Back to All Events

Finding Mary Jones in New Orleans: Unfinishing Black Trans History

  • Gertrude C Ford Ole Miss Student Union (map)

Dr. Jules Gill-Peterson will deliver the joint 2023 Isom Student Gender Conference Keynote/Lucy Somerville Howorth Lecture/Trans Studies Lecture entitled “Finding Mary Jones in New Orleans: Unfinishing Black Trans History”

Description:

Where does the association of trans womanhood and sex work come from? This talk considers the remarkable life of Mary Jones, a Black trans woman arrested in 1836 in New York City. At trial, Jones testified to the Black social world in which she lived and worked, including a reference to visiting New Orleans. Following the riddle of her journey from New York to the Mississippi Valley, Jones prompts how trans womanhood as a modern way of life may have been built into the emergence of the service economy in the antebellum era, with Black gender caught in the contradictions and symbiosis between enslaved labor and wage labor.

About Dr. Gill-Peterson:

Jules Gill-Peterson is an associate professor of History and Johns Hopkins University. She is the author of Histories of the Transgender Child (2018) and a general co-editor of TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly. Her next book, A Short History of Trans Misogyny, will be published by Verso.

Previous
Previous
March 22

Isom Student Gender Conference

Next
Next
April 6

Sarahtalk: Exploring the Impact of Pregnancy Loss during Adolescence on Maladaptive Coping