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EVERY

HEL
LO O

NE
!

Let's Get To
Know me
A quick fun facts about myself
Hello!
I'm ___________, nice to meet you all.
You can call me ______________________ for short.
My favorite color is __________________.
My favorite hobby/sport is ________________.
My favorite song is __________________.
Favorite Things
Toys

Hair Cut/Style

Color

TV
Shows/Programs
.
Sex Assigned at Birth

Female Intersex
xx
/XY/XXY/XYY
(++)
Male
estrogen testosterone XY
/estrogen Testosterone
Vagina
Breast Vigana and Penis
(primary and secondary
sex characteristics)
Penis Adam's Apple
(Nancy Navalta (primary and secondary
Aprilia Manganang) sex characteristics)
SEX-Gender SYSTEM
Biological Determinism

Gayle Rubin (1984) “the set of


arrangements by which a society
transforms biological sexuality into
products of human activity.”
GENDER roles
MANHOOd
Womanhood
Gender Bias
Gender-Based Discrimination and
Gender Division of Labor
Violence

Multiple Burden Stereotyping


That is, Rubin proposed that the links
between biological sex, social gender,
and sexual attraction are products of
culture.
In our heteronormative
culture, everyone is assumed
to be heterosexual (attracted
to men if you are a woman;
attracted to women if you are
a man) until stated otherwise.
According to a
biological
determinist view,
where “biology is
destiny,” this is the
way nature
intended. However,
this view fails to
account for human
intervention.
Social
constructionists
many things we typically leave unquestioned as
conventional ways of life actually reflect
historically- and culturally-rooted power
relationships between groups of people, which are
reproduced in part through socialization processes,
where we learn conventional ways of thinking and
behaving from our families and communities.
Kanino ka
nagka-
Crush?
Gender Identity
Pangkasariang Pagkakakilanlan

I Identify myself as
CISGENDER
NON-BINARY.
TRANSGENDER

SEX ASSIGNED AT BIRTH


What gender identity is

Your gender identity is your personal sense of


self. It’s how you, as an individual, conceptualize
your own gender.
Gender expression

is how you express your gender identity. Many do this


through clothing, behavior, gesticulations — anything
people might associate with gender. Your gender
expression might match what society expects of your
gender, or it might subvert it.
Gender presentation is often used
interchangeably with “gender expression” in
the sense that it’s how you present your
gender (whether you intend to or not)
externally.
Somebody might “present” as one gender
when they actually identify with another. For
example, a transgender woman might present
as masculine, or a nonbinary person might
present as feminine. The outside world might
assume that they’re one gender, even when
they’re not.
That’s why it’s
important not to make
assumptions about
someone’s gender based
on how they look.
CISNORMATIVITY
Agender
Someone who doesn’t identify with the idea or experience of
having a gender.
Aliagender
A nonbinary gender identity that doesn’t fit into existing gender
schemas or constructs.
Androgyne
Someone who has a gender presentation or identity that’s gender-
neutral, androgynous, or has both masculine and feminine
characteristics.
Aporagender
Both an umbrella term and nonbinary gender identity describing the
experience of having a specific gender that’s different from man, woman,
or any combination of the two.

Bigender
This term describes someone who identifies with two distinct genders.
Bigender indicates the number of gender identities someone has.
It doesn’t indicate which genders someone identifies with or the level of
identification they have with a particular gender (such as 50 percent
male, 50 percent demigirl).
Binarism
Generally, binarism refers to the gender
systems and schemas that are based on the
existence of two opposing parts, such as
man/woman or masculine/feminine.
More specifically, binarism is a type of sexism
that erases ethnic or culture-specific
nonbinary gender roles and identities.

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