My sociology professor
began our discussion on gender roles by saying “The hardest thing for my
students to understand is that sex and gender are 2 different things.” I guess
this not only applies to Sociology 101 at Stevenson University, but the larger
society as a whole.
This is only the second
time I picked up my textbook this entire semester, but I had a very good reason
to.
According to the Huffington Post, “in the first four months of 2014, 102 acts of violence against transgender people have been reported.” As staggering as this statistic is it could easily me 3 times this much. Such reports are voluntary, so many incidents go unreported. The Transgender Violence Tracking Portal says that 10% of these acts were done to minors.
This circles back to the
difference between sex and gender.
Parents need to understand
that even though they gave birth to a baby that has male sex organs, that baby
may grow up and identify with the culturally constructed attributes of being
female. Children as young as 3 know their actions don't correspond with their sex. This freaks
most parents out simply because in the society they grew up in boys had to be
masculine and girls had to be feminine. Change is hard.
The only crime here would
be people not calling this transgender person out of the pronouns they identify
with. Even worse, calling them the “I word.” Hate starts with misunderstanding
and lack of respect. As I mentioned in an earlier post, calling a transgender person demeaning names or pronouns they don't identify with is denying them the right to be human.
I, like my sociology
professor, think that hate towards transgender people would end with the basic
understanding of that gender and sex are not the same.
You wrote this post right in time for Transgender Day of Remembrance last Friday!
ReplyDelete