Jump to content

Transsexual News Telegraph

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Rites of Passage (magazine))
Transsexual News Telegraph
Summer 1993 cover
EditorAnne Ogborn, Gail Sondegaard
FrequencyQuarterly
First issue1991
Final issue2002
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Transsexual News Telegraph was a quarterly news and topics magazine published in United States from 1991 to 2002. TNT covers often portrayed Trans Identities or Art and the back covers were usually a piece of graphic art with a thought provoking theme.

TNT originally was published as Rites of Passage, the official publication of the New Womens Conference, with Anne Ogborn as the editor. It began as a magazine for the then nascent post op movement. After two issues the magazine came under the editorship of Gail Sondegaard, changed its name to Transsexual News Telegraph, and ceased being officially tied to the New Womens Conference.[1]

TNT continued to be published approximately quarterly until 2002. In 1999 Katherine Collins joined the paper as Art Director. She and Gail Sondegaard continued publishing until 2002, when publication ceased.[2]

The magazine was published in 8½ × 11 inch format saddle stitched 48 pages over most of its life. After 1998 publication became less frequent and the publication grew thicker.

TNT always had a strong anti neo-colonization medical[broken anchor] emphasis, and featured many articles on trans related art and cultural events, reviews of relevant movies, as well as "News On The March", a section of transsexual related news.

Never with a very large subscriber base, the magazine had more influence because of its status as a tool for discussions among trans activists during the emergence of the transgender rights movement.[citation needed]

In the mid 1990s TNT began organizing issues of the magazine around specific topics.

Notable articles

[edit]
  • Early (1992) coverage of trans man Loren Cameron's photography
  • Transgender Liberation (1993)
  • Saheli! Anne Ogborn's recounting of experiences with the Hijra community
  • Nancy Nangeroni's "Gender Identity Disorder: What to Do?," on DSM categorization and pathologization of gender difference (1997)[3]
  • On Being a Trans-Parent (Issue #9, Autumn 2000) Jamison Green

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Editorial Expanding Our Focus". Transsexual News Telegraph. 3: 1–2. January 1992.
  2. ^ Archives of The LGBT Historical Society.
  3. ^ "GID vs Mental Health | GenderTalk".
[edit]