A photographic archive of the transgender community in Bologna in the
1980s. With critical texts by scholars and queer
theorists.
This book is inspired by the pictures that Giordano Bonora, a young
streetcar operator and aspiring photographer, took of Bologna's small
transgender community in 1980 (although it would be more correct to speak,
in this case, of proto-Transgenderism). Reproduced here for the first time,
these raw and gilded images reflect—during a period in Italy characterized
by subversive movements and political revolts that were not just rooted in
questions of identity—attempts made by T* people at a construction of the
self outside the binary logic of the genotypically XY male/genotypically XX
female. By people like Valérie—a woman's face, a hairless chest
with no breasts, a fleur-de-lis tattooed on the shoulder, and two pairs of
pantyhose—for whom “gender” is not determined biologically but something to
be embraced depending on the circumstances. A box containing a jigsaw puzzle
with a picture that is constantly changing. Bundled with the photographs, a
handful of texts set out to explain how the question of gender involves two
cultural levels of sexual difference, the normative and the dissident, and
how the decision-making power over organs outside heteropatriarchal systems
of sexuality and processes of disidentification are the stakes in the new
“somato-political” struggle against hegemonic regimes of oppression
conducted by enchanting, allied, opaque, and vulnerable bodies.
Winner of the FLAT Prize–Fondazione Arte CRT, 2018.
Giordano Bonora (born 1947) is an Italian photographer and contemporary
artist.