 9781118574003 wattso046 ISBN 978 1 118 57266 5 Given the relative importance of inappropriate sexual interests in sexual offending behaviour among males Hanson amp Morton Bourgon 2005 this area is surprisingly meagre in the female sexual offender research Studies conducted have tended to be case study based or obtained from clinical practice self report data Cooper Swaminath Baxter amp Poulin 1990 Saradjian amp Hanks 1996 In general the research literature suggests that compared to males a relatively small proportion of females appear to hold inappropriate sexual interests of some degree Green amp Kaplan 1994 Nathan amp Ward 2002 Saradjian amp Hanks 1996 Certainly there appears to be a much lower prevalence of paedophilia and associated paraphilia diagnoses in women when compared to their male counterparts Abel amp Osborn 2000 Davin Hislop amp Dunbar 1999 Federoff Fishell amp Federoff 1999 Lev Arlene Istar 2007 Transgender Communities Developing Identity Through Connection In Bieschke K J Perez R M DeBord K A eds Handbook of Counseling and Psychotherapy With Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Clients 2 ed Washington American Psychological Association p 147 175 doi 10 1037 11482 006 ISBN 978 1 59147 421 0 a b c d e f g Ekins Richard King Dave 19 December 2005 Virginia Prince Transgender Pioneer International Journal of Transgenderism 8 4 Informa UK Limited 5 15 doi 10 1300 j485v08n04 02 ISSN 1553 2739 a b c d e Ekins R King D 2006 Virginia Prince Pioneer of Transgendering International journal of transgenderism Taylor amp Francis p 15 ISBN 978 0 7890 3055 9 Retrieved 17 May 2024 a b Hill Robert S 2007 Telling Gender Stories As a Man I Exist as a Woman I Live Heterosexual Transvestism and the Contours of Gender and Sexuality in Postwar America pp 45 116 Retrieved 19 May 2024 a b c d e Lair Liam Oliver 2015 Interrogating Trans Identities in the Archives In Stone A L Cantrell J eds Out of the Closet Into the Archives Researching Sexual Histories SUNY series in Queer Politics and Cultures State University of New York Press pp 233 254 ISBN 978 1 4384 5905 9 Retrieved 19 May 2024 I am committed to expanding the available narratives of transvestites and transsexuals beyond a linear born in the wrong body narrative Many trans people even today are coerced into telling a very linear narrative to claim a medically legitimized trans identity a narrative about being born in the wrong body and having always felt this way While this narrative is true for some for many it is not Yet it continues to influence how trans people understand themselves and what doctors expect to hear from those seeking medical intervention Virginia Prince one of the best known transvestites of the mid to late twentieth century critiqued this formulaic narrative as early as the late 1970s arguing that it was often provided to doctors based on the hope that if it worked for one person it might work for another 30 In the reading room at the Kinsey Institute I touched and held letters by transwomen I had read about for years Christine Jorgensen Virginia Prince and Louise Lawrence a b Vicente Marta V 10 July 2023 Transgender A Useful Category Or How the Historical Study of Transsexual and Transvestite Can Help Us Rethink Transgender as a Category Unequal Sisters New York Routledge p 126 138 doi 10 4324 9781003053989 12 ISBN 978 1 003 05398 9 a b Bevan Dana Jennett 2019 Transgender Health and Medicine History Practice Research and the Future Essentials of Psychology and Health Bloomsbury Publishing p 16 17 ISBN 979 8 216 15713 7 Retrieved 19 May 2024 a b Chiang H 2021 Transtopia in the Sinophone Pacific Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 54917 2 Retrieved 19 May 2024 a b Simone Caleb 2024 Archival Kinship Mid Century Male Transvestism Transvestia Newsletter and Trans Community Building Across Time ProQuest Retrieved 19 May 2024 Moser Charles Kleinplatz Peggy J 2002 Transvestic fetishism Psychopathology or iatrogenic artifact PDF New Jersey Psychologist 52 2 16 17 a b c d e f Lawrence Anne A 2012 Manifestations of Autogynephilia Men Trapped in Men s Bodies PDF New York NY Springer New York p 95 110 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 5182 2 6 ISBN 978 1 4614 5181 5 a b c d e f g h i j k McConaghy Nathaniel 1993 Transvestism and Transsexualism Sex Identity Disorders Sexual Behavior Boston MA Springer US p 143 181 doi 10 1007 978 1 4899 1133 9 4 ISBN 978 1 4899 1135 3 Ferrando McCorvey Simon and Stewart 1988 reported transvestism in a 32 year old man that occurred only on the occasions he ingested the contents of inhalants containing levo methamphetamine and other volatile substances They postulated several biochemical brain mechanisms whereby the drug could induce transvestism however they pointed out that other amphetamine congeners had been associated with bizarre sexual activities that did not include transvestism They did not appear to have considered the possibility that the subject they reported may have had transvestite impulses that he controlled when not disinhibited by the drug a b c d Croughan JL Saghir M Cohen R Robins E December 1981 A comparison of treated and untreated male cross dressers Arch Sex Behav 10 6 515 528 doi 10 1007 BF01541587 PMID 7332485 a b Blanchard Ray Racansky I G Steiner Betty W 1986 Phallometric detection of fetishistic arousal in heterosexual male cross dressers Journal of Sex Research 22 4 452 462 doi 10 1080 00224498609551326 ISSN 0022 4499 a b c d e f g h Langstrom N Zucker KJ 2005 Transvestic fetishism in the general population prevalence and correlates PDF J Sex Marital Ther 31 2 87 95 doi 10 1080 00926230590477934 PMID 15859369 Archived from the original PDF on 2024 05 16 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Lawrence Anne A 2017 Autogynephilia and the Typology of Male to Female Transsexualism Concepts and Controversies PDF European Psychologist 22 1 39 54 doi 10 1027 1016 9040 a000276 ISSN 1016 9040 S2CID 151624961 Archived from the original PDF on 2024 04 24 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Anne A Lawrence 2013 Men Trapped in Men s Bodies Narratives of Autogynephilic Transsexualism PDF Focus on Sexuality Research Springer Science amp Business Media doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 5182 2 ISBN 978 1 4614 5182 2 OCLC 910979847 Archived from the original PDF on 2024 03 23 a b c d e f g h i Prince V Bentler PM December 1972 Survey of 504 cases of transvestism Psychol Rep 31 3 903 917 doi 10 2466 pr0 1972 31 3 903 PMID 4650045 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Lawrence Anne A 2009 Transgenderism in Nonhomosexual Males As a Paraphilic Phenomenon Implications for Case Conceptualization and Treatment PDF Sexual and Relationship