Department of Psychological, Health, and Learning Sciences, College of Education, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Mar 19;16(3):e0248970. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0248970. eCollection 2021.
Identity concealment (whether or not a person is open with others about their transgender status) and passing/blending (how much a transgender person can, or chooses to, blend into the binary social environment) have been shown to impact transgender people's experiences in various ways, but few studies examine these constructs in the lives of non-binary individuals (those whose gender identity does not fall exclusively into the categories of man or woman). This study analyzed the non-binary subset of the nationwide sample from the 2015 United States Transgender Survey (9,769 participants) to examine the effects of blending/passing and identity concealment on distress and victimization. When ethnicity and income were controlled for, low concealers reported higher distress and more victimization experiences than high concealers, and blenders reported more distress and fewer victimization experiences than non-blenders. Not concealing may put non-binary people at higher risk for victimization, but blending into the binary-gendered environment may increase distress through identity erasure. Implications are discussed and future research directions are suggested.
身份隐瞒(无论一个人是否向他人公开其跨性别身份)和通过/融入(跨性别者在多大程度上能够或选择融入二元社会环境)已被证明会以各种方式影响跨性别者的体验,但很少有研究在非二元个体(其性别认同不完全属于男性或女性范畴)的生活中研究这些结构。本研究分析了全国性样本中的非二元子集,该样本来自 2015 年美国跨性别者调查(9769 名参与者),以研究融合/通过和身份隐瞒对痛苦和受害的影响。当控制了种族和收入时,低隐瞒者比高隐瞒者报告了更高的痛苦和更多的受害经历,而融合者比非融合者报告了更多的痛苦和更少的受害经历。不隐瞒可能会使非二元性别者面临更高的受害风险,但融入二元性别环境可能会通过身份抹杀而增加痛苦。讨论了其影响,并提出了未来的研究方向。