LEXINGTON, Ky. -- Researchers at the University of Kentucky have released a 10-minute film titled “Becoming Myself: Positive Trans & Nonbinary Identities.” It features narratives from the lives of seven transgender and nonbinary identified young adults, reflecting on their experiences navigating gender identity.
The film’s executive producers, based in the colleges of Arts & Sciences and Education, are Zak Clements, Ph.D. candidate in counseling psychology; Ellen Riggle, professor and chair in the Department of Gender and Women’s Studies and a professor in the Department of Political Science; and Sharon Rostosky, professor of counseling psychology and director of graduate studies in the Department of Educational, School, and Counseling Psychology.
Clements said he hopes the film provides a broader view and understanding of the experiences of trans and nonbinary individuals in Kentucky and across the country.
“We created this film for trans and nonbinary people and the people who love and care about them,” Clements said.
Individuals in the film offer support for other transgender and nonbinary individuals with a focus on the positive aspects of their identities.
Riggle and Rostosky have collaborated on several research-based projects focused on positive, strength-based approaches to LGBTQ identity, drawing international attention. They are authors of the award-winning 2012 book, “A Positive View of LGBTQ: Embracing Identity and Cultivating Well-Being.”
Riggle’s scales to measure positive LGB and Transgender identities (LGB-PIM and T-PIM) have been translated into several languages for use in research in other countries.
Rostosky is a licensed psychologist whose 2015 book, coauthored by Riggle, “Happy Together: Thriving as a Same-sex Couple in Your Family, Workplace, and Community,” brought a positive, strengths-based focus to helping LGBTQ-identified couples and families cope with minority stress and flourish.
Riggle and Rostosky have presented numerous workshops on positive identity for LGBTQ individuals and, in collaboration with graduate students, have researched the positive aspects of being a parent of an LGBTQ child or developing ally behaviors.
The film with Clements is the professors’ latest collaboration, which is part of a larger participatory community action project focused on interventions to help transgender and nonbinary individuals express the positive aspects of their identities.
Riggle said that 150 bills to restrict the rights of transgender people were introduced in legislatures in 2021. In the first five months of 2022, more than 150 were introduced. Riggle said she sees the film as “one way to counteract the harm done by the current negative political discourse and focus instead on supporting trans and nonbinary people.”
Rostosky sees the film as “uplifting, bringing to life and making accessible important information about many of the positive aspects of trans and nonbinary identities that we find in our research and are important to well-being.”
The film is directed and produced by Michael Breeding (Michael Breeding MEDIA) with funding support from JustFundKY. For more information, visit Prism Research or contact zakary.alexander@uky.edu; e.riggle@uky.edu; or s.rostosky@uky.edu. For information on resources at UK, visit the Office of LGBTQ* Resources.