Necropolitics and Trans Identities: Language Use as Structural Violence

Author:

Stewart Kinsey B.1,Delgado Thomas A.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 1621 Cumberland Ave, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA

2. Department of Anthropology, California State University, Chico, 400 West First Street, Chico, CA 95926, USA

Abstract

Despite the increasing visibility of transgender and gender diverse (TGD) people in U.S. society, current linguistic practices within forensic anthropology and death investigation in general are not TGD-inclusive. This lack of consideration for TGD decedents can cause unnecessary delays in the identification and disposition of their remains; moreover, failing to recognize their true identities is a form of forced post-mortem detransition. Using De León’s concept of necroviolence as a framework, we argue that language can also harm the dead and that the (mis)use of language within medicolegal death investigation reflects and reinforces structural violence against TGD people. Examples drawn from a qualitative review of public details for 87 cases are used to demonstrate how language and language-enforced bureaucratic structures can harm TGD decedents, their loved ones, the broader TGD community, and the process of medicolegal death resolution itself. We then suggest steps that anthropologists, death investigators, and their affiliated partners can take to reduce the systemic necropolitical violence faced by the TGD community. While TGD-inclusive methods will take time to implement at the institutional level, individual practitioners can enact significant change within the system by upholding core standards that recognize and respect the personhood and lived experiences of TGD decedents.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference79 articles.

1. (2023, March 17). National Unidentified Persons Data System, Available online: https://www.namus.gov/UnidentifiedPersons/Case#/6030.

2. Hyman, J. (2023, March 17). New DNA Tests Show Woman’s Body Found in Lake County Was Transgender. Watermark Online. Available online: https://watermarkonline.com/2015/11/17/new-dna-tests-show-womans-body-found-in-lake-county-was-transgender/.

3. De León, J. (2015). The Land of Open Graves: Living and Dying on the Migrant Trail, University of California Press.

4. Violence, Peace, and Peace Research;Galtung;J. Peace Res.,1969

5. An Anthropology of Structural Violence;Farmer;Curr. Anthropol.,2004

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