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Laura Jacobs
Laura Jacobs
from Wikipedia

Laura Jacobs is an American novelist, journalist, and critic. Jacobs is a regular contributor to The Wall Street Journal, where she reviews museum exhibitions on fashion. She was a staff writer at Vanity Fair from 1995 to 2018, where she wrote award-winning pieces for the magazine on the subjects of design, fashion, and the performing arts. In 2019, she became the Arts Intel Report editor for AIR MAIL, a weekly international digital newsletter co-edited by Graydon Carter and Alessandra Stanley.

Key Information

Background and education

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Laura Jacobs hails from Chicago, Illinois, and holds a B.A. in English Literature from Northwestern University.

Works

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Jacobs's most recent book, published in 2018 [Basic Books] is Celestial Bodies: How to Look at Ballet. The Bird Catcher, her second novel, was published in June 2009, by St. Martin's Press. In July, 2010 Picador released a paperback edition. Her first novel, Women About Town, a Literary Guild selection, was published by Viking Press in 2002, with French and Polish editions, followed by a paperback from Penguin.[1]

Career

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Jacobs began writing at Vanity Fair in 1995, and produced award-winning pieces on design, fashion, and the performing arts. She has profiled the mid-century American designers Norman Norell, Charles James, Adrian, and Mainbocher, and has made a specialty of writing about iconic American women, including Emily Post, Gypsy Rose Lee, Lilly Pulitzer, Grace Kelly, Suzy Parker and Julia Child.

Since 2012 Jacobs has reviewed fashion exhibitions in museums for The Wall Street Journal. She also contributes to the London Review of Books.

Jacobs began writing dance criticism in Chicago at the Chicago Reader. She has written about dance for The Atlantic Monthly, and held dance critic posts at The Boston Phoenix and The New Leader. Since 1994, Jacobs has been the dance critic at The New Criterion. In 2006 a collection of her New Criterion essays -- Landscape with Moving Figures: A Decade on Dance—was published by Dance & Movement Press.

From 1987 to 1995, Jacobs was the editor in chief of Stagebill, the national performing arts program magazine whose constituents included Lincoln Center, The Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall, theater in Chicago, and orchestras and opera companies around the country. During the late nineties, Jacobs wrote fashion criticism for both Modern Review and The New Republic. She collaborated with the fashion designer Geoffrey Beene on Beauty and the Beene (Abrams Books, 1999) and edited his last book, Beene by Beene (The Vendome Press, 2005).[2]

Personal

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Jacobs is a member of The Linnaean Society of New York. As a member of the Seaside Sparrows team, she has competed regularly in New Jersey Audubon's annual World Series of Birding. Jacobs is married to the writer James Wolcott, and lives in Washington Heights in New York City.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Laura A. Jacobs is a trans and genderqueer-identified psychotherapist and licensed clinical social worker (LCSW-R) based in New York City, specializing in affirmative therapy for transgender, gender nonbinary, and LGBTQIA+ clients with nearly 20 years of clinical experience. She is a contributor to the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) Standards of Care Version 8 (SOC-8), which provides evidence-based guidelines for the health care of transgender and gender diverse people. Jacobs has co-authored peer-reviewed articles on topics including gender dysphoria, transgender mental health, and responses to critiques of affirmative care practices. As an activist and public speaker, she advocates for gender inclusion and LGBTQ+ rights, drawing on her expertise in sex therapy and modern approaches to transgender mental health.

Professional Career

Clinical Practice

Laura A. Jacobs specializes in affirmative psychotherapy for transgender, gender nonbinary, and clients, providing support for individuals aged 13 and older, couples, and families navigating gender and sexual diversity. Her practice emphasizes a nonjudgmental, , approach that incorporates , methods and techniques to foster and . Jacobs' therapeutic model prioritizes affirmative care, trans-positive philosophies, and informed consent, avoiding assumptions that gender issues underlie all client stressors while affirming body autonomy and identity exploration. Based in New York City, she is licensed in New York, New Jersey, and Washington, D.C., delivering services online via teletherapy to accommodate diverse clients. As a trans and genderqueer-identified clinician, Jacobs draws on her firsthand experiences with marginalization, , and systemic challenges to build relatability, creating a validating space where clients need not justify their identities to receive affirmation and support for or broader life decisions.

