hannah baer
trans girl suicide museum
"I had a dream once where I found a hyper-cube that was also a book. It was opalescent and glistening, with gold edges. I couldn't figure out how to read it because I didn't know how to read in four-dimensional space. I had the sense that if I could figure out how to read this book it would change the way I lived. And then, years later, when I first read tgsm, I felt like maybe it was this hyper-cube-as-book of my dreams: twisted, shimmering, demented, and messy; but forgiving, hopeful, and saturated with meaning and feeling in the way I imagine hyper-life might be. I wish an anonymous messenger had left tgsm on my pillow when I was 16, so I could have envisioned another sort of life for myself, as a gendered being, a political subject, and a friend." —Cyrus Grace Dunham
one part ketamine spiral, one part confessional travelogue from the edge of gender, tgsm is a hallucinatory transmission on sex, identity, the internet, and the flickering wish not to exist in a given body in at a given point in time.
tgsm raises questions with which we have begun to negotiate broadly as a culture: what is actually happening to someone when they transition? how should we understand or describe such processes? what is the role of drugs, of hallucination, of imagination, in transition? is being a trans person in this moment in history—when the identity is ever more carefully traced [and tracked] by larger cultural forces—more liberated than before?
drawing its source material from chance encounters—wordless interactions in basements or bathrooms or hotel rooms—to archives of 20th century critical theory, sleepover secrets exchanged between old friends, rhetorical barbs deployed in the classrooms of elite universities, arguments on the phone with your parents across timezones, the nonverbal codes of high and low fashion, and scribbled notes on the backs of receipts for medicines you don’t know how they work, tgsm is a morbid yet strangely hopeful meditation on the possibilities and meanings of gender variation in our time.
hannah baer runs the meme account @malefragility on instagram, and studies clinical psychology in new york city.
ISBN 978-1-948434-06-5
Soft cover, perfect bound
130 pages, 5.375 × 8.25-inch
Sixth Edition
US $13 Retail
Also available from Asterism Books
Carll941
Logging into Uptown Aces for the first time, I was curious to see how the no deposit coupon code worked in practice. The registration process was quick and intuitive, and I was immediately shown the $20 free chip available to new players. Applying the promo code was simple, and it gave me a chance to explore the platform without risking my own money. While looking for tips to make the most of the bonus, I came across https://welcomebonus.co/bonus/uptown-aces-20-free-chip/ which provided clear guidance on claiming the offer and understanding the wagering requirements. Using the free chip, I tried a variety of games including slots, blackjack, and roulette, and I enjoyed seeing how each game contributed to the 60x wagering requirement. It was also exciting to experiment with different strategies to maximize potential winnings. Overall, the bonus made my first experience on Uptown Aces engaging, low-risk, and educational, giving me confidence to continue playing while exploring the casino’s features.
rafaelakutch
Thank you to the author for sharing an opening and transformative reading experience, one that is both disordered and full of hope. The text suggests that transitioning is not only a biological change but also a reconstruction of worldview, where language, friendship, and politics intertwine into a new structure. For readers, engaging with such works requires 11 skills, which means daring to experiment with multiple interpretations, harmonizing the personal and the collective, and finding one’s own resonance within the narrative of gender and existence.