Therapy 24 2 188 206 doi 10 1080 14681990902937340 ISSN 1468 1994 Calazans Gabriela Facchini Regina 2022 But the category of exposure also has to respect identity MSM classifications and disputes in AIDS policy Ciencia amp Saude Coletiva 27 10 3913 3922 doi 10 1590 1413 812320222710 08142022 ISSN 1678 4561 Beyrer Chris Baral Stefan D Walker Damian Wirtz Andrea L Johns Benjamin Sifakis Frangiscos 2010 The Expanding Epidemics of HIV Type 1 Among Men Who Have Sex With Men in Low and Middle Income Countries Diversity and Consistency Epidemiologic Reviews 32 1 137 151 doi 10 1093 epirev mxq011 ISSN 1478 6729 a b c d e f g Lawrence Anne A 2012 Theory and Case Histories Men Trapped in Men s Bodies PDF New York NY Springer New York p 19 35 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 5182 2 2 ISBN 978 1 4614 5181 5 McCloskey 1999 a MtF transsexual whose history is consistent with a nonhomosexual orientation she was not effeminate in childhood married a woman and fathered two children and underwent SRS at age 53 authored an autobiography in which she described her lengthy history of cross gender fetishism Prior to gender transition she had identi fi ed as just a heterosexual cross dresser p 48 just a guy who gets off dressing occasionally as a woman p 50 Until about a year before she underwent SRS in 1996 her cross dressing had routinely been associated with sexual arousal and presumably masturbation Until the spring of 1995 each of the fi ve thousand episodes of cross dressing was associated with quick male sex p 16 In an autobiographical essay Bornstein 1995 a nonhomosexual MtF transsexual who had undergone SRS repeatedly quoted from erotica written for heterosexual cross dressers and con fi ded that I never stopped reading those porno books I still have a small collection of them p 232 Bornstein also observed that 7 years after undergoing SRS she continued to be aroused by the image of herself as a female It s been 7 years and y know what I still get a thrill when I look at myself in the mirror and I see girl not boy p 238 a b Lowenstein L F 2002 Fetishes and Their Associated Behavior Sexuality and Disability 20 2 135 147 doi 10 1023 A 1019882428372 Categorising of transvestite type fetishism was attempted by Freund et al 1996 The study attempted to differentiate two clinical types of fetishism fetishism proper and transvestism and to determine if transvestites were truly fetishistic Transvestites were further divided into gender conforming and gender nonconforming groups according to their score on gender identity scale These groups were compared using a self report scale measuring true fetishistic behaviour and interests and a set of questionnaires regarding their childhood history parental characteristics and emotional closeness with their parents In addition the penile responses of a subtest of fetishes and transvestites were recorded while they were presented with visual depictions of female and male pubic regions and potentially fetishistic objects such as nylon stockings female and male shoes panties male underwear female and male feet The fetishists proper and the transvestite subgroups did not differ from each other in terms of self reported fetishism interests or childhood and family histories Moreover there were no differences between these groups and their penile responses to the potentially fetishistic stimuli they were most aroused by The results suggest that transvestites were in fact fetishists and they were difficult to distinguish from other fetishists a b Freund Kurt Seto Michael C Kuban Michael 1996 Two types of fetishism Behaviour Research and Therapy 34 9 687 694 doi 10 1016 0005 7967 96 00047 2 a b c d e f Lawrence Anne A 2004 Autogynephilia A Paraphilic Model of Gender Identity Disorder PDF Journal of Gay and Lesbian Psychotherapy 8 1 2 69 87 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 656 9256 doi 10 1080 19359705 2004 9962367 Archived from the original PDF on 2024 03 23 Retrieved 2024 05 14 Blanchard Ray 1993 The she male phenomenon and the concept of partial autogynephilia Journal of Sex amp Marital Therapy 19 1 69 76 doi 10 1080 00926239308404889 ISSN 0092 623X Blanchard Ray 1993 Partial versus complete Autogynephilia and gender dysphoria Journal of Sex amp Marital Therapy 19 4 301 307 doi 10 1080 00926239308404373 ISSN 0092 623X a b c d Blanchard Ray 1989 The classification and labeling of nonhomosexual gender dysphorias Archives of Sexual Behavior 18 4 315 334 doi 10 1007 BF01541951 ISSN 0004 0002 Freund Kurt Watson Robin Dickey Robert 1991 The types of heterosexual gender identity disorder Annals of Sex Research 4 1 93 105 doi 10 1007 BF00850141 ISSN 0843 4611 Lawrence Anne A 2012 Sex with Men Men Trapped in Men s Bodies PDF New York NY Springer New York p 127 142 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 5182 2 8 ISBN 978 1 4614 5181 5 Fedoroff J Paul Parpahilic Worlds In Levine S B Risen C B Althof S E eds Handbook of Clinical Sexuality for Mental Health Professionals 500 Tips 2 ed Taylor amp Francis pp 401 424 ISBN 978 1 135 96749 9 Retrieved 19 May 2024 Fedoroff J P 2019 The Paraphilias Changing Suits in the Evolution of Sexual Interest Paradigms Oxford University Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 19 046633 6 Retrieved 19 May 2024 Fedoroff JP 2011 Forensic and diagnostic concerns arising from the proposed DSM 5 criteria for sexual paraphilic disorder J Am Acad Psychiatry Law 39 2 238 41 PMID 21653271 Saleh F M Bradford J M Brodsky D J 2021 Sex Offenders Identification Risk Assessment Treatment and Legal Issues Oxford University Press p 212 ISBN 978 0 19 088438 3 Retrieved 19 May 2024 More than 50 paraphilias have been described in the literature and the list continues to grow Sealy John R 1995 Psychopharmacologic intervention in addictive sexual behavior Sexual Addiction amp Compulsivity 2 4 257 276 doi 10 1080 10720169508400088 ISSN 1072 0162 Money J 1986 Lovemaps Clinical Concepts of Sexual erotic Health and Pathology Paraphilia and Gender Transposition of Childhood Adolescence and Maturity Irvington p 13 ISBN 978 0 8290 1589 8 Retrieved 19 May 2024 a b c Myers WC Bukhanovskiy A Justen E Morton RJ Tilley J Adams K Vandagriff VL Hazelwood RR April 2008 The relationship between serial sexual murder and autoerotic asphyxiation Forensic Sci Int 176 2 3 187 195 doi 10 1016 j forsciint 2007 09 005 PMID 17980531 This case series documents and examines the association between autoerotic asphyxiation sadomasochism and serial sexual murderers Autoerotic asphyxiation along with other paraphilias found in this population is reviewed Furthermore two 40 had bondage fetishism and two 40 had transvestic fetishism consistent with these paraphilias co occurring in those with autoerotic