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Gender identity

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Gender identities)

Gender identity is how a person thinks of themself as being a boy or man, girl or woman. A person’s gender identity is based on what label and type they feel most comfortable aligning with. It can change throughout someone’s life, depending on how they feel during that time. Much of dominant society across cultures follows the construction of the gender binary, prescribing that everyone must either be a man or a woman. However, more genders exist outside of man and woman. Recent decades have brought new terminology and means of using language to make space for a range of genders. And more importantly, the rise of LGBTQ+ education and rights have brought transgender issues to the attention of the public, as well as the many genders that a person can identify as.

  • Cisgender: the label for people who identify as the gender they were assigned at birth (ex: boy and girl)

'Transgender' is both an identity label and an umbrella term. A person can identify as a trans woman or trans man, but there are more genders that fall underneath the transgender category. Nonbinary genders (or people who do not identify as male or female) may fall underneath transgender, depending on how the person self-identifies. 'Nonbinary' may be used as a synonym for agender, or someone does not identify with a gender, but also may refer to other genders.

Some gender identities include, but are not limited to:

Gender expression

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Gender expression (also called, "gender presentation") means how a person dresses, looks, and acts, in ways that might affect how other people view their gender. Someone who wears men's clothes and acts in a masculine way has a male gender expression. Someone who wears women's clothes and acts in a feminine way has a female gender expression. This is different from gender identity because people can choose to look or behave one way even if that is not how they feel inside. Sometimes people call this gender presentation or just presentation.

Gender identity in anthropology

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Gender is a key concept in the field of anthropology. Gender and sex are defined differently in this field. Gender in regards to an individual's identity, and sex being biology determined. Gender identity, while can be tied to sex and biology in some, is not necessarily determined by these factors. Assumptions around gender identity based in biological factors can be false and while sometimes accepted in the mainstream, can be in fact dangerous.[2] The roles and expectations of gender have strong cultural influences as well. Gender across cultures has been studied extensively, regarding the different identities accepted in the mainstream, roles of the genders, and historical trends of them.[3] Gender Identity and expression has extremely common historical roots, and more gender identities outside of the traditional binary are becoming accepted in the mainstream. Acceptance of gender identities that do not exist within a harsh binary is not exclusively a new concept, just one that is becoming more common in current western society.[4] There are various historical examples of gender identities that were not only recognized, but celebrated, outside the traditional cisgender male and female.

Transgender and transsexual

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'Transgender' is a term that means that the gender assigned at birth (typically 'AMAB' or 'assigned male at birth' and 'AFAB' or 'assigned female at birth') does not match with the gender a person identifies as. The experiences that transgender people have are vast and may differ from one another, although there are sometimes shared experiences. For instance, a transgender person may feel gender dysphoria (but not everyone will be dysphoric). A transgender person may also feel it necessary to medically transition, or take hormones, or a combination of the two. 'Transsexual' is a term that some transgender people may use after receiving sex-reassignment surgeries and medical transition, but depending on who one is talking to, this term may be considered outdated and the person may instead opt to simply continue using the term 'transgender' as their identification.

Some people use the word 'transgender' to mean somewhat different things, as the word has expanded and changed since it was first invented in 1965.[5][6]

Factors and terminology

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Some factors involved in transgender identification are:

  • Assigned gender (or sex assignment, or just sex) is whether a person is male or female at birth.
  • Gender identity (or simply gender) is the label a person uses to describe how they identify to the world around them: male, female, nonbinary, and other identities that fall around them.
  • Gender expression (or gender presentation) is how a person dresses, acts, and behaves. It is important to remember that gender expression is not the same as gender identity. A cisgender woman can wear traditionally-male clothes and not be a man, a cisgender man can act in a way that is considered "feminine" and not be a woman, etc.

All three of these factors contribute to how a person labels their self, and make gender a confusing construct to navigate. People can have gender presentations that do not match their gender identity, or a gender identity that does not match the gender they were assigned at birth, etc. A person whose gender identity matches the gender they were assigned at birth is called 'cisgender'. As time has passed, the growing voice of LGBTQ+ issues and rise of educational resources on the topics of gender and sexuality has allowed for many to learn about transgender issues, and help others with their own gender navigation.

Medical diagnosis

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When a person's gender identity and body do not match, they may go to see a doctor. The doctor may help them change their body if that is what they want. A psychiatrist may diagnose this person with Gender identity disorder (gender dysphoria), but medical diagnosis itself is a controversial subject because being transgender has one been considered to be a mental illness, the stigma is still there. Principle 18 of the Yogyakarta Principles, a document about international law on human rights states that "any classifications to the contrary, a person's gender identity is not in and of itself, medical condition".[7] And "Activist's Guide" to them says that "gender identity" or "gender identity disorder" exists still in categories of mental illness, contrary to the "sexual orientation" removed from such categories.[8]

For children about to enter puberty, drugs called puberty blockers can slow down or temporarily stop the process of puberty. This gives the person more time to explore their gender identity and decide if surgery is what they want.

References

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  1. Wilson, Alex (2010-02-08). "How We Find Ourselves: Identity Development and Two Spirit People". Harvard Educational Review. 66 (2): 303–318. doi:10.17763/haer.66.2.n551658577h927h4. ISSN 0017-8055.
  2. Gutmann, Matthew; Nelson, Robin G.; Fuentes, Agustín (2021-02-01). "Epidemic Errors in Understanding Masculinity, Maleness, and Violence: An Introduction to Supplement 23". Current Anthropology. 62 (S23): S5 – S12. doi:10.1086/712485. ISSN 0011-3204. S2CID 232080840.
  3. Delphy, Christine (1993-01-01). "Rethinking sex and gender". Women's Studies International Forum. 16 (1): 1–9. doi:10.1016/0277-5395(93)90076-L. ISSN 0277-5395.
  4. Hollimon, Sandra (2017). Bioarchaeological Approaches to Nonbinary Genders. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 9780826352583.
  5. A., R. (August 1965). "Book Reviews and Notices: Sexual Hygiene and Pathology". American Journal of the Medical Sciences. 250 (2): 235. doi:10.1097/00000441-196508000-00054. S2CID 71768943.
  6. Oliven, John F. (1965). Sexual Hygiene and Pathology. p. 514.
  7. The Yogyakarta Principles, Principle 18. Protection from Medical Abuse, and its annotations, p. 43 saying that such diagnosis as mental disorder once made a cause to do electroshock therapy to "cure" a gender identity differing from body sex at birth
  8. "Activist's Guide to the Yogyakarta Principles, p 100" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-01-04. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
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Other websites

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