Jump to content

Citations:cisfeminine

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English citations of cisfeminine

Adjective: "of or pertaining to female cisgender people or experiences"

[edit]
2018 2019 2020 2021
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2018, Ann K. McClellan, Sherlock's World: Fan Fiction and the Reimagining of BBC's Sherlock, page 129:
    At the beginning of Parachute_Silks's fem!Sherlock/fem!John story, "Categories," for example, a young female Sherlock tries to keep her university boyfriend, Sebastian, interested in her, first by pretending to fulfill traditional cisfeminine stereotypes: she hides her deductions and intelligence and tries to “make conversation—and the phrase is perfect, really, because that is very much what it feels like, that she is creating something artificial" (Parachute_Silks, "Categories").
  • 2018, William B. Parsons, Being Spiritual but Not Religious: Past, Present, Future(s), unnumbered pages:
    It encourages consumption through individual fulfillment, marketing products through promises of intangible goods such as happiness, beauty, family togetherness, national belonging, and even – perhaps especially – the attainment of an elusive cismasculine or cisfeminine, heteronormative ideal.
  • 2019, Delores Phillips, "The Struggle Plate at the Intersection", in Feminist Food Studies: Intersectional Perspectives (eds. Barbara Parker, Elaine M. Power, Jennifer Brady, & Susan Belyea), page 178:
    Like Murray, Curry uses “her multiracial heritage ... to neutralize polarizing discourses of race” (although Curry is, unlike Murray, clearly committed to a cisfeminine heterosexual conservatism).
  • 2019, Jane Settler, Your Voice Speaks Volumes: It's Not What You Say, But How You Say It, page 171:
    And it's in Scott's interview that the issue of transgender women not necessarily wanting to sound cisfeminine comes up.
  • 2020, Xavier L. Guadalupe-Diaz & Carolyn M. West, "The Intersections of Race and Immigration", in Transgender Intimate Partner Violence: A Comprehensive Introduction (Adam M. Messinger & Xavier L. Guadalupe-Diaz), page 143:
    Drawing on NCAVP transgender homicide data, research has found that transfeminine Black and Latina individuals are at significantly higher risk for homicide than cisfeminine counterparts.
  • 2020, Janice Joseph, "Transphobic Femicide: An Intersectional Persepective", in An International Perspective on Contemporary Developments in Victimology: A Festschrift in Honor of Marc Groenhuijsen (eds. Janice Joseph & Stacie Jergenson), page 109:
    However, “the homicide rates of young transfeminine Black and Latina residents were almost certainly higher than those of cisfeminine (assigned feminine gender at birth and conforming with feminine gender later in life) background, with all RR estimates above 1.0 for Blacks, and all above 1.0 for Latinas" (Dinno 2017, p.1).