Gender: Difference between revisions

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imported>Howard C. Berkowitz
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imported>Christine Bush
(Re-wrote stub to include the Animal and Plant Kingdoms, not just the "general public," lol. Added a second paragraph to provide a more nuanced, but cursory, overview of human gender issues.)
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{{dambigbox|the overall concept|Gender}}
{{dambigbox|the overall concept|Gender}}


For the general public '''gender''' is often understood as the dichotomous relationship between male and female but specialists expand the concept to include a number of other categories as well. This is because gender is shaped by more than the purely biological traits that determine an individual's sex: it also depends on factors of sexual orientation and social context.
'''Gender''' is a biological distinction among traits or individuals as being ''male'' or ''female''. This usage is common across the Animal Kingdom and to some extent in the Plant Kingdom as well. Intersexual and asexual traits can be found in both kingdoms, however, making distinctions of an organism as either male or female not always meaningful or accurate.
 
Among humans, the concept of gender is complex and more recently the study of [[gender expression]] has shown that gender identification is multivariate and, in the case of [[transgender]] or [[transsexual]] persons, may not be aligned with anatomical determinants. [[Sexual orientation]] is distinct characteristic from gender identification. Cultural and political affiliations between minority groups, as found in the lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender (LGBT) designation, may inadvertently conflate gender with sexual orientation. Conceptualizing gender as a spectrum rather than as a dichotomy gained increased acceptance in the late-twentieth century.

Revision as of 14:44, 13 July 2014

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
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This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.
This article is about the overall concept. For other uses of the term Gender, please see Gender (disambiguation).

Gender is a biological distinction among traits or individuals as being male or female. This usage is common across the Animal Kingdom and to some extent in the Plant Kingdom as well. Intersexual and asexual traits can be found in both kingdoms, however, making distinctions of an organism as either male or female not always meaningful or accurate.

Among humans, the concept of gender is complex and more recently the study of gender expression has shown that gender identification is multivariate and, in the case of transgender or transsexual persons, may not be aligned with anatomical determinants. Sexual orientation is distinct characteristic from gender identification. Cultural and political affiliations between minority groups, as found in the lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender (LGBT) designation, may inadvertently conflate gender with sexual orientation. Conceptualizing gender as a spectrum rather than as a dichotomy gained increased acceptance in the late-twentieth century.