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Stereotyping transgender people in media, all over the world, is more of a norm than an exception. Reviewing the Pakistani media archives, one gets the impression that, though over the past few decades some progress has been made, still there are many challenges to cope with in order to bring about a fairer and more balanced portrayal of the Pakistani transgender community. This paper investigates the media portrayals of the transgender people in Pakistan with reference to the Nation-one of the leading English newspapers. The study is both qualitative and quantitative, and analyzes the data stretched over five years-from 2011 to 2015. The researchers have demonstrated that there exists a highly patterned and repetitive stereotyping of transgender people verging on transphobic ostracization, misgendering and a thoroughgoing stigmatization. It has been demonstrated empirically and quantifiably as to how transgender people are bracketed with such criminal elements as prostitutes, drug addicts, human traffickers and pickpockets. Moreover, it has also been shown how they are consistently objectified and how their sexuality and criminality is foregrounded in such ways that it acquires the status of their only introduction. The paper emphasizes that in a country like Pakistan where the anti-transgender violence and stigmatization abound, it is important to get rid of clichd and formulaic representations of transgender people.

Jamil Asghar, Khurram Shahzad. (2018) Media Portrayals of Transgender People in Pakistan - A Case of Misgendering and Marginalization, Journal of Education & Social Sciences, Volume 6, Issue 1.
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