Writing Helped Her Realize She Was a Woman. It Also Made Her Famous.
Briefly

Growing up, Sosa Villada wrote in a female voice as an act of emancipation, laden with shame and mischief, later celebrated internationally for her work drawing on personal experiences.
She rejects terms like 'trans women' and surgical vocabulary, aiming to reflect the experience of travestis reclaiming their identity's origins and reclaiming scorn to evoke visceral reactions in her writing.
Read at www.nytimes.com
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