Skip to main content

Standardizing Sex

A History of Trans Medicine

A history of trans medicine that uses Scandinavian sources to tell a global story.
 
Standardizing Sex traces the emergence of trans medicine in Scandinavia in the twentieth century, exploring the construction and negotiation of medical expertise among medical professionals, patients, and activists in the media and government bureaucracy. The book combines the author’s analysis of medical records and other archival sources with oral history interviews with former patients, activists, doctors, psychologists, and civil servants. Physician-historian Ketil Slagstad uses the Scandinavian story of sex reassignment to anchor not only the role of the state but also bureaucracy and social rights. Scandinavian countries, he shows, played a foundational role in the emergence of trans medicine internationally. As a result, Standardizing Sex tells a transnational history of medicine that sheds light on a set of relations and problems that continue to impact discussions of trans medicine and trans rights around the world.
 
Slagstad’s sources offer a rare opportunity to explore the emergence of trans medicine in action in the clinic, laboratory, waiting room, and operating room, as well as in the bureaucrat’s office, on the psychologist’s couch, and in the publications and meetings of activist groups. Together, these sources allow for the analysis of the increasingly complex negotiations of nosological criteria, medical knowledge, and medical practices in a formative period for transgender medicine. More generally, the book offers a story about the reshaping of the normal and the pathological in modern societies.

304 pages | 17 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2025

Gender and Sexuality

History of Science

Medicine

Reviews

“Absorbing and deeply researched . . . Standardizing Sex brilliantly exposes how cultural context and social anxieties in Scandinavia, particularly the desire to uphold traditional gender norms for the sake of the public good, determined and limited transgender care, and it should motivate readers to better understand their own social perspectives as well.”

Annals of Science

“This is a phenomenal contribution . . . one that will be of interest to historians of trans medicine, and scholars of social medicine and the welfare state more broadly.” 

Social History of Medicine

Standardizing Sex delivers mightily on its promise to introduce a new model with which we can understand trans medicine’s development, administration, and political and social implications across the twentieth century. Organized into eleven chapters that vary greatly in scope and tone, the book is clearly the fruit of broad and careful archival research and meaningful, respectful engagement with trans Scandinavians’ life stories. Historians of trans medicine as well as sexology, surgery, psychology, psychiatry, and medical ethics more generally will take much from Slagstad’s capable handling of those fields; those interested in the social history of medicine, histories of trans activism, and the relationship between health systems and the state will similarly benefit from a reading.” 

Isis

“This important book richly historicizes medical engagement with transgender individuals and the emergence of particular forms of practices and institutions in trans medicine. Slagstad decenters the history of the emergence of transgender medicine, redirecting our attention from North American gender identity clinics to the crucial role Scandinavian countries played in the development and establishment of transgender medical practices from the early twentieth century onwards. As he shifts from the local to the national to the regional to the global, he reveals a world in which seemingly universal tools and technologies are shaped by local traditions and acquire different meanings.”

Sandra Eder, author of “How the Clinic Made Gender”

“A landmark work showcasing the value of comprehensive research, Slagstad has powerfully revised our understanding of transgender medicine’s history through the lens of Nordic welfare states. Standardizing Sex teaches us why medical transition is subject to such baroque and exceptional restriction: its fictitious value to society has overridden its life-giving significance to people who transition. This book is essential reading for everyone seeking to understand the politicization and practice of medical transition.”

Jules Gill-Peterson, author of “A Short History of Trans Misogyny”

Table of Contents

Introduction: A Welfare State Story
Chapter 1: Eugenic Beginnings
Chapter 2: Sex Change and Sex Offense
Chapter 3: Collecting Cases, Outlining Symptoms, Making Diagnoses
Chapter 4: Hormone Architecture and Guinea Pigs
Chapter 5: The Hospital Home and Surgical Pragmatism
Chapter 6: Sex and the Binary State
Chapter 7: Society as Cause and Cure
Chapter 8: Draw Your Sex and I Will Tell You Who You Are
Chapter 9: Community Care and Scientific Activism
Chapter 10: Epidemiological Dreams and the Operationalization of Regret
Chapter 11: Bureaucratizing Medicine
Conclusion: Social Medicine and the Norms of Health

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Notes
Interviews
Bibliography
Index

Be the first to know

Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!

Sign up here for updates about the Press