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Deconstructing the complex perceptions of gender roles, gender identity, and sexual orientation among transgender individuals
112
Citations
28
References
2012
Year
Transgender IndividualsQueer TheorySocial SciencesConventional Heteronormative BeliefsTransgender TheoryGender IdentityQueer HistoryGender StudiesTransfeminismIntersectionalitySexual DiversityFeminist TheoryQueer StudiesSociologySexual IdentityComplex PerceptionsHeteronormativity StudiesGender TransitionTransgender StudySexual Orientation
Conventional heteronormative beliefs about gender roles, identity, and sexual orientation are challenged by transgender experiences, prompting discussion of an emerging transgender theory that transcends essentialist and social constructionist views. The study interviewed eleven self‑identified transgender participants, asking them to define gender roles, gender identity, and sexual orientation and to describe how these concepts interrelate. Participants viewed gender roles as social constructs, gender identity as fluid, and most saw sexual orientation as dynamically linked to gender identity.
Conventional heteronormative beliefs about the nature of gender roles, gender identity, and sexual orientation are fundamentally challenged by the experiences of many transgender individuals. Eleven self-identified transgender individuals were interviewed about their definitions of, understanding of the relationships between, and perceptions of their own gender roles, gender identity, and sexual orientation. The questions focused on how transgender individuals define gender roles vs gender identity, how they defined themselves on these dimensions, and how they perceived the relationships among gender roles, gender identity, and sexual orientation. All of the participants understood gender roles to be social constructs and viewed gender identity as being more fluid, compared to essentialist, binary, heteronormative ideas about gender. Most viewed sexual orientation as being dynamically related to gender identity. These findings are discussed in terms of an emerging transgender theory of the nature of gender that transcends essentialist, traditional ideas, as well as social constructionist views of feminist and queer theories.
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