The Cross-dresser reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
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Cross-dresser

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A cross-dresser (sometimes called a transvestite, CD or TV) is any person who wears the clothing of the opposite gender, for any reason. Specific groups within the group of cross-dressers include (among others) drag queens, drag kings, and transvestic fetishists. Cross-dressing is one type of transgender behaviour.

While some cross-dressers may have no desire or intention of adopting other behaviors or practices common to the gender indicated by their choice of clothes, many endeavor to project a complete illusion of belonging to the opposite sex, down to mannerisms, speech patterns, and emulation of sexual characteristics. This is referred to as passing.

Others use a more "mixed" approach: for instance, a man who may wear both a dress and a beard. This is sometimes known as genderfuck.

Table of contents
1 Analyses of the behavior
2 Specific types of cross-dressing
3 Other cross-dressing
4 History of cross-dressing
5 Fiction

Analyses of the behavior

Sexual preferences among cross-dressers vary as much as they do in the general population, though, contrary to popular belief, most male-bodied cross-dressers are heterosexual. Some (but by no means all) lesbian women also cross-dress; compare butch. Cross-dressing among heterosexual women seems to be rare, however, no statistics exist.

The actual determination of cross-dressing is somewhat socially constructed. For example, pants used to be a generally male item of clothing, but has been adopted for wear by women -- this is generally not regarded as cross-dressing, and some women wear some male items of clothing (such as a suit, shirt, or jacket) for fashion, without fear of stigma from others. However, the reverse for men is generally not true. For example, in Western societies, a man who wears a typically female item of clothing such as a skirt will not be able to do so for the sake of fashion as a woman may.

Some students of differentiated reception of cross dressers have suggested as a reason for this aforementioned behavior, is that for a woman to take on a male role in a patriarchal society thus may raise her social status, whereas for a man to take on a female role in that same society is to lower his social status. Thus the woman may be unsympathetically viewed as some kind of social climber, but the man will most likely be unsympathetically viewed as a self-confessed failure in the male quest for dominance, culled by himself from the breeding stock, etc. However this is only one view, and relies on the view that a woman adopting male characteristics in society will be "rewarded" for doing so, which may not be the case.

Classic psychoanalytic views of crossdressing emphasized the role of taboo in the behavior. Only items that were proscribed to a gender would be appropriated, and therefore it is not the general association of an item with one sex or the other, but the prohibitions against the item that give satisfaction to those with a fetish (as opposed to political or sexually expressive) attachment to cross-dressing. As articles become acceptable for occasional wear (a man's necktie on a woman, for example, which passed from taboo to fashion in the 1970's), they cease to be sought by crossdressers.

Specific types of cross-dressing

Other cross-dressing

History of cross-dressing

Historically, and still in some parts of the world or in specific situations, cross-dressing occurs for reasons not (or not necessarily) related to the ones mentioned above:

Fiction

See also: List of transgender-related topics