Current:Home > NewsTradeEdge Exchange:'Transitions' explores the process of a mother's acceptance of her child's gender -Wealth Empowerment Zone
TradeEdge Exchange:'Transitions' explores the process of a mother's acceptance of her child's gender
PredictIQ Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-07 18:34:33
In the opening to Élodie Durand's visual narrative,TradeEdge Exchange Transitions: A Mother's Journey, a mother in her early 40s sits with her newly 19-year-old at a therapist's office. The therapist is explaining the ways people in France are typically placed into oversimplified categories, boy or girl, from birth. "But in reality," she continues, "there are multiple possibilities."
The guarded mother only reluctantly engaging in this conversation beside her mostly silent teenager is Anne Marbot, a French university biologist who, until this point, as she later admits, has generally considered herself to be open-minded. Anne's teenager, who was assigned female at birth and has been living her life until recently as "Lucie," came out to her as a boy just a few months earlier. This session, with her child's therapist, is intended to help Anne become a better ally to her son because, until now, the mother has not taken the announcement well. Instead, through nonacceptance she has driven a deep rift between them.
"I had no role model," she later admits. "I was not prepared."
Originally published in French in 2021 as Journal d'Anne Marbot, Transitions is a welcome addition to the growing number of graphic novels and comics exploring transgender as well as genderqueer identities. These include perhaps most famously Maia Kobabe's graphic memoir Gender Queer — which has faced challenges around the country — alongside works like L. Nichols' Flocks and Sabrina Symington's fictional First Year Out. A distinguishing characteristic of Transitions in relation to these other works is that the focus of the story is what Alex's mother refers to as her own different kind of transition, from shades of denial and rejection to unqualified support and acceptance of her child. As the therapist tells Marbot, who is riddled with anxiety, grief, and a host of other emotions for months following Alex's announcement: "You fear that Alex will be marginalized, but the first and foremost marginalization is family rejection. That is in your hands."
Transitions is shaped by the real-life story of Anne and Alex (all names have been fictionalized), as told to French artist and illustrator Durand. In addition to illustrating numerous children's books, Durand also recently published a graphic memoir, Parenthesis, in which she draws and writes of her own experiences having a brain tumor and its assorted effects on her everyday life and sense of self. Here in Transitions, a biography of sorts, she animates exchanges between various family members, people she spent three years learning from and listening to, through her thoughtful, kaleidoscopic layouts and illustrations. Large chunks of narration, distinguishable through their typescript, come directly from Marbot's own diary, which she started keeping nearly a year after her son told her he was male. Mixing text-heavy comics with pages of wordless, evocative drawings, most of Transitions is drawn in black, white, and grayscale, while splashes of bright colors — including an eye-popping hot pink — thread through, tracing the protagonist mother's many emotional ups and downs.
The end of the book includes six pages of illustrated text taken verbatim from an email eventually sent from Alex to his mother nearly three years after that appointment with the therapist. In this way, readers get to hear Alex's direct perspective after experiencing most of the story primarily through his mother's eyes. Alex is unsparing, if also deeply loving and compassionate, in his assessment of his mother's journey. He tells of how he has had to deal with his family's doubts and prejudices on top of his own and the rest of the world's, added burdens in his time of greatest need. "Beyond the immense freedom that there is in being oneself," he writes finally of his transition, "I learned to listen to myself. I learned what I wanted."
Transitions is a moving, demanding read, not least because it candidly traces a disjunction between an otherwise loving parent and her response to an unexpected situation in which her own intolerances get in the way of her relationship with her child. It is only when Alex reaches out to his parents in the middle of the night, reeling from a friend's suicide attempt, that Marbot is finally shaken enough to recognize the damage she has been inflicting on her son. As a biologist, it turns out she is in fact primed to see the fallacies and limitations of a system in which gender is divided into oversimplified categories. When she finally begins to move past her own preconceptions, this scientific training becomes an advantage. "Our classical scientific conception of male and female isn't relevant at all," she recognizes, and in pages of creative diagramming and other forms of visual mapping, a different, more complex version of the world is presented both to her and to readers. She even brings her changed outlook back to the workplace, suggesting a Philosophy of Science course for her institution.
"I feel I've taken on a new identity that I like," Marbot declares by the end of the book, having elected for a deep, renewed commitment to her son, marked both by educating herself and affirming her child through concrete actions and behaviors.
It's a satisfying end to a story that in real life often ends in heartbreak. Many parents and other family members are still hesitant to support transgender children and teens, despite how crucial that support is to their well-being. Durand's book is a welcome reminder that taking children and young people seriously is any parent's or caregiver's greatest responsibility.
Tahneer Oksman is a writer, teacher, and scholar specializing in memoir as well as graphic novels and comics. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.
veryGood! (753)
Related
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- Clergy burnout is a growing concern in polarized churches. A summit offers coping strategies
- Mexico is bracing for a one-two punch from Tropical Storms Lidia and Max
- Oklahoma, Brent Venables validate future, put Lincoln Riley in past with Texas win
- Golf's No. 1 Nelly Korda looking to regain her form – and her spot on the Olympic podium
- See states with the most student debt as Biden Administration moves in on new deal
- What is Hamas? Militant group behind surprise Israel attack has ruled Gaza for years
- ‘Without water, there is no life’: Drought in Brazil’s Amazon is sharpening fears for the future
- British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
- Should the next House speaker work across the aisle? Be loyal to Trump?
Ranking
- 51-year-old Andy Macdonald puts on Tony Hawk-approved Olympic skateboard showing
- Simone Biles wins something more important than medals at world championships
- Drake Fires Back at Weirdos Criticizing His Friendship With Millie Bobby Brown
- Bills LB Matt Milano sustains knee injury in 1st-quarter pileup, won’t return vs Jaguars
- IOC's decision to separate speed climbing from other disciplines paying off
- Spielberg and Tom Hanks' WWII drama series 'Masters of the Air' gets 2024 premiere date
- 9 rapes reported in one year at U.K. army's youth training center
- Opinion polls show Australians likely to reject Indigenous Voice to Parliament at referendum
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Kiptum sets world marathon record in Chicago in 2:00:35, breaking Kipchoge’s mark
Some in Congress want to cut Ukraine aid and boost Taiwan’s. But Taiwan sees its fate tied to Kyiv’s
150-year-old Florida Keys lighthouse illuminated for first time in a decade
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Carlos Correa stars against former team as Twins beat Astros in Game 2 to tie ALDS
9 rapes reported in one year at U.K. army's youth training center
A Russian-born Swede accused of spying for Moscow is released ahead of the verdict in his trial