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dc.contributor.authorCarrera Fernández, María Victoria 
dc.contributor.authorDepalma, Renée
dc.date.accessioned2024-02-07T10:42:10Z
dc.date.issued2020-07
dc.identifier.citationSociological Review, 68(4): 745-762 (2020)spa
dc.identifier.issn00380261
dc.identifier.issn1467954X
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11093/6046
dc.description.abstractAs two cis-hetero woman feminist educators, we provide an educator’s perspective on trans-exclusionary radical feminist (TERF) discourses. We begin by discussing the heterosexual matrix and the gender violence that it produces in schools as well as other socializing institutions. The socially constructed sexual binary constrains identity production to adhere to the heteronormative, at the same time excluding those who transgress this normativity. We continue by reviewing how schools are particularly significant spaces for these early social interactions, but the social discourses enacted in educational contexts mirror those of broader society. We then critically analyse some of the increasingly belligerent popular discourses promoted by TERF groups since the 1970s, appropriating feminist discourses to produce arguments that contradict basic premises of feminism. We trace possibilities for a collaborative response by reinforcing alliances between transfeminism and other feminist movements. Finally, as teacher-educators, we highlight among these a critical (queer) pedagogy that incorporates trans* experience as part of a broader feminist educational agenda: to contribute to the creation of a more equitable society based on critical reflections on the gender normative. Such a pedagogy not only rejects trans-exclusionary discourses that serve to reinforce hierarchies and promote violence, but embraces trans* experience as a productive educational resource for understanding human diversity. Human experience that challenges the sexual binary can help educators to critically question the heteronormative and to broaden our understandings; in the words of Eric Rofes, drawing upon ‘status queer’ to ‘rethink our efforts and our role in either maintaining or radically transforming the status quo’.en
dc.language.isoengspa
dc.publisherSociological Reviewspa
dc.rightsReservados todos os dereitos
dc.titleFeminism will be trans-inclusive or it will not be: Why do two cis-hetero woman educators support transfeminism?en
dc.typearticlespa
dc.rights.accessRightsclosedAccessspa
dc.identifier.doi10.1177/0038026120934686
dc.identifier.editorhttp://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0038026120934686spa
dc.publisher.departamentoAnálise e intervención psicosocioeducativaspa
dc.publisher.grupoinvestigacionSaúde, Sexualidade e Xénerospa
dc.subject.unesco6114 Psicología socialspa
dc.subject.unesco5206.09 Sexospa
dc.subject.unesco6309.09 Posición Social de la Mujerspa
dc.date.embargoEndDateindefinidospa
dc.date.updated2024-02-02T13:25:09Z
dc.computerCitationpub_title=Sociological Review|volume=68|journal_number=4|start_pag=745|end_pag=762spa


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