836 resultados para Gender Identity Disorder
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Resumen tomado de la publicación
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The present study is concerned with exploring the linguistic identity construction of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in the context of USA 2008 Democratic Party primaries. Thus, their speeches are examined in order to detect the aspects of identity that each politician resorted to in the process of projecting a political identity. The study, however, takes a special interest in the ways in which gender identity is projected by Obama and Clinton. Moreover, the notions of gender bias as well as gender representations are also investigated.
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Given the popularity of Korean television dramas among various age groups in other countries, one would expect to see a similar pattern of consumption across different ages in China. Instead, we see high levels of consumption of Korean dramas by a very specific demographic. Why do young Chinese females consume Korean dramas at such high levels? I argue that young Chinese women’s heavy consumption of Korean dramas that portray a particular aesthetic of self and familial resolution may be explained by a need to redress contemporary psychological issues related to gendered self-identity. I posit that the identity formation processes of this particular demographic has been shaped by changes in family dynamics that stem from social and political restructuring in the 1980s, particularly the one-child policy. Thus, this thesis explores how the consumption of Korean dramas by young females in China may be understood as an implicit interrogation of gendered identity.
Transnationalism and gender identity: The case of the "one and a half generation" Taiwanese migrants
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This dissertation examined how United States illicit drug control policy, often commonly referred to as the "war on drugs," contributes to the reproduction of gendered and racialized social relations. Specifically, it analyzed the identity producing practices of United States illicit drug control policy as it relates to the construction of U.S. identities. ^ Drawing on the theoretical contributions of feminist postpositivists, three cases of illicit drug policy practice were discussed. In the first case, discourse analysis was employed to examine recent debates (1986-2005) in U.S. Congressional Hearings about the proper understanding of the illicit drug "threat." The analysis showed how competing policy positions are tied to differing understandings of proper masculinity and the role of policymakers as protectors of the national interest. Utilizing critical visual methodologies, the second case examined a public service media campaign circulated by the Office of National Drug Control Policy that tied the "war on drugs" with another security concern in the U.S., the "war on terror." This case demonstrated how the media campaign uses messages about race, masculinity, and femininity to produce privileged notions of state identity and proper citizenship. The third case examined the gendered politics of drug interdiction at the U.S. border. Using qualitative research methodologies including semi-structured interviews and participant observation, it examined how gender is produced through drug interdiction at border sites like Miami International Airport. By paying attention to the discourse that circulates about women drug couriers, it showed how gender is normalized in a national security setting. ^ What this dissertation found is that illicit drug control policy takes the form it does because of the politics of gender and racial identity and that, as a result, illicit drug policy is implicated in the reproduction of gender and racial inequities. It concluded that a more socially conscious and successful illicit drug policy requires an awareness of the gendered and racialized assumptions that inform and shape policy practices.^
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Virtual Worlds (VWs) provide an environment to understand and explore notions of gender and identity, particularly given the ability for users to experiment with gender in online worlds. Our study analyses gender identity using the virtual space of Second Life (SL) to explore experiences and responses to gender in an avatar. We introduced 46 novice users to the VW of SL in order to see if real life gender influenced their choices of avatar. Participants selected the gender of their original avatar and once they were used to SL, they were then asked to change the gender of that avatar. We used mixed methods research consisting of paper based questionnaires (n=34) and focus groups (n=46) conducted in SL. Nearly all participants chose an initial avatar that reflected their real-life gender with females (n=22) reporting higher levels of identification with this initial avatar. Females were significantly more concerned with the gender-specific appearance of their initial avatar. On swapping gender, females reported higher levels of discomfort and many changed back before 7 minutes. Males (n=24) did not report significant discomfort with their changed-gender avatar and did not revert back to their original avatar as quickly. Our findings suggest that female participants in this study tended to reinforce gender binaries through such things as clothing, hairstyles and behaviors of their avatars. Male participants were less likely to experience discomfort through changing the gender of their avatar (with the males noting they still perceived an avatar with a female appearance as male).
