TY - JOUR
T1 - Priawan in Indonesia
T2 - A Study of Transmasculine Female-to-Male Individuals
AU - Artaria, Myrtati Dyah
AU - Alaydrus, Sayf Muhammad
AU - Budianto, Azzah Kania
AU - Prasetyo, Dwi
AU - Kaur, Charanjit
AU - Henneberg, Maciej
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, Universiteit Gent. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Topics surrounding transmasculinity, especially in Indonesia, are still overlooked, degraded, and understudied. This paper aims to explore the experience of priawan in Indonesia. Differentiating from the globally-renowned term ‘trans men’, a priawan identifies as a female-to-male transmasculine individual. We conducted in-depth interviews with eleven qualified informants. These interviews shed light on gender dysphoria or fluidity, gender-affirming processes, and discriminations they have faced, with hopes of proving and validating their existence. Eight of the informants express themselves as masculine and identify as lesbians. The most common gender-affirming process that they chose is name updating, followed by chest binding and hormone therapy. Five out of eleven reported having faced discrimination in various forms, such as verbal abuse, misgendering, stereotyping, and physical abuse. This study adds a new perspective on regional variability in transmasculine identities. Further research on chosen family dynamics and generational differences are encouraged to accentuate the visibility of transgender individuals in existing queer studies.
AB - Topics surrounding transmasculinity, especially in Indonesia, are still overlooked, degraded, and understudied. This paper aims to explore the experience of priawan in Indonesia. Differentiating from the globally-renowned term ‘trans men’, a priawan identifies as a female-to-male transmasculine individual. We conducted in-depth interviews with eleven qualified informants. These interviews shed light on gender dysphoria or fluidity, gender-affirming processes, and discriminations they have faced, with hopes of proving and validating their existence. Eight of the informants express themselves as masculine and identify as lesbians. The most common gender-affirming process that they chose is name updating, followed by chest binding and hormone therapy. Five out of eleven reported having faced discrimination in various forms, such as verbal abuse, misgendering, stereotyping, and physical abuse. This study adds a new perspective on regional variability in transmasculine identities. Further research on chosen family dynamics and generational differences are encouraged to accentuate the visibility of transgender individuals in existing queer studies.
KW - Female-to-male
KW - Gender fluidity
KW - Gender-based violence
KW - LGBT rights
KW - Trans men
KW - Transmasculine
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85197415582&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.21825/digest.90113
DO - 10.21825/digest.90113
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85197415582
SN - 2593-0273
VL - 11
SP - 85
EP - 103
JO - DiGeSt - Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies
JF - DiGeSt - Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies
IS - 1
ER -