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â[I]t is impossible for anyone to begin to learn that which he thinks he already knows.â
â Epictetus, âDiscoursesâ, book II, chapter 17
If you're not someone who's trans/gender-divergent (TGD), trying to navigate the various language issues related to sex and gender can be bewildering. This piece is an attempt to note some language that's currently often considered problematic, and to provide some language and alternatives that are more likely to be appropriate.
In addition to sections discussing âProblematic languageâ and âBetter languageâ, i've also included some more general information:
i acknowledge that there's a lot here, and a lot to take in, which is why i've structured this piece as i have: i hope it makes it easier to process things in small chunks (e.g. to start by reading only the headings). i feel a significant part of the issue is that âgenderâ and âsexâ are typically so fundamental to people's perceptions of the world - even more so than (say) ideas around monogamy in humans being ânaturalâ and/or âcorrectâ - that it can be difficult to discuss the issues around related language without discussing issues around the words and concepts themselves.
Finally, as a general point, note that _individuals_ are âdivergentâ, _groups_ are âdiverseâ. So it's not correct to describe a particular person as âgender diverseâ (possibly unless they're a system/plurality, as in Dissociative Identity Disorder).
As a general guide, avoid language that associates a particular gender with particular anatomy. If you're talking about people with particular anatomy, refer to the anatomy, rather than trying to use euphemistic gender-based language.
These acronyms, which expand to âFemale To Maleâ and âMale To Femaleâ, aren't necessarily considered _offensive_, but their use is increasingly discouraged. There are a few reasons for this, including that they can âkeep someone in a state of transitionâ by referencing how they were assigned at birth, in addition to their _actual_ gender. You probably want âtrans manâ (instead of âFTMâ) or âtrans womanâ (instead of âMTFâ) - see below.
A person's gender is not necessarily determined by their physical characteristics (nor their chromosomes). So changing someone's physical characteristics via doesn't necessarily imply any change(s) to their gender. This is why a better phrase is âgender confirmation surgeryâ - see below.
âSex reassignment surgeryâ is problematic because it can result in a focus on complex arguments about what âreallyâ constitutes âsexâ (external physical characteristics? chromosomes? hormone levels?) rather than a focus on the critical issue: a TGD person having a body that reflects their sense of their own gender, the lack of which can have a severely negative impact on their mental health.
This word is generally considered inappropriate; the word you're more likely to want is âintersexâ. See below.
This assumes gender and sex are binary, whereas neither is binary (even if most people fit into one of two categories). Refer to the section about âThe words âgenderâ and âsexââ for further information.
Not all TGD people want surgery, get surgery, or can even _have_ surgery, for various reasons - refer to the ââwoman-bodiedâ ...â entry below. Avoid these terms unless you're referring to a TGD person who's made it clear they're happy for the terms to be used to describe them.
Primarily a porn term, and not necessarily something that a trans woman self-labels with.
Some people self-label with this, but it shouldn't be used to describe someone unless they invite you to do so; otherwise, it can be as similarly offensive as a white person using the word âniggerâ.
My experience is that this is rarely used nowadays, though some people do self-label as âtranssexualâ. Again, it's best not to use it by default. It's very misleading due to the existence of words like âheterosexualâ, âhomosexualâ, âbisexualâ: people quite reasonably assume it's about someone's sexuality, which it's not. As a result, it leads to the situations where i've been asked if i'm âstraightâ, âgay/lesbianâ or âtransâ, which is analogous to being asked âAre you Australian, or a woman?â
This is usually applied to trans women, but i'm not sure i've ever known a trans woman who self-labels with this word. The reference is to a trans woman âpassingâ as a cis woman, until you find out they have a penis: it was a âtrapâ. There are very real-world consequences related to this conceptualisation: trans women, usually trans women of colour, can get physically assaulted and killed by straight men whose âmasculinityâ is threatened in these situations, as in the cases of Gwen Araujo and Jennifer Laudo in the âFurther readingâ section.
These sort of terms are problematic; usually, what they're trying to convey can instead by conveyed by alternatives such as âperson with a vulvaâ - see below.
