Cisgender/ru: Difference between revisions

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== Смотрите так же ==
== Смотрите так же ==


* [[Gender binary]]
* [[Gender binary|Гендерная бинарность]]
* [[Cissexism]]
* [[Cissexism|Циссексизм]]
* [[Cisgender men]]
* [[Cisgender men|Трансгендерные мужчины]]
* [[Cisgender women]]
* [[Cisgender women|Трансгендерные женщины]]


==Ссылки==
==Ссылки==

Revision as of 15:02, 7 August 2020

Цисгендер (от Лат. цис- "on the same side" + гендер) означает не трансгендер. А цисгендерный человек - это человек, который не является трансгендером, и их гендерная идентичность совпадает с полом, назначенным при рождении и у них нет гендерной дисфории. Цисгендерность это аспект гендерной идентичности человека. цис женщины это женщины, которые были назначены женщинами при рождении (или были рождены с определенным видом интерсекс), и при этом имеют женскую гендерную идентичность. цис мужчины это мужчины, которые были назначены мужчинами при рождении (или были рождены с определенным видом интерсекс), и при этом имеют мужскую гендерную идентичность

A person need not have a binary gender identity in order to be cisgender. People who were born intersex and who have a nonbinary gender identity can think of themselves as transgender, or as cisgender. Some cisgender intersex people call their gender identity "intersex," or "intergender." Some people of any gender assigned at birth think of their gender identity as cisgender at the same time as being genderqueergender nonconforming, or other identities that don't fit within the gender binary. Most cisgender people don't seek a gender transition, but some do. For example, some drag artists who think of themselves as cisgender go on hormone therapy.[1]

История

The word "cisgender" was "coined in 1995 by a transsexual man named Carl Buijs" to mean "non-transgender." He formed the word "cisgender" from the Latin prefix cis-, "on the same side," which is the counterpart of trans-, "across to the other side."[2]

However, there is some evidence that the word "cisgender" has been independently coined at other times by different people. In 1994, the word appeared in the alt.transgendered newsgroup, in a post by Dana Leland Defosse, who doesn't define the term, as though it was already familiar to the readers.[3]

Later, based on the word "cisgender," the word "cissexual" was created. Julia Serano uses both of these words in her book on trans-feminism, Whipping Girl: A Transsexual Woman on Sexism and the Scapegoating of Femininity (2007). Starting around 2006, both words came into use in academic writings by other writers, such as in the field of queer studies.

Циссексуальность

A person who isn't transsexual.[4] In some contexts, it can be useful to distinguish between cisgender and cissexual, along with distinguishing between transgender and transsexual. This distinction can be useful when talking about nonbinary and gender nonconforming people. Saying that a person is cissexual "emphasizes that someone is not dealing with the medical and legal aspects of a gender transition"; by contrast, "someone who has a nonbinary gender and [is] not dealing with the medical and legal aspects of a gender transition might call themselves a cissexual genderqueer."[5] Some nonbinary people who transition call themselves transsexual, whereas other nonbinary or genderqueer people who don't transition can call themselves cissexual. (For example, Chanda Prescod-Weinstein is an "agender cis-sex woman".) It is possible to be both transgender and cissexual, if gender and sex are considered to be separate aspects of a person. That said, it is a choice for each person what labels they are comfortable with using for themself, and they may find other ways to label their gender.

Смотрите так же

Ссылки

  1. Del Lagrace Volcano and Judith “Jack” Halberstam. The Drag King Book. London: Serpent’s Tail, 1999.
  2. Julia Serano, "Whipping Girl FAQ on cissexual, cisgender, and cis privilege." 2009-05-14. 
  3. Dana Leland Defosse, "Transgender Research." May 26, 1994. alt.transgendered (newsgroup). Accessed 2007-12-22.
  4. "Cissexual.Susan's Place Transgender Resource Wiki
  5. Tobi Hill-Meyer, "Definitions." No Designation (personal blog).