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Intersectionality - Race & Trans

This document discusses intersectionality and how it relates to race and being transgender. It defines intersectionality as overlapping systems of discrimination based on factors like gender, race, class, etc. It notes that the term was coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw in 1989 to explain discrimination faced by Black women. It then defines race as shared physical traits and transgender as a misalignment of gender identity and sex assigned at birth. The document explains that transgender people of color face challenges at the intersection of gender discrimination and racism, such as higher rates of violence. It concludes that intersectionality acknowledges everyone has unique discrimination experiences based on their identities and circumstances.

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Juliet Sabay
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
20 views15 pages

Intersectionality - Race & Trans

This document discusses intersectionality and how it relates to race and being transgender. It defines intersectionality as overlapping systems of discrimination based on factors like gender, race, class, etc. It notes that the term was coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw in 1989 to explain discrimination faced by Black women. It then defines race as shared physical traits and transgender as a misalignment of gender identity and sex assigned at birth. The document explains that transgender people of color face challenges at the intersection of gender discrimination and racism, such as higher rates of violence. It concludes that intersectionality acknowledges everyone has unique discrimination experiences based on their identities and circumstances.

Uploaded by

Juliet Sabay
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LIT Y:

TIO NA
RS EC AN S
INTE & TR
RA CE a b a y BS E
D - 2 D
. S
J u li et M
d by :
s e n te
P re
LEARNING IT Y
L
OBJECTIVES: C T IO N A
T E R SE
H A T IN
O V ER W
C
TO DIS F R AC E
IS N G ES O
H A LL E
T H E C N A L IT Y
P LO R E EC T IO
T O E X IN TE R S
R A N S A N DIN G
AN D T ER S T
F U N D E O F
EN SE O R TA N C
V E A S IM P O
TO GI ERSITY AND
O N D IV
SI V IT Y
IN C LU
LIT Y:
TIO NA
RS EC AN S
INTE & TR
RA CE a b a y BS E
D - 2 D
. S
J u li et M
d by :
s e n te
P re
WHAT IS
INTERSECTIONALITY?

Intersectionality describes overlapping or


interdependent systems of discrimination related
to age, disabilities, ethnicity, gender, geographic
location, sex, socioeconomic status, sexuality, etc.
KIMBERLÉ
CRENSHAW
- Intersectionality was first coined in 1989 by
American civil rights advocate and leading scholar
of critical race theory, Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw.
Intersectionality is a concept introduced as a means of
explaining the unique experiences of discrimination faced by
Black women. Crenshaw explained, “If an accident happens
in an intersection, it can be caused by cars traveling
from any number of directions and, sometimes, from all
of them. “ (Crenshaw, 1989, pp. 149)
RACE
&
TRANS
RACE
refers to a category of people who share
certain inherited physical characteristics,
such as skin color, facial features, and
stature.

TRANS
a prefix meaning “on the other side of,”
referring to the misalignment of one's
gender identity with one's sex assigned at
birth; transgender.
RACE
refers to a category of people who share
certain inherited physical characteristics,
such as skin color, facial features, and
stature.

TRANS
TRANSGENDER PEOPLE OF COLOR FACE
CHALLENGES AS GENDER DISCRIMINATION AND
RACISM INTERSECT
European colonizers began forcing indigenous people to follow white social norms.
These include anti-Blackness, Christianity, and a gender binary that reduced gender
to just man and woman.

Colonizers in some cases deemed people who expressed their gender outside the
binary as sinful and deviant and punished them with emotional and physical
violence.

For trans people, the challenges they face because of gender discrimination are
exacerbated by struggles they deal with because of racism.

Many studies suggest that many of the challenges they face arise from the
intersection of racism, xenophobia, and cisnormativity.
COMMON CHALLENGES
AND BARRIERS
The healthcare system has historically been fraught with danger for
trans people of color.
Mistrust is magnified for trans people of color, who may get deadnamed.
Medical professionals and lawmakers have mandated gatekeeping
measures that require extra steps to qualify for gender-affirming care
such as hormones and surgery.
Trans people of color face disproportionate rates of violence as a result of
racism and transphobia.
Black trans-women continue to have a higher risk for violence due to
their experiences of anti-Black racism, cissexism, and sexism intersect
(also known as transmisogynoir)
CONCLUSION
Put simply, intersectionality is the concept that all oppression is linked. It
is the acknowledgment that everyone has their own unique experiences of
discrimination and oppression and we must consider everything and
anything that can marginalize people – gender, race, class, sexual
orientation, physical ability, etc.

This is why intersectionality is such a useful framework — it highlights how


discrimination and exclusion are not simple and can't be solved by focusing
on a single issue. Instead, it can help us understand how the experience of
discrimination is gendered and racialized and how it differs within
different social contexts.
REFERENCES:
Lockett, G. (n.d.). Transgender people of color face unique challenges as gender discrimination and racism intersect. The
Conversation. https://theconversation.com/transgender-people-of-color-face-unique-challenges-as-gender-
discrimination-and-racism-intersect-179515?
fbclid=IwAR0PzbvRmMpfsUAp_tF8lmpNauuZ7cVSU9d2eAjLTBky5ne7sOnfR8ChrRY

Huang, Y. (2023). Intersectional inequalities in mental health and service use. In Elsevier eBooks (pp. 276–281).
https://doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-323-91497-0.00197-1

Intersectionality | Gendered Innovations. (n.d.). https://genderedinnovations.stanford.edu/terms/intersectionality.html?


fbclid=IwAR3pif0De9Ojc8nUPLis08UPd7QcEWFPcfFs6jrsR3tx9vBIWFeybJOBCzE

https://researchguides.library.syr.edu/fys101/intersectionality?fbclid=IwAR3MyF0ZsEmGdB7UCcaK4yx5-
iz3HULlzDdzAKgFRx1WGnti6ADi2N_vsmo

Publisher, A. R. a. R. O. O. (2016, April 8). 10.2 The Meaning of Race and Ethnicity. Pressbooks.
https://open.lib.umn.edu/sociology/chapter/10-2-the-meaning-of-race-and-ethnicity/?
fbclid=IwAR1gorWgpyAW7si2ducelola8cZBjqcSklONh5Jxo645hEAX_f1ZLGuJj_k

Dictionary.com | Meanings & Definitions of English Words. (2021). In Dictionary.com.


https://www.dictionary.com/browse/trans?fbclid=IwAR1iDYeU5S-Hw1MYISjk0Svdwi003zwC4svIvZrIW-
ZwWVrPXbBJ2wbwdoU
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