Told
with compassion and insight, the fascinating eight-episode documentary
TransGeneration focuses on the lives of four college students struggling
to fit into a society that doesn't understand why they are the way they
are--that is, transgendered young adults trapped in bodies that belie their
true selves. Gabbie and Raci deal with their issues in vastly different
ways.
Sex-reassignment
surgery is expensive, and is a procedure many transgendered folks can't
afford. But money is no object for Gabbie--the first-born son of an affluent
family--and she literally counts the days until her scheduled treatment.She
has no problem telling her classmates she's transgendered and believes
surgically ridding herself of her penis will complete her life. Raci, also
19, is deaf and poor. An immigrant from the Philippines, she resorts to
purchasing female hormone shots off the street because that's all she can
afford. Though she's hopeful at the start of the school year that the kids
are "tranny friendly," Raci lives in constant fear that she will
be ostracized if her true identity is found out. When people ask her about
the camera crew following her around, she mumbles that she's part of a
documentary about women in college.
The
two female-to-male subjects are no less complicated. Lucas is tired of
being asked about transsexuals and transgendered people, but he's also
aware that as one of the few males at an all-female school (Smith College),
people are curious about his beginning college as a woman and graduating
as a man. A neuroscience major, he's worried about hormones potentially
shaving years off his life. TJ, an Armenian grad student, is self-assured
and a leader on campus. But when he calls his mother back home, he's reduced
to an unsure child who doesn't want to disappoint his family. In Cyprus,
where he grew up, TJ was known as Tamar, a gorgeous gamine of a girl. He
wants to return home as TJ, but is worried about the ramifications against
his mother in their tight knit community.
Transitioning
into adulthood is an awkward and painful phase for many teens, who're unsure
of who they are and what they want to be. The four subjects of TransGeneration
know they don't want to be what they were born as. The documentarians
are careful not to present them as martyrs or perverts, but rather as full-dimensional
people who're scared, curious, and hopeful about what the future holds
in store for them. |
Photo courtesy of New Video Group |