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25 Cards in this Set

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  • Back

Androgyny

A person who identifies as both or neither of the two culturally defined genders, or a person who expresses merged culturally/stereotypically feminine and masculine characteristics or mainly neutral characteristics.

Anti-Semitism

Hostility toward, or prejudice or discrimination against Jews or Judaism.

Assigned Sex

A social construct referring to the state of being intersex, female, or male. A concept that relies on the dichotomous division of various genitive, biological, chromosomal, hormonal and physiological differences in human. Also, what society creates when it genders a body.

Bisexual

A person who is emotionally, physically, and/or sexually attracted to both men and women. Some people avoid this term because of its implications that there are only two sexes/genders to be sexually attracted to and this reinforces the binary gender system.

Cross-Dresser

Someone who enjoys wearing clothing typically assigned to a gender that the individual has not been socialized as, or does not identify as. This is a person of all sexual orientations and do not necessarily identify as transgender. Also is frequently used today in place of the term "transvestite." This activity seems more obvious when men as opposed to women engage in it publicly, because of an inequity in societal norms concerning attire and other components of appearance.

Cultural Humility

A lifelong commitment to self-evaluation and critique, to redressing the power imbalances in the [interpersonal relationship] dynamic[s], and to developing mutually beneficial and non-paternalistic partnerships with communities on behalf of individuals and defined populations. An institution committed to this would be characterized by training, established recruitment and retention processes, identifiable and funded personnel to facilitate the meeting of program goals, and dynamic feedback loops between the institution and its employees and between the institution and [clients] and/or other members from the surrounding community (Tervalon).

FtM/MtF

Generally, abbreviations used to refer to specific members of the trans community. FtM stands for female-to-male, as in moving from a female pole of the spectrum to the male. MtF stands for male-to-female and refers to moving from the male pole of the spectrum tot eh female. FtM is sometimes, not always, synonymous with transman. Conversely, someone who identifies as MtF, may identify as a transwoman.

Gay

Someone who is primarily or exclusively attracted to members of the same sex. In certain contexts, this term is used to refer only to those who identify as men.

Heterosexual Privilege

Being able to kiss or hug your partner in public without threat or punishment; adopting or foster-parenting children; dating the person of your desire during your teen years; receiving validation from your religious community; receiving social acceptance.

Homophobia

The irrational hatred and fear of lesbian and gay people that is produced by institutionalized biases in a society or culture.

Institutional Oppression

Policies, laws, rules, norms and customs enacted by organizations and social institutions that disadvantage some social groups and advantage other social groups. These institutions include religion, government, education, law, the media, and health care system.

Intersex

An anatomical variation from typical understandings of male and female genetics. The physical manifestation, at birth, of genetic or endocrinological differences from the cultural norm. Also, a group of medical conditions that challenge standard sex designations, proving that sex, like gender, is a social construct. At least one in 2,000 children is born with some degree of ambiguity regarding their primary and/or secondary sex characteristics. In these cases, medical personnel cannot easily label the child "boy" or "girl." Most of these children receive cosmetic surgery so that the child's genitalia conform to societal and familial expectations of "normalcy," even thought such surgeries are not medically necessary and can damage the child's reproductive organs. The number of children born with some degree of this is difficult to estimate. This and transgender people share some overlapping experiences and perspectives, but the terms are not synonymous, and the issues are not the same. Though these people are opposed to the word "hermaphrodite" because it is misleading and stigmatizing, it continues to be widely used in the medical profession.

Male Privilege

Benefiting from the higher status of men and attributes associated with men and masculinity within the larger culture.

Multiple Identities

The concept that a person's identity does not rest solely on one factor (e.g., sexual orientation, race, gender, etc.). Therefore, no single element of one's identity is necessarily dominant, although certain identities can take precedence over others at certain times.

Dialect

the language of a particular district, class, or group of persons. It encompasses the sounds, grammar, and diction employed by a specific people as distinguished from other persons either geographically or socially. This, as a major technique of characterization, is the use by persons in a narrative of distinct varieties of language to indicate a person's social or geographical status, and is used by authors to give an illusion of reality to fictional characters. It is sometimes used to differentiate between characters.

Euphemism

the use of an indirect, mild, delicate, inoffensive, or vague word or expression for one thought to be coarse, sordid, or otherwise unpleasant, offensive, or blunt.

Hyperbole

obvious and deliberate exaggeration or an extravagant statement. It is a figure of speech not intended to be taken literally since it is exaggeration for the sake of emphasis. This is a common poetic and dramatic device.

Imagery

the forming of mental images, figures, or likenesses of things. It is also the use of language to represent actions, persons, objects, and ideas descriptively. This means encompassing the senses also, rather than just forming a mental picture.

Metaphor

a figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to a person, idea, or object to which it is not literally applicable. It is an implied analogy or unstated comparison that imaginatively identifies one thing with another.

Novel

a lengthy fictitious prose narrative portraying characters and presenting an organized series of events and settings. These are accounts of life and involve conflict, characters, action, settings, plot, and theme. This is considered the third stage of the development of imagination fiction, following the epic and the romance.

Pathos

A quality of a play's action that stimulates the audience to feel pity for a character. This is always an aspect of tragedy, and may be present in comedy as well.

Personification

a figure of speech in which abstractions, animals, ideas, and inanimate objects are endowed with human form, character, traits, or sensibilities.

Protagonist

the leading character of a drama, novel, etc. This is not always the hero, but is always the principal and central character whose rival is the antagonist.

Scene

the place where some act or event occurs. Sometimes the term is used for an incident or situation in real life. It is also the division of an act of a play or a unit of dramatic action in which a single point is made or one effect obtained.

Drama

A prose or verse composition, especially one telling a serious story, that is intended for representation by actors impersonating the characters and performing the dialogue and action. A serious narrative work or program for television, radio, or the cinema.