Vanguard Allure

Top Menu

  • Vanguard

Main Menu

  • Home
  • Allure Magazine
    • Features
    • Magazine
    • Profiles
  • Allure TV
  • Celebration
    • Fashion & Style
    • Weddings
    • Lifestyle
    • Events
  • Wellbeing
    • Allure Woman
    • Healthy Living
    • Beauty
  • Happiness
    • Food
    • Shopping
    • Travel
    • Relationships
    • Career
  • News
  • Vanguard

logo

Vanguard Allure

  • Home
  • Allure Magazine
    • Favour Erere Eyeoyibo: Many hats one calling

      April 5, 2026
      0
    • Nollywood YouTubers redefining entertainment

      March 30, 2026
      0
    • MISKAY and Hilda Baci Launch Signature Collection in Lagos

      March 27, 2026
      0
    • Must a woman change her surname after marriage?

      March 13, 2026
      0
    • Championing Equity for Women: Chinyere Okorocha

      March 8, 2026
      0
    • Ify Uzokwe’s Call for Collaboration, Courage and Collective Growth on International Women’s ...

      March 6, 2026
      0
    • The Women We Love

      March 5, 2026
      0
    • Silent Scars: When Boys Become Victims of Child Sexual Abuse

      March 5, 2026
      0
    • IS BEING NIGERIAN EMBARRASSING NOW?

      February 27, 2026
      0
    • Features
    • Magazine
    • Profiles
  • Allure TV
  • Celebration
    • Fashion & Style
    • Weddings
    • Lifestyle
    • Events
  • Wellbeing
    • Allure Woman
    • Healthy Living
    • Beauty
  • Happiness
    • Food
    • Shopping
    • Travel
    • Relationships
    • Career
  • News
    • World Autism Day: Foundation calls for early intervention in Children

      April 7, 2026
      0
    • Belaire and Stars Shine at Yemi Alade’s Yem Beauty Launch

      April 5, 2026
      0
    • Faith Morey Introduces The Grace Circle to Lagos

      March 8, 2026
      0
    • Jobberman Pushes Inclusive Hiring at HR Fusion - Pink Edition

      February 25, 2026
      0
    • Application for Lifesaver Intervention Initiative leadership certification course opens

      February 23, 2026
      0
    • Avoid friends who are fame and money hungry — Hilda Baci warns

      February 20, 2026
      0
    • Adebukola Salau's ‘Night of the Royals’ Honours Impact, Advances Leadership and Legacy

      January 24, 2026
      0
    • Adekunle Gold Reopens Wole Soyinka Centre with Grand Orchestral Showcase

      January 12, 2026
      0
    • Bimbo Ige Unveils New Beauty Tech at Celeb Clinic in Style

      January 12, 2026
      0
  • World Autism Day: Foundation calls for early intervention in Children

  • Highs and Lows: Understanding Bipolar Disorder

  • Understanding Stress Load & Emotional Burnout

  • Investment in Real Estate: The Dos & Donts

  • REKINDLING EASTER ROMANCE

Allure MagazineNews
Home›Allure Magazine›Author, Chimamanda Adichie clarifies her stance on trans-women

Author, Chimamanda Adichie clarifies her stance on trans-women

March 14,2017
Share:

By Patricia Uyeh
Last week, Nigerian author, Chimamanda Adichie appeared on Channel 4 and spoke on trans -women.

According to her, the whole problem of gender in the world is about our experiences and not because of the genitals we have. This obviously did not go down well with lots of people, who criticised her statement.

In order to clarify her statement, the ”Americannah” author took her Facebook page to wrote a lengthy post that read:

“CLARIFYING
‘Because I have been the subject of much hostility for standing up for LGBTQ rights in Nigeria, I found myself being very defensive at being labeled ‘trans phobic.’ My first thought was – how could anyone think that?
“I didn’t like that version of myself. It felt like a white person saying ‘I’m not racist, I supported civil rights.’
“Because the truth is that I do think one can be trans phobic while generally supporting LGBTQ rights.
“And so I want to put my defensiveness aside and clarify my thoughts. To make sure that I am fully understood.
“I said, in an interview, that trans women are trans women, that they are people who, having been born male, benefited from the privileges that the world affords men, and that we should not say that the experience of women born female is the same as the experience of trans women.

“This upset many people, and I consider their concerns to be valid. I realize that I occupy this strange position of being a ‘voice’ for gender rights and so there is an automatic import to my words.
“I think the impulse to say that trans women are women just like women born female are women comes from a need to make trans issues mainstream. Because by making them mainstream, we might reduce the many oppressions they experience.
“But it feels disingenuous to me. The intent is a good one but the strategy feels untrue. Diversity does not have to mean division.

“Because we can oppose violence against trans women while also acknowledging differences. Because we should be able to acknowledge differences while also being supportive. Because we do not have to insist, in the name of being supportive, that everything is the same. Because we run the risk of reducing gender to a single, essentialist thing.
“Perhaps I should have said trans women are trans women and cis women are cis women and all are women. Except that ‘cis’ is not an organic part of my vocabulary. And would probably not be understood by a majority of people. Because saying ‘trans’ and ‘cis’ acknowledges that there is a distinction between women born female and women who transition, without elevating one or the other, which was my point.