asphyxiation Masochism and transvestic fetishism or cross dressing are some of the more commonly associated paraphilias 4 5 7 In fact 20 25 of autoerotic asphyxiation death scenes demonstrate evidence of transvestic fetishism 6 9 14 Throughout his murder career Dennis Rader documented his autoerotic involvement through photographs That involvement included sexual bondage and transvestic fetishism His practice of transvestic fetishism was intricate he possessed and wore numerous pairs of panty hose underwear and bras He assumes the identity of the victim thought such mechanisms as wearing women s undergarments and placing himself in bondage as did Rader and Shaefer Next he asphyxiates the victim Not surprisingly two of five 40 in this sample had transvestic fetishism consistent with this paraphilia commonly cooccurring in those with autoerotic asphyxiation Hsu Kevin J Rosenthal A M Miller David I Bailey J Michael 2017 Sexual Arousal Patterns of Autogynephilic Male Cross Dressers Archives of Sexual Behavior 46 1 247 253 doi 10 1007 s10508 016 0826 z ISSN 0004 0002 a b Freund K Blanchard R April 1993 Erotic target location errors in male gender dysphorics paedophiles and fetishists Br J Psychiatry 162 558 563 doi 10 1192 bjp 162 4 558 PMID 8481752 Parchomiuk Monika 2019 Sexuality of Persons with Autistic Spectrum Disorders ASD Sexuality and Disability 37 2 259 274 doi 10 1007 s11195 018 9534 z ISSN 0146 1044 Information on the occurrence of paraphilic disorders in people with ASD is scarce Using self assessment of 55 adults with AS L Cabral Fernades and co authors 51 reported fetishism in 6 individuals one transvestite fetish 2 instances of sadomasochism and 7 cases of voyeurism Isolated cases of pedophilia and fetishism have been reported in the cited studies of Hellemans et al 42 Schottle D Briken P Tuscher O Turner D December 2017 Sexuality in autism hypersexual and paraphilic behavior in women and men with high functioning autism spectrum disorder Dialogues Clin Neurosci 19 4 381 393 doi 10 31887 DCNS 2017 19 4 dschoettle PMC 5789215 PMID 29398933 Fernandes LC Gillberg CI Cederlund M Hagberg B Gillberg C Billstedt E September 2016 Aspects of Sexuality in Adolescents and Adults Diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorders in Childhood J Autism Dev Disord 46 9 3155 65 doi 10 1007 s10803 016 2855 9 PMID 27401993 Deviant or unusual sexual behaviors and interests paraphilias as described in DSM IV APA 2000 have been reported in the literature on sexuality and ASD Gillberg 1984 Hellemans et al 2007 Case studies describing pedophilia Murrie et al 2002 Robinow 2009 transvestism Lande n and Rasmussen 1997 exhibitionism Beddows and Brooks 2015 voyeurism Milton et al 2002 Murrie et al 2002 fetishism Dozier et al 2011 and partialism sexual arousal characterized by focus on one part of the body Haracopos and Pedersen 1992 in individuals with ASD have been presented Information on the prevalence of paraphilias in this group of individuals is scarce Realmuto and Ruble 1999 but in the general population paraphilias have been found at a prevalence rate of 0 4 7 7 Langstrom and Seto 2006 Langstrom and Zucker 2005 A relationship between ASD psychopathology and specific paraphilias has been proposed as related to neuropsychiatric and developmental perspectives Silva et al 2002 Paraphilias were present in almost one fourth of the study group in Study 2 Overall the prevalence rates of paraphilias in this group far surpassed those known in the general population Langstrom and Seto 2006 Langstrom and Zucker 2005 a b c d e f g h i Crocq MA 2021 How gender dysphoria and incongruence became medical diagnoses a historical review Dialogues Clin Neurosci 23 1 44 51 doi 10 1080 19585969 2022 2042166 PMC 9286744 PMID 35860172 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fifth ed Arlington VA American Psychiatric Publishing 2013 pp 451 460 ISBN 978 0 89042 554 1 Green R October 2000 Family cooccurrence of gender dysphoria ten sibling or parent child pairs Arch Sex Behav 29 5 499 507 doi 10 1023 a 1001947920872 PMID 10983252 a b c d e f g Moser Charles 30 June 2010 Blanchard s Autogynephilia Theory A Critique Journal of Homosexuality 57 6 790 809 doi 10 1080 00918369 2010 486241 ISSN 0091 8369 a b c Dreger AD June 2008 The controversy surrounding The man who would be queen a case history of the politics of science identity and sex in the Internet age Arch Sex Behav 37 3 366 421 doi 10 1007 s10508 007 9301 1 PMC 3170124 PMID 18431641 a b c d Serano Julia 2020 Autogynephilia A scientific review feminist analysis and alternative embodiment fantasies model The Sociological Review 68 4 763 778 doi 10 1177 0038026120934690 ISSN 0038 0261 a b c d Serano Julia M 12 October 2010 The Case Against Autogynephilia International Journal of Transgenderism 12 3 176 187 doi 10 1080 15532739 2010 514223 ISSN 1553 2739 a b c d Veale Jaimie F Lomax Tess Clarke Dave 12 October 2010 Identity Defense Model of Gender Variant Development International Journal of Transgenderism 12 3 125 138 doi 10 1080 15532739 2010 514217 ISSN 1553 2739 a b c Veale Jamie F 2005 Love of oneself as a woman an investigation into the sexuality of transsexual and other women Master of Arts in Psychology thesis Massey University Singal Jesse 2023 11 21 The rage behind Transgender Map UnHerd Retrieved 2024 04 28 What appears to have curdled her is the work of Ray Blanchard the sex researcher who proposed the theory of autogynephilia which posits that some trans women are motivated to transition by sexual arousal at the thought of being a woman It is seen by some trans people as offensive because in their view it pathologises and or sexualises their identity An apparently smaller group of individuals most famously Anne Lawrence believe it accurately describes their own experiences a b Veale Jaimie F Clarke David E Lomax Terri C 2012 Male to Female Transsexuals Impressions of Blanchard s Autogynephilia Theory International Journal of Transgenderism 13 3 131 139 doi 10 1080 15532739 2011 669659 ISSN 1553 2739 a b c d Illy P 2023 Autoheterosexual Attracted to Being the Other Sex Houndstooth Press ISBN 978 1 5445 4144 0 Retrieved 16 May 2024 Schott Richard L 1995 The childhood and family dynamics of transvestites Archives of Sexual Behavior 24 3 309 327 doi 10 1007 BF01541602 ISSN 0004 0002 Rachman S 1966 Sexual Fetishism An Experimental Analogue The Psychological Record 16 3 293 296 doi 10 1007 BF03393671 ISSN 0033 2933 Rachman S Hodgson R J 1968 Experimentally Induced Sexual Fetishism Replication and Development The Psychological Record 18 1 25 27 doi 10 1007 BF03393736 ISSN 0033 2933 Moser Charles Kleinplatz Peggy J 3 February 2006 DSM IV TR and the Paraphilias An Argument for Removal Journal of Psychology amp