To use a phrase like âwoman-bodiedâ to mean âsomeone with a vulva and vaginaâ implies that i'm not a woman, since i have a penis: my gender dysphoria manifests as feeling that i should have a vulva and a vagina _as well as_ a penis, rather than _instead of_ a penis. However, many TGD people, myself included, can't access surgery for a variety of reasons, including the significant costs involved, lack of authorisations from the relevant health professionals (typically referred to as âgatekeepersâ), medical issues that might make surgery particularly risky, and so on.
One might ask, âOkay, I can accept you're a woman with a penis, but why can't I then say you're âmale-bodiedâ?â Well, as a result of being on hormones, i have âfemaleâ breasts, in addition to a penis. So if you refer to people who are âmale-bodiedâ, or people who are âfemale-bodiedâ, am i included in both cases, or neither?
i use the word âbetterâ here for two reasons:
These are abbreviations for âAssigned Female/Male At Birthâ. This is a way of describing the sex/gender one was labelled with when one was born: âIt's a boyâ, "It's a girlâ. However, it does _not_ inherently imply anything about a given person's current sense of gender, gender identity, or gender presentation. i'm AMAB - i was assumed to be a boy growing up - but i'm a woman. In particular, these are _not_ words to use to try to describe how someone _looks_. There are many AMAB people who totally âpassâ as a woman (i.e. people don't read them as anything other than a woman).
This is making use of the Latin prefix âcis-â, âon the same side asâ, as the âoppositeâ of the âtrans-â prefix. It's also used in words like âcisalpineâ (âthis side of the Alpsâ) and âcislunarâ (âbetween the Earth and the Moonâ). It basically refers to people who feel that their internal sense of their own gender matches the sex/gender they were assigned at birth.
However, note that refusing the âtraditionalâ presentations and roles deemed âappropriateâ for your assigned sex/gender (cf. âAFABâ/âAMABâ) does _not_ automatically mean you aren't cisgender, just as it's sexist to jokingly or seriously claim that a woman is âreally a manâ because she prefers wearing pants. Similarly, it would be sexist to say that a woman who's interested in maths/science, or cricket, is âreally a manâ. So if you're AMAB, and you seriously say "Oh I must be a woman, I like wearing dresses and sewingâ, that's (a) sexist, and (b) no indication as to whether or not you're actually a woman. You might indeed be a woman, but these things are not arguments for that.
Some of my main interests are maths, computing, and cricket - all traditionally âmaleâ interests. But i say i'm a man as well as a woman not because of these things, but simply because, after many years of introspection, i know myself to be both a woman and a man, _whatever_ my interests and _regardless_ of how i dress. (Similarly, these interests are not part of my âmale sideâ, nor is wearing dresses part of my âfemaleâ side; i don't _have_ a âmale sideâ and a âfemale sideâ).
âCisâ is not inherently an insult; in my experience, it's overwhelmingly intended purely descriptively. The abbreviation âcissyâ is more likely to be used negatively, in a similar way to how some queer people use the word âstraightâ disparagingly, or how some kinky people similarly use the word âvanillaâ. i certainly never use the word âcissyâ myself, not least because the word âsissyâ was part of the harrassment i was subjected to when growing up in rural Victoria.
Prefer this to phrases like âgender reassignment surgeryâ and âsex reassignment surgeryâ - refer to the relevant entry above for details about why these are problematic. The surgery doesn't _change_ someone's gender, it provides them with physical characteristics which they feel reflect the gender _they actually are_.
Someone whose gender isn't simply either âwomanâ/âgirlâ or âmanâ/âboyâ. This includes people who are agender (i.e. feel that they don't have a gender) and pangender (i.e. feel they're multiple genders).
Someone whose internal sense of gender differs from that assigned to them at birth.
Note the spaces between the words: the words âtransmanâ and âtranswomanâ are often discouraged because they can result in what's called âthird-genderingâ: ânot a man, or a woman, but a transmanâ. But a trans man is a (type of) man, and a trans woman is a (type of) woman, in the same way e.g. a âblack manâ and a âblack womanâ are a type of man and a type of woman, respectively.
