Dallas Denny (born August 18, 1949 in Asheville, North Carolina) is a writer, editor, behavior analyst, and transgender rights activist.

Dallas Denny
Dallas Denny, December, 2021
Born (1949-08-18) August 18, 1949 (age 74)
EducationMiddle Tennessee State (B.S.), University of Tennessee (M.A.)
OccupationApplied behavior analyst (Retired)
Known forWriting, education, policy development, and activism on behalf of transgender and transsexual people

Education edit

Denny holds the M.A. degree in psychology from The University of Tennessee and the B.S. degree in psychology and sociology from Middle Tennessee State University. She was licensed to practice psychology in Tennessee from 1980 through the mid-1990s.

Activism edit

In 1990 Denny founded the 501(c)(3) nonprofit American Educational Gender Information Service (now Gender Education & Advocacy, Inc.).[1] In the same year she started the Atlanta Gender Explorations Support Group and launched the print journal Chrysalis Quarterly. In 1993 she founded the National Transgender Library & Archive, which now resides in the Labadie Collection at The University of Michigan Library System. Also in the 1990s she continued the work of the Erickson Educational Foundation.[2][3] She was a founder of Atlanta's transgender Southern Comfort Conference and provided start up funding, through AEGIS, for the first FTM Conference of the Americas. She was Director of the transgender conference Fantasia Fair for five years and from 1999-2008 editor of Transgender Tapestry Journal, published by the International Foundation for Gender Education.

Writing edit

Since 1989 Denny has produced dozens of flyers, booklets, and medical advisories, contributed considerable content to Chrysalis, AEGIS' several newsletters, and Transgender Tapestry, and written a column for TG Forum. She wrote hundreds of articles for transgender community magazines and newsletters, many of which were widely reprinted and eventually placed on the internet. In 1994 her book Gender Dysphoria: A Guide to Research was the first book-length contribution to the scientific literature of transsexualism produced by a transsexual. Her 1998 Current Concepts in Transgender Identity reprised John Money & Richard Green's text Transsexualism and Sex Reassignment. Today Denny publishes an online version of Chrysalis Quarterly. Her novel Chance down the Mountain[4] was published in 2018 by Foundations, LLC.

Awards edit

Denny has received IFGE's Trinity and Virginia Prince Lifetime Achievement Award and Real Life Experience's Transgender Pioneer Award.

Personal edit

Denny was born in Asheville, North Carolina to Ruby Lee Bradley and an unidentified father. When Dallas was about three, Richard Denny married Ruby Lee and Denny was adopted. Denny has resided in North Carolina, France, Arizona, Georgia, and Tennessee, and since 2015 has lived in the highlands of New Jersey. Marriages: Lynneda Jane Roberts Denny (1971-1976) and Heather Kay Verdui (2015-). She has three siblings, all living. She has no children.

References edit

  1. ^ "American Educational Gender Informational Service (AEGIS) |". "Word of Mouth" - Digital Exhibits. 2021-11-09. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  2. ^ Green, Richard; Money, John (1969). Transsexualism and Sex Reassignment. The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0801810381.
  3. ^ Denny, Dallas (August 22, 2013). "The Impact of Emerging Technologies on One Transgender Organization". Dallas Denny: Body of Work. Dallas Denny. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  4. ^ Denny, Dallas (December 10, 2018). Chance Down the Mountain (First ed.). Foundations, LLC. p. 275. ISBN 978-1725609235.
  • Denny, Dallas (Ed.). (1994). Gender dysphoria: A guide to research. New York: Garland Publishers.
  • Denny, Dallas (Ed.). (1998). Current concepts in transgender identity. New York: Garland Publishers.
  • Denny, Dallas. (2018). Chance down the mountain. Foundations, LLC.
  • Green, Richard, & Money, John (Eds.). (1969). Transsexualism and sex reassignment. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Virginia Prince Award Winners

External links edit