Human Sexuality 17 3 4 91 109 doi 10 1300 J056v17n03 05 ISSN 0890 7064 Moser Charles 2013 Paraphilia A Critique of a Confused Concept In Kleinplatz P J ed New Directions in Sex Therapy Innovations and Alternatives Philosophical Issues in Science Taylor amp Francis p 91 ISBN 978 1 134 87353 1 Retrieved 17 May 2024 a b c DSM 5 Task Force 2013 Paraphilic Disorders Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fifth Edition DSM 5 Washington D C American Psychiatric Association pp 685 705 ISBN 978 0 89042 554 1 Transvestic Disorder Diagnostic Criteria 302 3 F65 1 Specify if With fetishism If sexually aroused by fabrics materials or garments With autogynephilia If sexually aroused by thoughts or images of self as female Specifiers The presence of fetishism decreases the likelihood of gender dysphoria in men with transvestic disorder The presence of autogynephilia increases the likelihood of gender dysphoria in men with transvestic disorder Associated Features Supporting Diagnosis Transvestic disorder in men is often accompanied by autogynephilia i e a male s paraphilic tendency to be sexually aroused by the thought or image of himself as a woman Autogynephilic fantasies and behaviors may focus on the idea of exhibiting female physiological functions e g lactation menstruation engaging in stereotypically feminine behavior e g knitting or possessing female anatomy e g breasts a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b Cameron Laura 11 April 2013 How the Psychiatrist Who Co Wrote the Manual on Sex Talks About Sex VICE Retrieved 16 May 2024 Do you think autoandrophelia where a woman is aroused by the thought of herself as a man is a real paraphelia No I proposed it simply in order not to be accused of sexism because there are all these women who want to say women can rape too women can be pedophiles too women can be exhibitionists too It s a perverse expression of feminism and so I thought let me jump the gun on this I don t think the phenomenon even exists a b c Reed GM First MB Kogan CS Hyman SE Gureje O Gaebel W Maj M Stein DJ Maercker A Tyrer P Claudino A Garralda E Salvador Carulla L Ray R Saunders JB Dua T Poznyak V Medina Mora ME Pike KM Ayuso Mateos JL Kanba S Keeley JW Khoury B Krasnov VN Kulygina M Lovell AM de Jesus Mari J Maruta T Matsumoto C Rebello TJ Roberts MC Robles R Sharan P Zhao M Jablensky A Udomratn P Rahimi Movaghar A Rydelius PA Bahrer Kohler S Watts AD Saxena S February 2019 Innovations and changes in the ICD 11 classification of mental behavioural and neurodevelopmental disorders World Psychiatry 18 1 3 19 doi 10 1002 wps 20611 PMC 6313247 PMID 30600616 a b Reed GM Drescher J Krueger RB Atalla E Cochran SD First MB Cohen Kettenis PT Arango de Montis I Parish SJ Cottler S Briken P Saxena S October 2016 Disorders related to sexuality and gender identity in the ICD 11 revising the ICD 10 classification based on current scientific evidence best clinical practices and human rights considerations World Psychiatry 15 3 205 221 doi 10 1002 wps 20354 PMC 5032510 PMID 27717275 The Committee on Nomenclature and Statistics of the American Psychiatric Association 1952 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual Mental Disorders Washington D C American Psychiatric Association pp 38 39 000 x63 Sexual deviation This diagnosis is reserved for deviant sexuality which is not symptomatic of more extensive syndromes such as schizophrenic and obsessional reactions The term includes most of the cases formerly classed as psychopathic personality with pathologic sexuality The diagnosis will specify the type of the pathologic behavior such as homosexuality transvestism pedophilia fetishism and sexual sadism including rape sexual assault mutilation The Committee On Nomenclature and Statistics of the American Psychiatric Association 1968 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Second Edition DSM II 2 ed Washington D C American Psychiatric Association pp 44 52 LCCN 68 26515 302 Sexual deviations This category is for individuals whose sexual interests are directed primarily toward objects other than people of the opposite sex toward sexual acts not usually associated with coitus or toward coitus performed under bizarre circumstances as in necrophilia pedophilia sexual sadism and fetishism Even though many find their practices distasteful they remain unable to substitute normal sexual behavior for them This diagnosis is not appropriate for individuals who perform deviant sexual acts because normal sexual objects are not available to them 302 0 Homosexuality 302 1 Fetishism 302 2 Pedophilia 302 3 Transvestitism 302 4 Exhibitionism 302 5 Voyeurism 302 6 Sadism 302 7 Masochism 302 8 Other sexual deviation 302 9 Unspecified sexual deviation a b Task Force on Nomenclature and Statistics of the American Psychiatric Association February 1980 Psychosexual Disorders Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Third Edition 3 ed Washington D C American Psychiatric Association pp 261 285 LCCN 79 055868 Work Group to Revise DSM III of the American Psychiatric Association 1987 Sexual Disorders Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Third Edition Revised DSM III R 3 revised ed Washington D C American Psychiatric Association pp 279 296 302 30 Transvestic Fetishism The essential feature of this disorder is recurrent intense sexual urges and sexually arousing fantasies of at least six months duration involving cross dressing The person has acted on these urges or is markedly distressed by them Usually the person keeps a collection of women s clothes that he intermittently uses to cross dress when alone While cross dressed he usually masturbates and imagines other males being attracted to him as a woman in his female attire Task Force on DSM IV 1994 Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition DSM IV Washington D C American Psychiatric Association pp 493 538 a b Task Force on DSM IV and other committees and workgroups of the American Psychiatric Association 2000 Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition Text Revision DSM IV TR 4 TR ed Washington D C American Psychiatric Association pp 535 582 302 3 Transvestic Fetishism The paraphilic focus of Transvestic Fetishism involves cross dressing by a male in women s attire In many or most cases sexual arousal is produced by the accompanying thought or image of the person as a female referred to as autogynephilia Cowen P Harrison P Burns T 2012 Shorter Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry OUP Oxford p 373 ISBN 978 0191626753 Knudson Gail De Cuypere Griet Bockting Walter 2011 Response of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health to the Proposed Revision of the Diagnosis of Transvestic Fetishism for DSM 5 International