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Trans writer alumna Paris Lees publishes acclaimed memoir

Brighton graduate – and leading trans writer and broadcaster – Paris Lees has made her book publishing debut with the memoir What It Feels Like for a Girl.

28 May 2021

Arguably the most prominent trans writer in the country, Lees graduated in 2009 with BA(Hons) English Language and Literature, and was then awarded an honorary doctorate by the university in 2016 for making a major contribution to transgender identity in contemporary society through her work as a journalist and social commentator.

Described as "the voice of a generation" by i-D magazine, Lees has been a regular contributor to national newspapers, and the first trans columnist at Vogue. She was the first openly trans person to appear on the BBC's Question Time programme, as well as the first to present for Radio One and Channel 4. She co-founded in 2011, a project to connect trans people with the media that led to the BBC2 comedy Boy Meets Girl and Eastenders’ first trans character.

Published by Penguin Random House, Lees' memoir has drawn instant acclaim for its powerful vernacular-language exploration of her earlier life as a boy called Byron, struggling with their identity in a dead-end East Midlands town two decades ago.

Speaking on her publisher's website, Lees said that she wanted What it Feels Like for a Girl to be "an antidote to all of this f*cking boring, middle-class discussion about identity... I still don't know why I'm the way I am today, all I know is that I am, a fact in and of myself. I exist.... Writing it was like going back and reclaiming it, and saying: 'I was there, I was taking notes'."

Paris Lees

Paris Lees after receiving her honorary doctorate in 2016

Paris Lees speaking at our graduation ceremony in 2016

At the 2016 ceremony to receive her honorary doctoral degree, Lees said: "I am deeply grateful to everyone at the university and in particular the Vice-Chancellor, Professor Debra Humphris. Up until very recently trans people weren't celebrated for anything – we were simply objects of ridicule, or data points in academic debates.

"Family. Love. Prestige. These are things traditionally denied to trans people. I want people from the margins of society to know that it is possible to have these things."

You can hear a clip of Lees reading from the book on , as well as an interview on .

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