:
Literally what other use does "gender" (as defined as not a synonym for sex, nor sex stereotyping) have other than being able to explain how transwomen are actually women? Please give an example.
|
Well it also explains who trans men and non-binary people are, if that helps you.
Having an understanding of gender as separate from sex gives us the ability to talk about gender roles, stereotypes, and expectations for each gender and how
these are not defined by a person’s physical sex – if we accept that the roles and expectations of men and women are not defined by their physical sex then must therefore conclude they are defined by something else; the logical answer to this is societal expectations.
:
Can you give me an example of an outdated concept of gender?
|
Sex as the sole determinant of gender.
:
See, you say that gender is separate from biology, and then say that gender exists regardless of most people conflating it with sex. If it's not biological, and its not sociological (because a vast majority of society treats gender as a synonym for sex) then what is it?
|
Hold on, you can’t say gender is not sociological because society treats gender and sex as synonymous – all that means is that society has a sociological understanding of gender which treats the two as one.
Gender is a social construct – just because our society’s general understanding of the construct they have created is poor, this does not mean it is not sociological; our society has indeed created the concept of gender, it is just poorly recognized and not properly separated on a wider scale.
:
When is "gender assigned"? Who assigns gender? Can you explain this process? Is what you call "assigning gender" really just projecting sexual expectations onto a child?
|
A simple description of the process would be: doctor identifies sex via baby’s anatomy, people around baby from then on will describe baby with gender-specific terms based on the identified sex (male as a boy, he/him/his; female as a girl, she/her/hers), baby is henceforth identified with a gendered given name, clothes, toys, and as they become older they will be taught and subjected to attitudes, behaviors, societal expectations that reinforce gender.
This would not be best described as “sexual expectations” – sexual expectations would be expectations based upon their physical sex, e.g. an expectation to reproduce, expectation of body shape, sex-related illnesses, etc. It would be more useful to describe
gender-related expectations with separate terminology, such as “gender roles” or “gender expectations”, as this would allow us to separately discuss the physical and social aspects of the equation.
:
How can people conflate sex and gender when they have no concept of (what you call) gender?
|
I am not saying that they have no concept of gender, I am saying that their concept of gender is strongly tied to sex – as you said, they see sex and gender as one and the same, i.e. they
conflate them.
:
No, our society assigns certain behaviours to different sexes. People who have sexist expectations of women see women as a sex and not an identity.
|
This is another conflation of sex and gender – it is equally valid to say that people who have sexist expectations of women see women as an
identity, but an identity that they value as lesser.
Our society assigns behaviors to different
genders, but for the most part those genders are conflated with sex.
:
So we're back to gender isn't sex and gender also isn't gender roles. Then what is it?
|
As I’ve said previously, gender is difficult to define as there are many things tied into it. I would personally say it can be best understood as a social construct, an identity system created over millions of years of human development and refined and nuanced in the human psyche as society has developed.
We have an internal understanding of our gender identity. This is built out of the societal expectations that we experience from birth, and everything from sex, brain structure, physical anatomy, hormones, mannerisms and behaviors, fashions and tastes, roles in the workplace and community, and many more.
Gender is not sex, but sex can be an aspect of gender; gender is not gender roles, but roles can be an aspect of gender. Is that helpful to you?
:
I suppose that makes a majority of society (myself included) agender since most of us have no internal understanding of gender.
|
No, you’re misunderstanding – the majority of society has an internal understanding of gender that matches the body they are born with. That does not equate to a lack of gender.
:
But I thought it was wrong to conflate gender with anatomy.
|
I don’t see how what I said would contradict that? Let me repeat: “Gender identity is determined by the brain – most people simply don’t notice because their identity matches their physical anatomy, and thus they conform to societal expectations.”
Saying that for most people the internal understanding of their gender identity matches their physical anatomy is not a conflation of sex and gender – it merely recognizes that sex is one way in which gender identity is judged and perceived by society. As I’ve said in a previous post, this can differ for the individual; many trans people experience dysphoria related to their physical anatomy and seek to change it, while others do not.
:
What makes a woman a woman is that she is female. If you are not female you cannot be a woman. A woman is not something you can dress up as. It is not something you can identify into. If it were then there would have to be some sort of criteria for what makes one a woman.
So what does it mean to you to be a woman? If you think someone can simply identify as a woman then I want to know what defining qualities women have that someone can identify with or as. In fact you can pretty much ignore most of the the rest of my post because I'm pretty sure this is the root of our disagreement.
|
As I explained above, I think that gender is a social construct, and that each person’s understanding of their gender identity is internal and is separate from their physical sex at birth.
For most people, their understanding of their gender matches their physical sex at birth – physical sex plays a role in how we identify ourselves, and research even suggests similarities between trans people’s brain structure and function and those of non-trans people of the same gender identity. But physical attributes are not the
sole determinant of that identity, and we cannot and should not base that identity on one single determinant when it can greatly vary from the perceived identity.
And as I have pointed out, physical identifiers are never going to be set in stone either – genes can vary, chromosomes can vary, brain structure/activity can vary, hormone levels can vary, body shape can vary, genitals can vary.
So, ultimately I would define “being a woman” as someone who intrinsically identifies as a woman. And because I’m sure it will be brought out as a counterargument – no, I don’t think it’s acceptable for people to abuse self-identity to, say, pretend to be trans to sexually harass people in bathrooms. People who try to do this are committing a crime; their abuse does not invalidate the identities of actual trans people who just want to use the correct bathroom, nor does it imply that trans people would inherently pose a threat to anyone in a bathroom.
:
Manco, in the first paragraph you're defending by saying the concept of gender is currently accepted, then, in the second one you're saying the general population does not even recognize its existence. Among whom it's currently accepted, then?
|
In my research for this thread, I’ve generally found that most respectable medical and psychology organizations make distinctions between sex and gender – for example the World Health Organization, American Psychological Association, and much of the research published on transgender-related subjects; the UN even
refers to “gender identity” rather than sex. There appears to be consensus at the expert level, although there is still a lot of uncertainty and ongoing research to expand our understanding of the topic.
So when I refer to the concept of gender and sex as distinct as currently accepted, I don’t mean by a majority of the population; I refer to expert knowledge of the subject.
:
Can we just take two moments to realise gender is a literal construct, and people can be whatever the fuck they want to be.
|
but genitals???