Spring Get-Together Focuses on FTMs and AIDS
FTMs, Health, Trans masculine
Issue 12 of the newsletter from FTM International, the longest-running, largest organization serving the female-to-male trans community. Lou Sullivan founded FTM in San Francisco in 1986 as a support group for female-to-male transvestites and transsexuals and began publishing the quarterly newsletter in 1987. Sullivan died from AIDS-related complications in 1991.
FTM International
<a href="https://sexualminoritiesarchives.wordpress.com/">Sexual Minorities Archives</a>
1990
Chris Barcelos
Newsletter
English
You Don't Have to Love Your Body to Take Care of It (2nd ed.)
Accessing healthcare, Queer, Transgender, Health, Medical care
A little tiny guide to accessing healthcare especially for queer/trans folks and all of us who have had complicated relationships with our bodies. even if you’ve been traumatized, stigmatized or generally fucked over BY the health care system.
Kelli Dunham
https://organrecital.org/2017/02/27/the-promised-zine-you-dont-have-to-love-your-body/
2017
Chris Barcelos
PDF Pamphlet
trans* sex activity book
Trans, Safer Sex, Anatomy, Consent, Pleasure
"This is a zine about sex and sexuality. It uses both medical terminology for body parts and welcomes you to make up your own. It also includes diagrams of sexual anatomy. Sex can be a place both great pleasure and great pain. For people who are trans or gender-variant, sex is often intertwined with gender identity. Everyone thinks about how the other person (or people) see them during sex, but trans folks have the added layer of how their gender is seen, and how their bodies are interpreted. We don’t even have language to talk about trans experience, trans bodies, or trans sex. Yet."
Damon Constantinides
http://www.therapistdamon.com/services/individual-counseling/sexual-orientation-gender-identity/trans-sex-activity-book-2/
2013
PDF Pamphlet
transcending anatomy: a guide to bodies and sexuality for partners of trans people
Transgender, Language, Sex
"A guide to help partners of trans people navigate bodies and sex! It starts by unpacking some common assumptions, then goes through strategies for understanding your partner's body, what language to use, and what feels good for them. It also also talks about getting comfortable with physical contact, dealing with dysphoria, and creative ways to work within limits. It won't tell you what to say and do during sex, or what your partner wants – instead, think of this as a starting point for challenging your own assumptions and talking about this stuff. (And few things in here need to be about trans people per se: some of them are just good sense strategies for respecting, communicating with, and opening up to a new partner.)"
Eli Aaron
http://transcending-anatomy.tumblr.com/contents
2011
Anya Katz
PDF Pamphlet
English
Trans Sexuality: A Safe Sex Guide for Trans People and Their Partners
Trans bodies, Safer Sex, Disclosure
"Often times, sex educators prefer to use 'standard' language for our bodies (penis, vagina, etc). It’s true that using one set of words means people will be more likely to understand everything, however, doing so can feel invalidating for trans people who don’t identify their bodies with those terms. Additionally, it feeds the myth that trans people's bodies work the same as cis people’s bodies and that’s not true. What works for a cis man’s genitals won’t necessarily work for a trans woman without surgery or a trans man who’s had surgery, what works for a cis woman’s genitals won’t necessarily work for a trans man without surgery or a trans woman who’s had surgery."
Tobi Hill-Meyer
Handbasket Productions
http://handbasketproductions.com/Trans%20Sex%20Ed%20(ezine).pdf
Unknown
Anya Katz
PDF Pamphlet
English
Safer Sex for Trans Bodies
Safer Sex, Trans* people
"This is a safer sex guide for transgender and gender expansive people, and for our partners and lovers. When it comes to sex, there’s a serious lack of resources available to trans people that talk about our bodies and our needs in a relatable and respectful way. We decided to make a guide, specifically for trans and gender expansive people, that helps answer questions about safer sex. This guide isn’t all about sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and condoms—inside, you’ll find information about sex during and after transition, ways to talk to your partner(s) (romantic, casual and transactional) about sex and suggestions for exploring your own sexuality, whether you have many partners, one partner, or you’re going solo."
Human Rights Campaign and Whitman-Walker Health
http://www.hrc.org/resources/safer-sex-for-trans-bodies
2016
Anya Katz
PDF Pamphlet
English