TRANS NECROPOLITICS: Gender Identity Law In Argentina

Authors

  • Martin Adrian De Mauro Rucovsky Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades, Escuela de Filosofía

Keywords:

Gender Identity Law, Trans community’s, Biopolitical approach

Abstract

Last May 9, 2012, the Argentinian Senate turned into  a law what was a long colective process driven by trans activism, the so called Gender Identity Acknowledgemente Law.

The Gender Identity Law, meant a large step forward at an  international  level in the sexual and civil rights field, and specifically in the Trans politics subject. Nontheless, what was concerned in the approval of the GIL implied not only an advance at a personal and global level in legal terms, but also a  set of representations, desires and social pledges over Trans population and life. Theoretically, if we adjust to the scope of the GIL’S achievements, we can state that a concrete life, a Trans life, does not qualify as a living life.

The following lines are centered in a critical consideration over the specific ways of presenting and understanding a Trans life, both in the variety of parliamentary debates regarding the GIL as in the social disputes withing Trans activism itself. From a biopolitical approach over gender identity, we plan to rethink the social conditions that sustain life, and consecuently, the interpretative frames of death.

Author Biography

Martin Adrian De Mauro Rucovsky, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades, Escuela de Filosofía

Investigador Grupo de investigación “Haciendo cuerpos: biopolítica y gestión de vidas humanas”: Liliana Pereyra & Andrea Lacombe. Secyt, grupo tipo B, Biaño 2012-2013. Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Argentina

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Published

2015-08-09

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Articles