Quote from: Chrissty on August 06, 2008, 05:52:24 AM
The problem only starts when the label is used as grounds to separate, or exclude.
I think that we have our own little tower of babel going on here with the label ontology, differences of opinion about what they describe, misunderstandings about the underlying behavior/motivation combinations, relationships between the combinations, potential for coexistence of multiple combinations in the same individual, etc. And then the strife stems from peoples' innate need to oversimplify and categorize things, such as the judgement that it is either all about clothes or all about gender identity. But look at how gender identity was defined in the inclusive ENDA:
GENDER IDENTITY- The term `gender identity' means the gender-related identity, appearance, or mannerisms or other gender-related characteristics of an individual, with or without regard to the individual's designated sex at birth.
Sounds like Gender Idenity is being used there to include Gender Expression, but might leave out Intersexed.
And then also the way it is used in Miss Lisbeff's post above from the DSM, where Dual Role Transvestism is categorized as a gender identity disorder.
So any of these terms can be used in many different ways, and we constantly have to ask, "What do you mean by that?" The discussion always yields differences of opinion about the categories and meanings of labels, and strife is inevitable. So I think the term Transgender is especially useful as an uber inclusive category for all things gender aberrant. It avoids revealing those inevitable differences of opinion. And we can all get together and make a list of the things we all need and fight, as a group, for getting all of those things. And then, of course, it is really not helpful when someone in the group pipes up and says, "I don't want to fight for that thing this other person needs because I don't need it, I think it is morally wrong, and I don't want the recognition of my rights to be contingent on the recognition of that other right for that other person." But we do see that happen a lot.
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even when living totally as my male side, I now realise that I was still "seeing" the world through Chrissty's eyes; then switching the gender viewpoint in my head before acting.
I think we call that "the male mask."