I've been struggling with the terms we use in gender issues.
Just my thoughts. i know its not this simple but without writing a book,
Male/ Female: Our chromosomes, our genitals, our hormones at birth. Plants, insects, other animals are designated M/F or even Bi sexual or hermaphrodite.
Masculine/ Feminin: Our programming in child hood of of base traits of our society ( masculinity is stronger, more assertive, territorial).
Femininity: (Compassion, nurturing, collaboration ect).
Man/Woman: Conforming to the cultural and religious norms of our given society ( A man in Afghanistan will be quite different from a biker in California or a gay man in Chicago.)
A lot of which we get from tv and media (remember all those cartoons/ sit coms?) and less from family and community these days.
And Here are definitions from someone did wright a book.
[i]Proposed Legal Definitions
Faced with the wide array of definitions of sex, gender and transsexualism, ICTLEP offer some standard definitions from the standpoint of utility under health law.
Sex: A person's identity along a continuum of role types with "male" and "female" at the polar extremes.
Role Type: A set of beliefs, behaviors and appearances.
Male: A role type which a particular culture associates with individuals anatomically structured for contributing reproductive cells to another person.
Female: A role type which a particular culture associates with individuals anatomically structured for receiving reproductive cells from another person.
Gender: The characteristics of a continuum of role types ranging from male to female, with such characteristics including behaviors and sexual anatomy, and being labelled as "masculine" and "feminine" at the polar extremes.
Transsexualism = ->-bleeped-<-: The condition of wanting to change one's gender to better match one's sex.
These revised legal definitions recognize the emerging scientific reality that sex is in the brain, and not the body. Transsexuals do not really change their sex - they are born with that. Instead, transsexuals aim to change the erroneous sex labels that were assigned to them at birth. The only way to change those labels is to change the basis upon which those labels were applied, namely, the outward expressions of sex. This means that to change a sexual label, one must change their gender - from behavior to anatomy - since gender is the outward expression of one's sexual identify. Hence, transsexualism is really a misnomer and ->-bleeped-<- is a more scientifically accurate term.[/i]
Thougths?