These are usually the more appropriate phrases to use when one is wanting to use problematic phrases like âwoman-bodiedâ etc. - refer to the relevant entry above.
i don't ever recall a case where a specific type of anatomy is relevant, but where it would be appropriate to use âcisgenderâ rather than these terms. For example, if you're wanting to run a workshop on menstruation, that's clearly going to be suitable for some people and not others. i'm a trans woman, and don't have a uterus and so don't menstruate; and of course there are _cis_ women who don't have a uterus and don't menstruate (e.g. because they've had a hysterectomy). But say that, instead of stating that it's for âpeople with a uterus/wombâ, you say it's for âcisgender womenâ. Well, you're up-front excluding trans men; why? On what grounds? i assume that there are probably _some_ valid cases where a specific type of anatomy is involved _and_ that it's reasonable to exclude trans people (e.g. specific types of research), but in my experience, this is very rarely the case.
These sort of terms are still not perfect, because, for example, a number of trans women will refer to their âclitâ. This might seem ridiculous on the face of it, but biologically, a penis and a clitoris are âhomologousâ structures - they're essentially the same structure that has developed in different ways. So even though _i'm_ happy to be labelled a âperson with a penisâ (well, i much prefer the word âcockâ, but that's just because i find the word âpenisâ too clinical), others might be less so. Unfortunately, i'm not yet aware of any alternative terms or phrasing that are more inclusive (though i'm always on the lookout for them).
i attended uni in the early-to-mid 90s, majoring in Women's Studies (what would probably now be called âgender studiesâ), although i also did language/linguistics and science units as well. i transitioned to living publicly as a transgenderqueer woman in the early 00s, when trans people were significantly less accepted than we are now (and obviously we're still not broadly accepted). During the last few decades, i've been pretty much constantly involved in discussions and debates around gender and sexuality, and have heard a wide variety of non-cisgender people's experiences.
So, what i present here is a perspective based on all that: an understanding based on having various ideas about gender, but continually revising that as i take on board non-cisgender people's _lived experiences_, even - perhaps particularly! - when they significantly differ from my own. This means my perspective is not necessarily shared by academic âexpertsâ on gender, but it _does_ have the advantage of being inclusive of more (but surely not all) TGD people's _actual lived experiences_, regardless of whether those experiences fit a particular theoretical model. My own experience is that people whose experiences don't fit certain theoretical models - from across the political compass - tend to get erased and/or invalidated, which is disrespectful, invalidating, and harmful to people's mental health. (One example: the âGender Accelerationist Manifestoâ asserts that trans people are saying ânoâ to gender, as though the authors can speak for how _all_ trans people relate to this topic.)
Contrary to how it often seems to be presented, âgenderâ is _not_ simply a Politically Correct replacement term for â(biological) sexâ. âGenderâ and âsexâ are actually two distinct - but, of course, related - things. Talking of âgender revealâ parties for newborns is ridiculous, because although it might be reasonable to _assume_ a newborn's gender based on their physical characteristics, you don't know someone's gender _for certain_ until they actually _tell you_.
The general concept of âgenderâ was actually derived from the linguistic concept of gender, in which various languages have a grammar that categorises certain words as having a particular âgenderâ: âmasculineâ, âfeminineâ, etc.. A word's grammatical gender isn't necessarily related to biological sex: for example, the Spanish word âmapaâ, âmapâ, is grammatically âmasculineâ, though most Spanish nouns ending in â-aâ are grammatically âfeminineâ. The idea was to use the word to talk about social/cultural/political stuff such as âthe roles expected of people with certain physical characteristicsâ (e.g. âa woman is expected to be a motherâ) and âhow people with certain physical characteristics are expected to lookâ (e.g. âmen are expected to not wear dressesâ). This was summed up in the phrase âgender is a social constructâ.
However, what's ended up happening is that there's a lot of ambiguity when people talk about âgenderâ, because depending on context, it can be referring to one or more of:
Over the course of decades my experience has been that using the word âgenderâ without any qualifiers (as per the above list) often leads to extensive crosstalk, and many unnecessary misunderstandings and arguments. This is not only evident when trying to discuss what is being asserted by the phrase âgender is a social constructâ, but also in the phrase âgender is fluidâ. For specifics, refer to the relevant blog posts in the âFurther Readingâ section.
