Austin Svedjan

Wolf Humanities Center Doctoral Fellow

20252026 Forum on Truth

Austin Svedjan

Ph.D. Candidate, English

Austin Svedjan is a Doctoral Candidate in the Department of English at the University of Pennsylvania. Their writing appears or is forthcoming in venues such as TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, Postmodern Culture, among others. Their dissertation project tracks the emergence of the modern concept of “bad sex” through its historical interfacing with institutions of literary education across the long twentieth-century United States.

For the 2025–2026 academic year, Austin is a Doctoral Fellow at the Wolf Humanities Center, where they are working on a project interrogating discourses surrounding the “truth” of medical gender transition as it is represented in the work of both twentieth-century sexology and contemporary trans studies. Their archival attentions for this project focalize around autobiographies written by trans people and prefaced by sexologists in order to experiment with how the concept of “paratext” might offer a new tool for better understanding the historical development of trans subjectivity. 

TruTrans?: Trans Autobiography, Sexological Paratext, and Medical "Truth"

Using the colloquialism “TruTrans”—a term used online to juxtapose “true” trans people who medically transition against their “fake,” non-medical counterparts—as a conceptual springboard, this project interrogates how aesthetic concepts of the “truth” of trans life have been constructed through narrative techniques like autobiography in U.S. literature. It leverages an archive of trans autobiographies prefaced by sexologists like Jennie June’s Autobiography of an Androgyne (1918) to intervene upon ongoing debates in trans studies pitting—not unlike “trutrans” discourse—“material” against “aesthetic” transition. While trans access to healthcare has never seemed more pressing, this project traces the fraught historical relationship between transness and self-authorship to newly problematize accepted wisdoms about the incompatibility between medical and aesthetic “truth” as models for trans flourishing.