Journal of Transgenderism 13 1 5 8 doi 10 1080 15532739 2011 606201 ISSN 1553 2739 Knudson Gail De Cuypere Griet Bockting Walter 2011 Second Response of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health to the Proposed Revision of the Diagnosis of Transvestic Disorder for DSM 5 International Journal of Transgenderism 13 1 9 12 doi 10 1080 15532739 2011 606195 ISSN 1553 2739 Puri BK Singh I June 1996 The successful treatment of a gender dysphoric patient with pimozide Aust N Z J Psychiatry 30 3 422 425 doi 10 3109 00048679609065010 PMID 8839957 Archived from the original on 2024 05 16 a b c d Solla P Bortolato M Cannas A Mulas CS Marrosu F April 2015 Paraphilias and paraphilic disorders in Parkinson s disease A systematic review of the literature Mov Disord 30 5 604 13 doi 10 1002 mds 26157 PMC 4428164 PMID 25759330 a b c d e Riley DE 2002 Reversible transvestic fetishism in a man with Parkinson s disease treated with selegiline Clin Neuropharmacol 25 4 234 237 doi 10 1097 00002826 200207000 00008 PMID 12151912 Ferrando RL McCorvey E Simon WA Stewart DM March 1988 Bizarre behavior following the ingestion of levo desoxyephedrine Drug Intell Clin Pharm 22 3 214 7 doi 10 1177 106002808802200308 PMID 3366062 Lothstein Leslie M 1982 Amphetamine Abuse and Transsexualism The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 170 9 568 571 doi 10 1097 00005053 198209000 00009 ISSN 0022 3018 One drug however amphetamine has been associated with disturbed sexuality 2 11 and related to transvestic episodes 1 6 Connell 6 noted that two out of 42 patients became transvestites under the influence of amphetamine and gave this as one of the main reasons for taking large dosages p 66 Beamish and Kiloh 1 also described a 19 year old male patient whose daily ingestion of 24 tablets of Detamphetamine and Drinamyl caused him to begin feeling like a woman and occasionally dressing up in women s clothing p 141 a b Moser Charles 30 June 2009 Autogynephilia in Women Journal of Homosexuality 56 5 539 547 doi 10 1080 00918360903005212 ISSN 0091 8369 Veale Jaimie F Clarke Dave E Lomax Terri C 2008 Sexuality of Male to Female Transsexuals Archives of Sexual Behavior 37 4 586 597 doi 10 1007 s10508 007 9306 9 ISSN 0004 0002 a b Lawrence Anne A 31 December 2009 Something Resembling Autogynephilia in Women Comment on Moser 2009 Journal of Homosexuality 57 1 1 4 doi 10 1080 00918360903445749 ISSN 0091 8369 Bailey J Michael Hsu Kevin J 2022 How Autogynephilic Are Natal Females Archives of Sexual Behavior 51 7 3311 3318 doi 10 1007 s10508 022 02359 8 ISSN 0004 0002 Moser Charles 2023 A Response to Bailey and Hsu 2022 It Helps If You Stop Confusing Gender Dysphoria and Transvestism Archives of Sexual Behavior 52 2 469 471 doi 10 1007 s10508 022 02418 0 ISSN 0004 0002 Serano Julia M Veale Jaimie F 2023 Autogynephilia Is a Flawed Framework for Understanding Female Embodiment Fantasies A Response to Bailey and Hsu 2022 Archives of Sexual Behavior 52 2 473 477 doi 10 1007 s10508 022 02414 4 ISSN 0004 0002 Bailey J Michael 2023 Autogynephilia and Science A Response to Moser 2022 and Serano and Veale 2022 Archives of Sexual Behavior 52 2 479 481 doi 10 1007 s10508 022 02482 6 ISSN 0004 0002 Holmes Morgan 2016 Critical Intersex Routledge p 176 ISBN 978 1 317 15730 4 The term transvestism was coined by Berlin sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld 1868 1935 in 1910 for individuals compelled to wear the typical clothes of the opposite sex Hirschfeld later used the term extreme transvestism for those who wanted to pass physically as a person of the gender to which they felt they truly belonged For these subjects he also used albeit unsystematically the term transsexual Hirschauer 1993 96 Hirschfeld 1923 15 Beginning in 1912 the first sex change operations were carried out in Berlin under Hirschfeld s supervision Herrn 2005 Mak Geertje 2022 The Sex of the Self and Its Ambiguities 1899 1964 In McCallum David ed The Palgrave Handbook of the History of Human Sciences Springer Nature pp 423 433 doi 10 1007 978 981 15 4106 3 ISBN 978 981 16 7255 2 S2CID 242987098 From 1910 to 1933 Hirschfeld and his colleagues at the Institute for Sexual Science were thus able to collect an increasingly rich collection of cases around the sexological category of transvestite From this category a subcategory was carved out the homosexual transvestiate and later extreme transvestite with demarcation lines both in the transvestite community and in therapeutic treatment Herrn 2005 Sutton 2012 Hirschfeld had always advised against such surgeries until he learned that some extreme transvestites would otherwise commit suicide Herrn 2005 184 85 Beachy R 2015 Gay Berlin Birthplace of a Modern Identity Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group pp 177 178 ISBN 978 0 307 47313 4 Retrieved 18 May 2024 What Levy Lenz Hirschfeld and others at the institute effectively pioneered was a primitive diagnosis with corresponding treatments for what is now described as gender dysphoria As historian Rainer Herrn has noted Hirschfeld used the term Transsexualismus but ultimately recurred to his model of transvestititism 56 In 1926 Hirschfeld introduced the term total transvestitism We find the strongest form of total transvestitism among those who want to transform not only their sartorial but also their biological appearance These strive for a complete transformation of their genitalia This means the elimination of menstruation by removing the ovaries for female transvestites and for men castration The number of cases is much greater than one had anticipated before 57 Hirschfeld Magnus 1923 Die Intersexuelle Konstitution The Intersexual Constitution Jahrbuch fur sexuelle Zwischenstufen Yearbook for Intermediate Sexual Types PDF Vol 23 pp 3 27 Benjamin Harry August 1953 Transvestism and Transsexualism International Journal of Sexology 7 1 12 14 Benjamin H April 1954 Transsexualism and Transvestism as Psycho Somatic and Somato Psychic Syndromes Am J Psychother 8 2 219 230 doi 10 1176 appi psychotherapy 1954 8 2 219 PMID 13148376 Benjamin Harry 1 January 1966 The Transsexual Phenomenon PDF New York The Julian Press a b c d e Blanchard R October 1989 The concept of autogynephilia and the typology of male gender dysphoria J Nerv Ment Dis 177 10 616 623 doi 10 1097 00005053 198910000 00004 PMID 2794988 a b Hirschfeld Magnus 1918 Sexualpathologie Ein Lehrbuch fur Arzte und Studierende Zweiter Teil Sexual Pathology A Textbook for Doctors and Students Part Two Bonn Marcus amp Weber OCLC 41101568 OL 51680148M Janssen Diederik F 2020 Transgenderism Before Gender Nosology from the Sixteenth Through Mid Twentieth Century Archives of Sexual Behavior 49 5 1415 1425 doi 10 1007 s10508 020 01715 w ISSN 0004 