Now you may think, âOkay, but at least âbiological sexâ is straightforwardâ. Well, actually, it's much less straightforward than is commonly understood. There's a social component to it, in that we could, for example, define âsexâ on the basis of hormone levels, rather than chromosomes. But even when we define it on the basis of chromosomes, it's not simple, because not everyone is either âXXâ or âXYâ. There are people who are âintersexâ, having a chromosome set such as âXXYâ. (Horrifically, a number of intersex people are genitally mutilated at birth, in order to force them to look either âfemaleâ or âmaleâ.) And if you're âXXYâ, your âsexâ can âchangeâ simply by travelling between countries, because some countries define sex on the basis of the number of X chromosomes, and others on the presence of a Y chromosome.
For some further information, refer to the âBiologist Explains Biological Sexâ link in the âFurther Readingâ section.
i also want to draw particular attention to the distinction i make between âone's sense of one's own genderâ and âgender identityâ. The former is an internal feeling; the latter is the label one uses to try to describe or summarise that feeling. There are various reasons to change one's gender label, and it doesn't mean that one's underlying _feeling_ has changed. For example, when i transitioned, i initially described myself as âbi-genderedâ, to try to describe that i'm both a woman and a man. But what i found _in practice_ was that a lot of cross-dressing cis men were using it to describe themselves. That's fine, but then that meant it didn't accurately describe me. So i started using the word âtwo-genderedâ instead (not âtwo-spiritâ, because i'm not a First Nations person). But had my underlying sense of my gender changed? No.
TGD people are constantly invalidated. We are daily misrepresented, discriminated against, harrassed, physically assaulted and murdered on the basis of being TGD. As per the link in the âFurther readingâ section, âNews Corp covers trans issues more negatively than other Aussie mediaâ. J.K. Rowling uses her platform to express transphobic politics to literally _millions_ of people, and when she's criticised for it, has the gall to claim she's being âcancelledâ, whereas many TGD people aren't even given a voice in the first place, let alone have such a huge audience (cf. my blog post âThe original cancel culturesâ). We still get regularly used as fodder for wedge politics / distraction politics, as happened during the last Federal election, with the former Prime Minister publicly supporting transphobic Liberal candidate Katherine Deves, and which i imagine we're probably going to see happen again in the upcoming Victorian state election with transphobic Liberal candidate Moira Deeming.
It's hardly surprising, then, that the mental health of trans people in Australia is appalling:
Transgender people experience a higher rate of suicide attempts than LGB people, and are nearly eleven times more likely to attempt suicide than the general population.
Transgender people are nearly three times more likely to have had thoughts of suicide than LGB people combined, and are twelve times more likely to have thoughts about suicide than the general population.
â âSnapshot Of Mental Health And Suicide Prevention Statistics For LGBTI Peopleâ [2020]
A recent study from the University of Melbourne found transgender Australians have experienced thoughts of suicide or hurting themselves at disproportionately high rates during the pandemic.
"We've seen a picture that the trans community are not receiving the support that is needed, and they're in a state on the whole of crisis, with significant mental health distress," said co-author Ada Cheung.
"This is significantly higher than the general population.["]
...
The researchers surveyed more than 1,000 transgender people during the pandemic and found 61 per cent experienced clinically significant symptoms of depression.
More than one in 10 reported feeling unsafe or afraid at home.
â âLGBT Australians at higher risk of depression, suicide and poor access to health services during coronavirus pandemicâ [2020]
As a result of all this, many of us are constantly âon edgeâ as we anticipate the next incident that erases us, invalidates us, or harms our mental and/or physical health. Even after many such incidents, we can still get blindsided: making a call to my bank, i was flagged as being a possible fraudster, due to my account listing me as âfemaleâ but my voice not sounding âfemaleâ enough. i lodged a formal complaint, noting that, as someone who's worked in motor accident claims, i understood the desire to minimise fraud, but that the sound of someone's voice was not an appropriate criterion. Thankfully, the bank was responsive, and ended up issuing a nationwide memo that made my point. But it was time and effort i was not expecting to have to put in.
