Difference between revisions of "Gender identity"

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(apologetic note)
(saving first section -- it's not much, but it makes a point)
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{{PG-safe|gender dysphoria,}}
{{PG-safe|gender dysphoria,}}
==Gender==
The first thing you need to understand is that "gender" is not the same thing as "sex". They are often used interchangeably, and indeed ''in most people'' they are intercorrelated to a very high degree, but there is a significant portion of the population for which this is not true.


''Sorry, I know I really need to put something here, but (surprise) I'm finding it very difficult to figure out how to approach this subject in a "PG-Safe" way, though I have confidence that it can be done. I also plan to have non-PG-Safe pages with appropriate warnings at the top for PG people, but I wanted to start with this one. (I keep starting to write it and then getting pulled away, and then Firefox crashes and loses everything I typed, which usually isn't much.) --[[User:Woozle|Woozle]] 01:19, 11 April 2008 (UTC)''
* '''sex''' (as in the attribute, not the act) is most commonly used to mean the ''physical, genetic, or biological'' male-ness or female-ness of a person.
* '''gender''' refers to ''all'' attributes which are commonly thought of as "masculine" or "feminine" traits. This technically includes "sex", so you might define "sex" as "one's physical/genetic/biological gender". However, even leaving out "sex", there are many separate aspects to "gender". Again, these aspects are highly correlated in most people -- but not in everyone.
 
''this essay is still under construction''

Revision as of 01:34, 17 April 2008

Parental Generation.png Although this page discusses gender dysphoria, a somewhat delicate subject, it has been written with the aim of being safe reading for people born before approximately 1950. If you find any objectionable content, please feel free to post on the discussion page and the editors will attempt to ameliorate it.

Gender

The first thing you need to understand is that "gender" is not the same thing as "sex". They are often used interchangeably, and indeed in most people they are intercorrelated to a very high degree, but there is a significant portion of the population for which this is not true.

  • sex (as in the attribute, not the act) is most commonly used to mean the physical, genetic, or biological male-ness or female-ness of a person.
  • gender refers to all attributes which are commonly thought of as "masculine" or "feminine" traits. This technically includes "sex", so you might define "sex" as "one's physical/genetic/biological gender". However, even leaving out "sex", there are many separate aspects to "gender". Again, these aspects are highly correlated in most people -- but not in everyone.

this essay is still under construction