亚洲AV

He has a message he wants to carry worldwide

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photo of a person with blue hair
Casey Klemmer. Photo provided

Before he took the class Transnational Sexualities at 亚洲AV with Associate Professor , Casey Klemmer had not heard anything about transgender people outside of Virginia.

So when Klemmer, then a sophomore from Fairfax, Virginia, learned the extent of that population, 鈥淚t was amazing to me,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 just a Fairfax thing. It wasn鈥檛 just a U.S. thing. It was all over the world.鈥

Klemmer, who is transgender and queer, carries that sensibility into his work as lead center mentor at Mason鈥檚 and as a graduate student coordinator at Mason鈥檚

鈥淐ommunity can be found anywhere,鈥 said Klemmer, BA 鈥21, who is pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in with a concentration in . 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 need to be limited to the people in your immediate space.鈥

With his bachelor鈥檚 concentration in and his master鈥檚 focused on transgender refugees and asylum seekers, Klemmer said he hopes to work overseas, and is traveling to Spain in the summer.

鈥淚 really want to go somewhere where I can get immersed in the culture and help trans people to have better places to live and have better lives,鈥 he said.

鈥淗e鈥檚 developed into one of our strongest student leaders,鈥 said associate director of Women and Gender Studies. 鈥淗e鈥檚 the epitome of someone who takes what he does very seriously. He鈥檚 constantly works for ways to develop himself, and he鈥檚 a shining example of feminist values and our values at Mason.鈥

Klemmer was also the first students to sign up for Mason鈥檚 minor in .

It was that program, he said, and his work in Women and Gender Studies that helped set his educational path and was personally affirming.

A paper he researched in his Transnational Sexualities class on Hijras, a community of transgender and intersex people who are considered India鈥檚 third gender, was particularly enlightening.

鈥淚t was a great experience for me to see people who have similar experiences to myself all over the world,鈥 Klemmer said. 鈥淚t was sort of a way of talking about myself in academia and having it matter.鈥

It also was part of the process of forming the message he delivers to LGBTQ+ students at Mason.

鈥淔or me, it was helpful to widen my view of what community could look like,鈥 Klemmer said. 鈥淲e have lots of students, first years and people who have been here for a while, who feel like they don鈥檛 have communities. And so that class changed my perspective on what community could look like. Your immediate people near you are not the limit.鈥