Citations:ipso-gender

English citations of ispo-gender, ipso gender, and ipsogender

ipso gender edit

  • 2018, James W. Messerschmidt, Michael A. Messner, Raewyn Connell, Patricia Yancey Martin, Gender Reckonings: New Social Theory and Research, NYU Press (→ISBN), page 293:
    Costello, C. G. 2015. "Cis gender, ipso gender." June. http://trans-fusion.blogspot.com.
  • 2019 December 13, Katie Steele, Julie Nicholson, Radically Listening to Transgender Children: Creating Epistemic Justice Through Critical Reflection and Resistant Imaginations, Lexington Books, →ISBN, pages 45–46:
    Wider than the umbrella terms transgender or trans, gender expansiveness also includes cisgender or ipso gender individuals whose gender expression and/or use of pronouns and gendered language are not limited by binary expectations based on their gender identity.
  • 2020, JE Sumerau, A tale of three spectrums: deviating from normative treatments of sex and gender, in ''Deviant Behavior (2020, Taylor & Francis):
    Finally, as noted in Table 2 , there is also the ipso gender sex-to-gender pathway [] What does the ipso gender pathway look like and how varied might it be? How do people []

ipso-gender edit

  • 2016, C. G. Costello, Intersex and Trans* Communities: Commonalities and Tensions, in Transgender and Intersex: Theoretical, Practical, and Artistic Perspectives, ed. by Stefan Horlacher (Springer, →ISBN), page 85:
    [...] transgender, genderqueer, neutrois/agenderd, gender-fluid, and/or identify with genders other than male or female (androgyne, two-spirit, hijra, etc.). Those not trans* I refer to as cis-gender if born binary-sex-typical, and ipso-gender if born intersex.
  • 2018, Gary Wood, The Psychology of Gender, Routledge (→ISBN),
    page 20 (section title): Transgender, ipso-gender, agender, genderqueer etc. versus cisgender
    page 23: To counter this issue, Costello proposes the term ipso-gender (ipso meaning 'in the same place') for people with an intersex condition who identify with the sex they were assigned (by others) at birth.

ipsogender edit

  • 2023, CG Costello, The Intersection of Transgender and Intersex Experiences, in The Rowman & Littlefield Handbook of …:
    [] binary sex, but was surgically assigned to that sex, ipsogender (Costello 2015). (“Cis” is a [] Ipsogender people often object to their infant genital surgeries despite the fact that doctors []