Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Queer - Coggle Diagram
Queer
Connection:
-
-
-
In different environments and situations, people have different gender performativity, which also reflects Intersectionality.
Gender Performativity
Gender is expressed through our own behavior, which is influenced by environment, established norms and other acquired factors.
The ways we talk and the ways we talk about each other are an important part of how gender identities are created and understood as normative or as challenging norms (Meyerhoff, 2015).
There is no such thing as gender identity outside the ways it is constituted as a “social temporality” (Butler, 1990:141).
The default rules of society are that girls, for example, must like pink and wear skirts, while boys must wear dark clothes and no skirts.
Intersectionality
People can be classified in many ways, and each person can have many identities. Human being is a kind of pluralistic and interrelated identity in society.
Intersectionality is the mutually constitutive relations among social identities (Shields, 2008).
-
Non-binary
This means acknowledging that people's genders are diverse, not just men and women.
Some people have a gender which is neither male nor female and may identify as both male and female at one time, as different genders at different times, as no gender at all, or dispute the very idea of only two genders (Richards, 2016).
-
Heteronormativity
There are only two categories of gender, male and female. And only men and women can fall in love.
Many old people in my village believe that men must marry and have children with women, and they have no concept of gender other than heterosexuality and men and women. If there is a homosexual or other gender, they think it is abnormal.
Trans(gender)
Sex transfer, sex transferred after birth is different from sex at birth.
-
-
-