“I have and will continue to stand up for the rights of transgender people. Not merely because of the violence they experience but because they are equal human beings deserving to be what they are.
“I see how my saying that we should not conflate the gender experiences of trans women with that of women born female could appear as if I was suggesting that one experience is more important than the other. Or that the experiences of trans women are less valid than those of women born female. I do not think so at all – I know that trans women can be vulnerable in ways that women born female are not. This, again, is a reason to not deny the differences.
“Why does this even matter? Because at issue is gender.
“Gender is a problem not because of how we look or how we identify or how we feel but because of how the world treats us.
“Girls are socialized in ways that are harmful to their sense of self – to reduce themselves, to cater to the egos of men, to think of their bodies as repositories of shame. As adult women, many struggle to overcome, to unlearn, much of that social conditioning.

“A trans woman is a person born male and a person who, before transitioning, was treated as male by the world. Which means that they experienced the privileges that the world accords men. This does not dismiss the pain of gender confusion or the difficult complexities of how they felt living in bodies not their own.

“Because the truth about societal privilege is that it isn’t about how you feel. (Anti-racist white people still benefit from race privilege in the United States). It is about how the world treats you, about the subtle and not so subtle things that you internalize and absorb.
“This is not to say that trans women did not undergo difficulties as boys. But they did not undergo those particular difficulties specific to being born female, and this matters because those experiences shape how adult women born female interact with the world.

“And because to be human is to be a complex amalgam of your experiences, it is disingenuous to say that their being born male has no effect on their experience of gender as trans women.
“Of course there are individual differences. But there are always individual differences. We speak of ‘women’s issues’ knowing that while there are individual differences, the truth of human history is that women as a group have been treated as subordinate to men. And we speak of male privilege acknowledging that individual men differ but that men as a group are nevertheless accorded privileges by the world.

“I think of feminism as Feminisms. Race and class shape our experience of gender. Sexuality shapes our experience of gender. And so when I say that I think trans women are trans women, it is not to diminish or exclude trans women but to say that we cannot insist – no matter how good our intentions – that they are the same as women born female. Nor do I think that we need to insist that both are the same.
“To acknowledge different experiences is to start to move towards more fluid – and therefore more honest and true to the real world – conceptions of gender.”

Photo  credit: ConnectNigeria.com

Previous Article

Ooni of Ife meets with Prince Charles ...

Next Article

Jealous lover kills girlfriend after catching her ...

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related articles More from author

  • Allure MagazineLook of the day

    Look of the day: Mercy Aigbe Gentry

    January 5, 2017
    By allure1
  • Allure MagazineNews

    Actress, Toyin Aimakhu rocks new hair-do (photo)

    January 30, 2017
    By allure1
  • Allure MagazineNews

    Armed robbers attack Lagos residence of comic actor, Mr Ibu, makes away with cash

    January 9, 2018
    By allure1
  • MagazineNews

    Making music is my ministry, obedience to call of God – Chineze Okeke

    January 31, 2021
    By CHIOMA
  • EntertainmentNews

    It’s been difficult for me-Singer, Tekno shares health challenges

    November 29, 2018
    By allure1
  • Allure MagazineNews

    Daniella Okeke, unpertubed about bad econony, shows off new home, G Wagon

    August 19, 2016
    By allure1
0

  • Allure MagazineNews

    Actor, Odunlade Adekola celebrates his wife of 14 years

  • Allure MagazineEntertainmentInterviews

    ‘BIG BROTHER AFRICA’ PAST WINNERS: Where are they now?

  • Fashion & Style

    Analysis of the Onifaari Collection by Oladim Fashion House

  • 5312
    Followers
  • 0
    Likes

Timeline

  • April 7, 2026

    World Autism Day: Foundation calls for early intervention in Children

  • April 5, 2026

    Highs and Lows: Understanding Bipolar Disorder

  • April 5, 2026

    Understanding Stress Load & Emotional Burnout

  • April 5, 2026

    Investment in Real Estate: The Dos & Donts

  • April 5, 2026

    REKINDLING EASTER ROMANCE

Categories

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Sign up to receive email updates and to hear what's going on with our magazine!

  • Recent

  • Popular

  • Comments

  • World Autism Day: Foundation calls for early intervention in Children

    By Temitope
    April 7, 2026
  • Highs and Lows: Understanding Bipolar Disorder

    By CHIOMA
    April 5, 2026
  • Understanding Stress Load & Emotional Burnout

    By CHIOMA
    April 5, 2026
  • Investment in Real Estate: The Dos & Donts

    By CHIOMA
    April 5, 2026
  • Chioma Jesus, Sammie Okposo, Midnight Crew set for #THUGGLA2018

    By CHIOMA
    April 24, 2018
  • American rapper, Kendrick Lamar wins Pulitzer prize for 2017 ‘Damn’ album

    By CHIOMA
    April 17, 2018
  • Afrobeat singer, Seun Kuti drops new album titled ‘Black Times’ 

    By CHIOMA
    April 23, 2018
  • Actor, Yul Edochie declares intention to run for presidency

    By CHIOMA
    April 23, 2018

Entertainment

  • January 3, 2026

    Olajide Ajose, Davido, Omoni Oboli Make Visibility 50 Africa List

  • November 21, 2025

    Evia Simon Unveils New Christmas-Themed Film Project

  • October 22, 2025

    Davido Becomes Osun State’s Chairman of Sports Trust Fund 

  • October 21, 2025

    Iyabo Ojo welcomes daughter, grandson back to Nigeria

  • October 5, 2025

    Imisi crowned winner of Big Brother Naija Season 10

Follow us