0002 Recent pertinent terms such as autogynephilia underscore the need for historical circumspection Blanchard s term coined in this journal 30 years ago revisited Hirschfeld s 1910 duly hesitant invocation see pp 199 202 of the notion of automonosexualism Rohleder 1907 or erotic arousal strictly from oneself In 1914 it found its way into Hirschfeld s more formal typological distinction of the automonosexual transvestite deriving arousal from the idea or image of oneself as opposite sexed New terms would be needed by 1989 because of the inconsistent history of this term automonosexualism and its nondescriptive derivation Blanchard 1989 p 323 Bullough Vern L 12 June 1991 Transvestism A Reexamination Journal of Psychology amp Human Sexuality 4 2 53 67 doi 10 1300 J056v04n02 05 ISSN 0890 7064 Ellis Havelock 1 August 1913 Sexo Aesthetic Inversion Alienist and Neurologist 34 3 156 167 Ellis Havelock 1928 Studies in the Psychology of Sex Volume VII Eonism and Other Supplementary Studies Philadelphia F A Davis Company OCLC 547136 OL 26431702M a b Buhrich N February 1978 Motivation for cross dressing in heterosexual transvestism Acta Psychiatr Scand 57 2 145 152 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0447 1978 tb06882 x PMID 636906 Prince a transvestite with a wide experience of transvestism considers that sexual arousal to female clothes is a relatively unimportant aspect of transvestism Prince 1967 Prince amp Bentler 1972 Prince believes that a major component of the transvestites urge to cross dress is their desire to emulate women He suggested the term femmiphilic transvestism be used to describe the common form of cross dressing in view of the transvestites love of feminine things a b c Bentler P M Sherman Richard W Prince Charles 1970 Personality characteristics of male transvestites Journal of Clinical Psychology 26 3 287 291 doi 10 1002 1097 4679 197007 26 3 lt 287 AID JCLP2270260308 gt 3 0 CO 2 G a b Prince Virginia 19 December 2005 The Transcendents or Trans People International Journal of Transgenderism 8 4 39 46 doi 10 1300 J485v08n04 07 ISSN 1553 2739 Freund K Steiner BW Chan S February 1982 Two types of cross gender identity Arch Sex Behav 11 1 49 63 doi 10 1007 BF01541365 PMID 7073469 a b Blanchard R 1991 Clinical observations and systematic studies of autogynephilia PDF J Sex Marital Ther 17 4 235 251 doi 10 1080 00926239108404348 PMID 1815090 Prince CV January 1957 Homosexuality transvestism and transsexualism reflections on their etiology and differentiation Am J Psychother 11 1 80 85 doi 10 1176 appi psychotherapy 1957 11 1 80 PMID 13394762 Prince C V 19 December 2005 Homosexuality Transvestism and Transsexuality Reflections on Their Etiology and Differentiation International Journal of Transgenderism 8 4 17 20 doi 10 1300 J485v08n04 03 ISSN 1553 2739 Dickey Robert Stephens Judith 1995 Female to male transsexualism heterosexual type Two cases Archives of Sexual Behavior 24 4 439 445 doi 10 1007 BF01541857 ISSN 0004 0002 PMID 7661657 Zavitzianos G 1972 Homeovestism perverse form of behaviour involving wearing clothes of the same sex Int J Psychoanal 53 4 471 477 PMID 4664943 Zavitzianos G 1977 The object in fetishism homeovestism and transvestism Int J Psychoanal 58 4 487 495 PMID 598975 Lawrence Anne A 2009 Anatomic Autoandrophilia in an Adult Male Archives of Sexual Behavior 38 6 1050 1056 doi 10 1007 s10508 008 9446 6 ISSN 0004 0002 Stoller RJ April 1982 Transvestism in women Arch Sex Behav 11 2 99 115 doi 10 1007 BF01541978 PMID 7125888 Gutheil E An Analysis of a Case of Transvestitism In Stekel Wilhelm ed Sexual Aberrations The Phenomenon of Fetishism in Relation to Sex New York Liverright pp 281 318 Buhrich N McConaghy N September 1977 The clinical syndromes of femmiphilic transvestism Arch Sex Behav 6 5 397 412 doi 10 1007 BF01541183 PMID 921524 David A Gerstner 2006 Routledge International Encyclopedia of Queer Culture Routledge p 568 ISBN 0313393680 Retrieved October 21 2016 A variety of derogatory terms are still used to describe any aspect of the transgender condition The term transvestite being older than cross dresser and associated with the medical community s negative view of the practice has come to be seen as a derogatory term The term cross dresser in contrast having come from the transgender community itself is a term seen as not possessing these negative connotations Vaccaro Annemarie August Gerri Kennedy Megan S Newman Barbara M 2011 Safe Spaces Making Schools and Communities Welcoming to LGBT Youth ABC CLIO p 142 ISBN 978 0 313 39368 6 Retrieved October 21 2016 Cross dresser cross dressing 1 The most neutral word to describe a person who dresses at least partially or part of the time and for any number of reasons in clothing associated with another gender within a particular society Carries no implications of usual gender appearance or sexual orientation Has replaced transvestite which is outdated problematic and generally offensive since it was historically used to diagnose medical mental health disorders Capuzza Jamie C Spencer Leland G eds 2015 Transgender Communication Studies Histories Trends and Trajectories Lexington Books p 174 ISBN 978 1 4985 0006 7 Retrieved October 21 2016 Eventually the transvestite label fell out of favor because it was deemed to be derogatory cross dresser has emerged as a more suitable replacement GLAAD 2014b Zastrow Charles 2016 Empowerment Series Introduction to Social Work and Social Welfare Empowering People Cengage Learning p 239 ISBN 978 1 305 38833 8 Retrieved October 21 2016 The term transvestite is often considered an offensive term Kattari Shanna K Kinney M Killian Kattari Leonardo Walls N Eugene eds 2021 Glossary Social Work and Health Care Practice With Transgender and Nonbinary Individuals and Communities Voices for Equity Inclusion and Resilience 1st ed New York NY Routledge p xxxviii ISBN 978 1138336223 Transvestite Outdated term previously used to describe a cross dresser Now considered pejorative a b Richards Christina Barker Meg 2013 Sexuality and Gender for Mental Health Professionals A Practical Guide SAGE Publications p 162 ISBN 978 1 44628716 3 Retrieved October 21 2016 The term transvestite should not be considered to be a safe term and should certainly not be used as a noun as in a transvestite Instead and only when relevant the term trans person should be used There are some people who have reclaimed the word transvestite and may also use the word tranny or TV to refer to themselves and others The term cross dressing too is somewhat outdated and problematic as not only do many fashions allow any gender to wear them at least in many contemporary Western societies but it also suggests a strict dichotomy being reinforced by the person who uses it Joyce