Citations:antigenderist

English citations of antigenderist

opposing (restrictive) traditional gender roles edit

  • 2001, Dan Sanders, Chelydra Serpentina: Terror in the Adirondacks, Astral Publishing (→ISBN)
    He looked directly into the eyes of anyone he spoke to, intimidating less honest and not straightforward persons. Women found his eyes not intimidating but stimulating. Even the "antigenderist" females and "womenslibbers" conceded that he ...
  • 2016 October 1, Dorothy Y. White, Sandra Crespo, Marta Civil, Cases for Mathematics Teacher Educators: Facilitating Conversations about Inequities in Mathematics Classrooms, IAP, →ISBN, page 87:
    We wanted to promote an antigenderist approach to mathematics education. “An anti-genderist approach strives to combat the use of the gender binary (or other simplified understandings of gender categories) to structure schools and []

supporting traditional gender roles, opposing those who oppose traditional gender restrictions edit

  • 2020, Heidemarie Winkel, Angelika Poferl, Multiple Gender Cultures, Sociology, and Plural Modernities: Re-reading Social Constructions of Gender across the Globe in a Decolonial Perspective, Routledge (→ISBN):
    These antigenderist voices reclaim the gender-cultural constitution of the national order which they believe to be in danger. In Germany, the public debate has notably been shifting in this direction ...
    Self-proclaimed antigenderists oppose sociopolitical changes such as in migration and asylum policy, or gender political modifications such as the legal equality for same-sex couples. ...
  • 2020 December 16, Anja Hennig, Mirjam Weiberg-Salzmann, Illiberal Politics and Religion in Europe and Beyond: Concepts, Actors, and Identity Narratives, Campus Verlag, →ISBN, page 110:
    “Antigenderists” do not only “mobilize people gathered in existing national and local groups, churches, and political parties”, they “are increasingly networking on the global level through international []
  • 2021 September 16, Agnieszka Graff, Elżbieta Korolczuk, Anti-Gender Politics in the Populist Moment, Routledge, →ISBN:
    ... are called upon to become engaged in the struggle for the sake of their children. And many of them have responded. The parental role legitimizes conservative efforts for social change. Anti-genderists present themselves as oriented toward the common good and the best of possible futures, while portraying feminists and "genderists" as a threat to children and a cause of dissolution of family, []  []
  • 2022 March 7, Antonia Kupfer, Constanze Stutz, Covid, Crisis, Care, and Change?: International Gender Perspectives on Re/Production, State and Feminist Transitions, Verlag Barbara Budrich, →ISBN, page 57:
    Currently, she is working on her doctoral dissertation in which she analyses the antigenderist movement against and general debate about addressing sexual diversity in German schools from a discourse analytical perspective.
  • (Can we date this quote?), Maria Stern, Feminist IR in Europe, Springer Nature, →ISBN, page 41:
    Korolczuk and Graff (2018, 802) explain that antigenderists have used the term 'cultural wars,' and other militarizing narratives such as 'fight' or 'weapon,' whereas their key focus has been on the politics of reproduction.