Organizational Involvement

Jacobs served as a contributor to the () Standards of Care Version 8 and participated in its revision committee. She has held leadership roles in organizations supporting health, including as Chair of the Board of Directors for the Callen-Lorde Community Health Center, where she became the first trans and genderqueer-identified person in that position at a . Jacobs is involved with professional networks such as the Gender Dysphoria Affirmative Working Group, which promotes affirmative approaches to care, and maintains affiliations with health directories like OutCare Health.

Contributions to Transgender Health

WPATH Standards of Care

Laura A. Jacobs served as a member of the revision committee for the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) Standards of Care Version 8 (SOC-8). She is officially recognized as a contributor to SOC-8, which provides evidence-based guidelines for the health care of transgender and gender diverse people. Jacobs holds certification in the WPATH SOC-8, enabling her to integrate its standards into clinical protocols for assessing and supporting transgender and gender diverse clients. This certification underscores her adherence to SOC-8's frameworks for gender-affirming care, including evaluation processes tailored to individual needs within ethical and medical contexts.

Advocacy and Education

Jacobs has engaged in activism addressing and advocating for the rights of gender-diverse individuals, often through efforts to promote transgender wellbeing. Her work emphasizes resilience against and broader societal acceptance of gender diversity. In educational initiatives, Jacobs has conducted workshops at conferences and delivered lectures in higher education settings, focusing on creating inclusive therapy environments for transgender and clients. These efforts extend her clinical expertise into training that supports affirmative practices for clients, families, and professionals. Jacobs received the 2017 Dorothy Kartashovich Award from the Community Health Center Association of New York State for her dedication to community health initiatives benefiting LGBTQ+ populations. She was also honored with the 2019 Standard of Excellence Award by the American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counselors, and Therapists for contributions to sexuality education and counseling in affirming contexts.

Publications and Public Engagement

Authored Works

Laura A. Jacobs edited Surviving Transphobia (2023), an anthology published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers that compiles narratives from transgender and gender nonbinary individuals, including athletes, politicians, and activists, emphasizing resilience strategies amid institutional discrimination and personal adversity. The volume highlights endurance techniques such as community support, , and to counter 's impacts, earning the 2025 Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversity Distinguished Book Award from the . Jacobs has contributed chapters to several edited volumes on gender diversity and therapy. In Trans Bodies, Trans Selves (, 2014), she authored sections on "Posthuman Bodies, Posthuman Selves" and "Informed Consent," exploring evolving embodiments and autonomous healthcare decision-making. Later works include "The Body is the Ocean on the Shore of Being" in Trans Sex: Clinical Approaches to Trans Sexualities and Erotic Embodiments (, 2019), addressing therapeutic perspectives on transgender erotic experiences, and "Hormones & Handcuffs: The Intersection of Transgender Identity, , and " in Sex, Sexuality, and Trans Identities (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2020), which examines overlapping identities in clinical contexts. Her writing often integrates personal narratives with professional insights on diverse gender identities, as seen in the essay "Laura is a Transgender. Didn’t the Surgeons do an Amazing Job?" in Bodies and Barriers: Essays by Queer Activists on Health (PM Press, 2019), which critiques assumptions about transgender surgical outcomes through autobiographical reflection. Additionally, Jacobs co-authored the article "Gender Dysphoria and Autism Spectrum Disorders" in LGBT Health, analyzing intersections between neurodiversity and in therapeutic practice.

Speaking and Media Appearances

Laura Jacobs delivered a TED Talk titled "Fear of a GenderQueer Planet," exploring the role of gender in human experience and drawing from her personal transition as a trans and genderqueer individual. She has co-presented on gender affirmative therapy at professional events, including sessions focused on mental health tracks for practitioners. Jacobs contributed a reflective piece to ' "Transgender Today" series, sharing insights on the efforts transgender and gender nonconforming people invest in navigating societal perceptions. As a public speaker, she offers workshops and keynotes on , transgender issues, and LGBTQ+ advocacy, emphasizing to gender diversity.
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