Disrupting cisnormativity: Decentering gender in families

Authors

  • Elizabeth McNeilly University of Calgary

Keywords:

Transgender, gender variance, gender non-binary, cisgender, cisnormativity, family

Abstract

Within the last decade, emerging research and activism in the sphere of transgender and gender non-binary (TGNB) persons has necessitated new vocabulary and perspectives. Families of TGNB are often challenged to reevaluate understandings of gender, of sexuality, and the family unit itself. Gender binaries are perpetuated and reinforced in Western culture through our gender “performances” (Butler, 2004), and children are judged on their performances (Wahlig, 2015). The conceptual model of decentering cisnormativity allows researchers to analyze when tensions grow taut when society members are confronted with gender nonconformity. Parents often undergo transformation when they choose to explore these tensions, deconstruct their assumptions about gender, and critically reflect on their underlying biases, belief systems, values, and understandings. In this way, it is not only TGNB children who transition, but those around them (Malpas, 2017) as their belief systems and social constructions of gender are called into question.

Author Biography

Elizabeth McNeilly, University of Calgary

Ph.D. student, Educational Research, Adult Learning

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Published

2019-05-19

How to Cite

McNeilly, E. (2019). Disrupting cisnormativity: Decentering gender in families. Emerging Perspectives: Interdisciplinary Graduate Research in Education and Psychology, 3(2), 35–41. Retrieved from https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/ep/article/view/43285

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