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Em 2008, a partir da Portaria 1707 do Ministério da Saúde, foi instituído no âmbito do Sistema Único de Saúde o Processo Transexualizador que estabeleceu as bases para a regulação do acesso de transexuais aos programas para realizar os procedimentos de transgenitalização. Esta Portaria, que tem como base o reconhecimento de que a orientação sexual e a identidade de gênero são determinantes da situação de saúde e que o mal-estar e sentimento de inadaptação por referência ao sexo anatômico do transexual devem ser abordados dentro da integralidade da atenção preconizada pelo SUS, significou avanços expressivos na legitimação da demanda de transexuais por redesignação sexual e facilitou o acesso dessa população à assistência de saúde. Embora a proposta da atenção a transexuais instituída no Brasil seja a de uma política de saúde integral que ultrapassa a questão cirúrgica e considera fatores psicossociais desta experiência, é possível observar que a mesma está baseada em um modelo biomédico que considera a transexualidade um transtorno mental cujo diagnóstico é condição de acesso ao cuidado e o tratamento está orientado para a realização da cirurgia de redesignação sexual. Nesse sentido, apenas os sujeitos que se enquadram na categoria nosológica de Transtorno de Identidade de Gênero e, consequentemente, expressam o desejo de adequar seu corpo ao gênero com o qual se identificam por meio de modificações corporais têm seu direito à assistência médica garantido. Diante disso, considerando que no Brasil a atenção a transexuais está absolutamente condicionada a um diagnóstico psiquiátrico que, ao mesmo tempo em que legitima a demanda por redesignação sexual e viabiliza o acesso a cuidados de saúde é um vetor de patologização e de estigma que restringe o direito à atenção médica e limita a autonomia, o presente estudo pretende discutir os desafios da despatologização da transexualidade para a gestão de políticas públicas para a população transexual no país. A partir de uma pesquisa sobre as questões históricas, políticas e sociais que definiram a transexualidade como um transtorno mental e dos processos que associaram a regulamentação do acesso aos serviços de saúde ao diagnóstico de transexualismo, espera-se problematizar o atual modelo de assistência a pessoas trans e construir novas perspectivas para a construção de políticas inclusivas e abrangentes que garantam o direito a saúde e o exercício da autonomia para pessoas trans.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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This article is concerned with how men and women on farms socially construct their gender and work identities through interaction with each other and public representations of themselves. It is argued that identity is a process, and like gender, it is socially constructed through ‘doing’ identity.
Farming has changed tremendously over the last forty years in Europe. The position of women in the labour market and on the family farm has also undergone significant changes. In Western Europe, women in general and women on family farms are more likely to be active in the labour market than they were forty years ago. While it remains the case that all of their labour on the farm is not properly recorded, they now also have visible, paid employment. Scholars have been surprised that farm women’s gender identity has not changed more significantly with this changed labour market presence. This article argues that in order to understand this limited change we need to understand how men and women in family farms verify and reinforce farming work identities and farming gender identities. It is argued that while off-farm work does not ‘look’ like gender deviant work, it is because it questions the male breadwinner role. An analysis of this helps us understand why the discourse of the family farm remains so dominant and so persistent. In 2012 and 2013, a qualitative study was undertaken in Northern Ireland to examine the gender implications of the EU rural development programme on farms and rural areas. Some of the data gathered as part of this study is interpreted to shed light on how and why particular work and gender identities are constructed within the farm family.
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Orchids: Intersex and Identity in Documentary explores the creative practice challenges of working with bodies with intersex in the long-form auto/biographical documentary Orchids. Just as creative practice research challenges the dominant hegemony of quantitative and qualitative research, so does my creative work position itself as a nuanced piece, pushing the boundaries of traditional cultural studies theories, documentary film practice and creative practice method, through its distinctive distillation and celebration of a new form of discursive rupturing, the intersex voice.