H 2021 Sissy Boys and the Woman Inside Trans When Ideology Meets Reality Oneworld Publications pp 31 52 ISBN 978 0 86154 050 1 Retrieved 13 May 2024 She presented copious evidence that three transwomen had orchestrated the campaign Andrea James Lynn Conway a computer scientist and Dierdre McCloskey an economist Strikingly one had previously acknowledged autogynephilia and another described what sounded awfully like it in an autobiography In McCloskey s autobiography Crossing she writes that her teenage self Donald experienced a rush of sexual pleasure when dressing in his mother s underwear and used to break into neighbours houses in search of girls clothes She also specifies his preference for autogynphilic pornography There are two kinds of cross dressing magazines those that portray the men in dresses with private parts showing and those that portray them hidden Donald could never get aroused by the ones with private parts showing His fantasy was of complete transformation Stella O Malley and Sasha Ayad 18 March 2022 67 Pioneers Series Men Trapped in Men s Bodies with Anne Lawrence Gender A Wider Lens Podcast Substack Retrieved 12 May 2024 You asked me whether I would be willing to discuss my personal history and perhaps that will be useful or illustrative I remember at age six being fascinated by the clothing of a little girl who lived close to me and who I often played with She had a ballerina s tutu that I just I really wanted to wear that I didn t know why but I did And I remember that distinctly So this interest in wearing girls clothes or the idea of it and its fascination for me was kind of a puzzle I certainly remember by age eight that when I thought of being a girl or looking like a girl I would get erections And I didn t know what to make of that It was puzzling It was shameful But I didn t know what to do with it I remember at age eight my parents asked me well what do you want for Christmas And I wanted to say oh would you buy me a dress But I didn t know how to say that My desire felt incomprehensible It was shameful I didn t dare to say it Well it was actually happening in a dorm room at the University of Chicago I did cross dress publicly occasionally during those times I had some friends among gay men and I occasionally would go out to a concert or some sort of an event dressed in women s clothes but somehow it couldn t be more than episodic McCloskey D N 1999 Crossing A Memoir University of Chicago Press pp 19 20 ISBN 978 0 226 55668 0 Retrieved 19 May 2024 Donald s preoccupation with gender crossing showed up in an ugly fact about the pornographic magazines he used There are two kinds of crossdressing magazines those that portray the men in dresses with private parts showing and those that portray them hidden He could never get aroused by the ones with private parts showing His fantasy was of complete transformation not a peek a boo leering masculinity He wanted what he wanted Then it occurred to him that he might find something on crossdressing and on the local Net he did find an on line conversation that included it After some weeks he figured out how to access alt sex which contained materials for his fantasies in an abundance that startled him It aroused him too For weeks of spending a couple of hours a day on the Internet whenever he could make time in a doubly crowded semester of teaching he would focus on the pornographic bits Here was a library expressly designed for sexual arousal of crossdressers and aroused he was The sexual part started to fade something new in his crossdressing though he didn t notice Richards R Ames J Ames J M 1983 Second Serve The Renee Richards Story G Reference Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series in French Stein and Day p 27 ISBN 978 0 8128 2897 9 Retrieved 19 May 2024 My forays into my sister s wardrobe were happening with greater frequency It would be natural to think that this cross dressing must have been associated with some sexual activity In fact it was not I would sometimes get an erection as I pulled on some silky underthing but this was pretty much a response to the soft touch of the fabric It was not associated with the transformation to a girl The same thing might happen as I dried myself with a soft towel after a bath It is peculiar indeed that I could control the desire to masturbate but not the desire to dress in my sister s clothes I did have wet dreams so the mechanism was in perfectly good shape Cummings K 2007 Katherine s Diary The Story of a Transsexual a Transgender Journey from First Awareness to Self determination and Beyond Beaujon Press p 11 ISBN 978 1 4392 1545 6 Retrieved 19 May 2024 Was there a sexual component to this dressing up Yes and no I was ambushed by orgasm in a way I found quite antipathetic Because my routine involved dressing up and standing in front of the mirror while I admired my feminised reflection I wanted the image to be as female as possible and would as most transvestites learn to do pull my genitals back and clamp them between my thighs Adolescence combined with friction tended to create an erection quite the reverse of what I wanted and this in turn often resulted in orgasm and ejaculation Contrary to what one might imagine this ruined my enjoyment Of course the moment of orgasm was pleasurable but it was only a moment and the consequent ejaculation called an immediate halt to my activity partly because I had to prevent any semen from soiling my sister s clothes and partly because I disliked intensely the presence of the sticky fluid on my body I would hastily undress and wash myself a b Aggrawal A 2010 Necrophilia Forensic and Medico legal Aspects Taylor amp Francis p 113 ISBN 978 1 4200 8913 4 Retrieved 19 May 2024 Jerry Brudos suffered from multiple paraphilias He may be seen primarily as a fetishist with additional paraphilias transvestism and necrophilia Ed Gein 1906 1984 suffered from multiple paraphilias most notable were fetishism transvestism and necrophilia a b Kerswell J A 2018 The Teenage Slasher Movie Book 2nd Revised and Expanded Edition Fox Chapel Publishing p 58 ISBN 978 1 62008 308 6 Retrieved 19 May 2024 HITCHCOCK S PSYCHO Released in 1960 Psycho was Hitchcock s 49th picture and one that very nearly didn t happen The director stinging from the commercial and critical failure of Vertigo 1958 noticed that low budget horror thrillers were making money at the box office Accordingly Hitchcock bought the rights to the 1959 novel Psycho by writer Robert Bloch The events in the book and in turn the film were loosely inspired by the real life murders by Ed Gein in 1950s Wisconsin which involved transvestism necrophilia cannibalism and Gein dressing in the skins of women Although Bloch and Hitchcock without a doubt