On top of all this, even those of us who _do_ constantly try to educate people - as i, a transgenderqueer woman with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, have been trying to do for the last couple of decades - nevertheless have to deal with the fact that:
For example, in my own case, i've spent so many years trying to get people to stop throwing around the phrase âgender is a social constructâ that my health professionals have had to convince me that it has actually become a trigger for me - âtriggerâ is a word i don't at all use lightly. (And the phrase âgender is fluidâ is increasingly heading in that direction as well.)
That said, i'm far less bothered by the âperson in the streetâ using problematic language than i am by academics and sex educators doing so. My guess is that this might be due in part to people getting so used to being an educator that they can fail to recognise situations requiring them to return to being a humble student. Nevertheless, it's their _job_ to continually try to better understand this stuff, and it's frustrating to keep encountering basic issues with their language when i've spent many years making good-faith efforts, at a significant cost to my time and energy, to create and provide informational resources in this regard. It's even more frustrating when people like feminist sex educator Laci Green try to âeducateâ people with PhDs in sex differentiation: refer to the âLaci Green vs person with a PhD on sex differentiationâ image in the âFurther readingâ section. And this is symptomatic of âthe Long History of Feminism Failing Transgender Womenâ: refer to the relevant link in that same section.
So. All the preceding means that TGD people often have very good reasons, based on ongoing lived experiences, to be very sensitive to issues of language.
That said, i don't claim that _every_ TGD person's behaviour around language is necessarily appropriate; for a concrete example where i felt a TGD person's attitudes and behaviours were actively _inappropriate_, cf. my âSelf-involved egocentric bullshitâ blog post.
Because TGD people are working from a context in which various social, political, religious and cultural systems have - over the course of centuries - actively erased and denied our existence, our experiences, and our voices. As a result, we've only recently started finding our voices, and started trying to find the language that expresses our lives and experiences.
So those of us who are TGD are ourselves trying to work it out as we go along, as we explore the space of possibilities that exist outside the straitjacket of binary and/or dualist ideas about gender. We might initially think that particular language is perfect to describe our sense of our gender, but then over time come to feel that specific language isn't accurate, or is actually actively misleading in some way. So we might then search for more accurate language - and if that language doesn't yet exist, we might have to create it ourselves.
As we do all this, we can find that, although we're using certain language to mean certain things, some people start using that same language to mean different things (particularly when people jump to incorrect conclusions as to what the language âobviouslyâ means). So we then have to find _other_ language to convey what we'd been trying to convey in the first place. But then the same thing can happen to _that_ language. So then the process has to begin again.
A related issue is language being affected by people trying to shoehorn gender diversity into pre-existing concepts and understandings. One example is the âmale sideâ / âfemale sideâ conceptualisation mentioned in the âcis(gender)â entry. This is certainly understandable - we often learn most effectively when we're able to connect new ideas to existing existing ideas - but it can also mean that a number of us can constantly need to try to describe our gender in ways that are less amenable to such shoehorning and misrepresentation.
Finally, there are various TGD-negative forces - social, political, religious and cultural - continuing to actively work against recognition of our existence, our experiences, and our voices. Trying to develop and express TGD-positive language in this context is .... challenging, to say the least.
âOn the word âgenderâ and the phrase âgender is a social constructââ
âOversimplified notions of âfluidityââ
âDualism, polarities and cishetnormativityâ
âThe original cancel culturesâ
âSelf-involved egocentric bullshitâ
âBiologist Explains Biological Sexâ
Wikipedia: âMurder of Gwen Araujoâ
âUS Marine pardoned by Philippines for killing of transgender woman [Jennifer Laudo]â
âNews Corp covers trans issues more negatively than other Aussie mediaâ
âSnapshot Of Mental Health And Suicide Prevention Statistics For LGBTI Peopleâ [PDF]
Image: Laci Green vs person with a PhD in sex differentiation
âIt's Time to End the Long History of Feminism Failing Transgender Womenâ
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