stretched the boundaries of what was acceptable with audiences at the time only the quasi transvestism and murder were utilized in Psycho Unfortunately equating tranvestism with mental illness in Psycho serves to date the film And this is why she s screaming Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates dons his dead mother s attire Miller Laurence 2014 Serial killers I Subtypes patterns and motives Aggression and Violent Behavior 19 1 1 11 doi 10 1016 j avb 2013 11 002 For example Ed Gein wore the skin of his victims during his autoerotic transvestite rituals this became the inspiration for the Buffalo Bill character in Silence of the Lambs LaBrode 2007 White John H 2007 Evidence of Primary Secondary and Collateral Paraphilias Left at Serial Murder and Sex Offender Crime Scenes Journal of Forensic Sciences 52 5 1194 1201 doi 10 1111 j 1556 4029 2007 00523 x ISSN 0022 1198 Jerry Brudos a serial killer in Washington state collected women s high heeled shoes and women s underwear He even amputated the foot of his first murder victim 15 It appears that some sexual serial killers such as Jeffrey Dahmer did engage in numerous paraphilias that are both primary secondary cumuative and collateral see below In the well documented case of Jerry Brudos 15 he developed a shoe fetish early in life and later killed to fulfill his fantasies concerning women and highheeled shoes Even though he raped took pictures of his victims stole their underwear and mutilated them his primary paraphilia at least at one point in time was the shoe fetish An underwear fetish then developed adding to the shoe fetish later followed by the addition of paraphilic rape pictophilia triolism he positioned mirrors so that he could see himself with his victims and then mutilation Breo D L Martin W J Kunkle B 2016 The Crime of the Century Richard Speck and the Murders That Shocked a Nation Skyhorse p 553 ISBN 978 1 5107 0887 7 Retrieved 19 May 2024 The interview contains several colloquies in which Speck brags about how many homosexual encounters he has had in Stateville Speck frequently boasted about how much he enjoys having sex with black men and how he wants to have sex every day I About how many people have you had sex with since you have been locked up S Oh God I can t count that high Laughter I Someone said you have real titties Do you S Yeah I Let me see them Speck stood up and removed the layers of his house painter clothes stripping down to blue silk women s panties His naked chest revealed that he had grown nearly full size women s breasts In 1988 Stateville contraband of every kind was not hard to sneak into the institution by visitors and bribed guards If the interviewer could get a hand held video audio camera into the joint and find a room to film a video without fear of interruption how difficult would it have been for Speck to get the hormones that would enable him to sprout female breasts I Can t stand them titties S No I love them I pet them every night before I go to sleep I got nothing I m ashamed of I Do you have panties and a bra in prison S Yeah L You got lots of that shit Columbia Chronicle 05 20 1996 Digital Commons Columbia College Chicago 20 May 1996 Retrieved 19 May 2024 In another part of the tape Speck stood in front of the camera to reveal breasts that were unusually large for a male The committee concluded that Speck had female hormones Sitting in women s underwear Speck told Larimore If they only knew how much fun I was having they would turn me loose Knoll James L Hazelwood Robert R 2009 Becoming the victim Beyond sadism in serial sexual murderers Aggression and Violent Behavior 14 2 106 114 doi 10 1016 j avb 2008 12 003 In a study of 20 sexually sadistic serial murderers five of them demonstrated paraphilic activities including transvestism Warren et al 1996 In addition over half reported homosexual experiences These findings led to the clinical hypothesis that these subjects were polymorphous or variable in their perversity which may suggest an underlying disorganization of sexual development Stone Michael H 2001 Serial Sexual Homicide Biological Psychological and Sociological Aspects Journal of Personality Disorders 15 1 1 18 doi 10 1521 pedi 15 1 1 18646 ISSN 0885 579X TABLE 1 Types of Paraphilias Noted in the Serial Killers Paraphilia Transvestism Paraphilia Frequencya 5 aAs noted in the 98 biographies where information pertaining to paraphilias was adequate a b Woodward Suzanne 2011 Imagining possibilities Trans representations in mainstream film ResearchSpace Auckland Retrieved 19 May 2024 a b c Malinowska Anna 2015 Eonist Spies Cross Dressing and the Idea of Sartorial Camouflage In Bemben A Boryslawski R eds Cryptohistories Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 96 ISBN 978 1 4438 7565 3 Retrieved 19 May 2024 a b Ketchum Daniel L 25 September 2015 Transmission Premium Television Characters Outside of the Gender Binary Digital Commons DU Retrieved 19 May 2024 Woody Harrelson a masculine cisgender male actor plays a ridiculously costumed German transvestite prostitute Galaxia trying to provoke Adam Sandler s character in Anger Management Peter Segal 2003 Sandler says I actually like to spend most of my time in GirlsWithoutWeiners ville followed by an equally juvenile off screen reveal of Galaxia s penis whoa there it is a b Abbott Traci B 2022 The Comedic Cis Surprise Romantic Partner Version The History of Trans Representation in American Television and Film Genres Cham Springer International Publishing p 101 130 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 97793 1 4 ISBN 978 3 030 97792 4 Later R rated flms made this aggression sexually explicit such as exposing her penis unsolicited Anger Management Segal 2003 American Crude Sheffer 2008 Passenger Side Bissonnette 2009 and The Hangover Part II Phillips 2011 Galaxia cis male actor Woody Harrelson in Anger Management is even more extreme rubbing her nipples and gyrating against male characters Lenning Emily Guadalupe Diaz Xavier 19 July 2023 Monsters with Mommy Issues The Mis Representation of Queer Lives in True Crime London Routledge p 67 86 doi 10 4324 9781003279440 6 ISBN 978 1 003 27944 0 Boyd H 2003 My Husband Betty Love Sex and Life with a Crossdresser Basic Books ISBN 978 1 56025 515 4 Retrieved 22 May 2024 Boyd H 2007 She s Not the Man I Married My Life with a Transgender Husband Basic Books ISBN 978 1 58005 193 4 Retrieved 22 May 2024 Novic Richard J 2005 Alice in Genderland A Crossdresser Comes of Age iUniverse ISBN 978 0 595 76376 4 Retrieved 22 May 2024 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Transvestic fetishism amp oldid 1225255268, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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