The recognition that authentic gender identity development requires social conditions of fairness, recognition, and equal rights.
Sor Juana could not fully develop her intellectual identity in a system that denied women education and authority. Her struggle for justice and her struggle for self-definition were inseparable. This concept reframes cisgender identity not as purely individual but as embedded in systems of justice or injustice. When gender systems are unjust—when women lack economic power or men are trapped in emotional restriction—everyone's identity formation is constrained. Authentic cisgender identity thus requires commitment to broader gender justice: women's full participation in intellectual and economic life, men's freedom from rigid emotional codes, non-binary recognition in binary systems. The concept suggests that examining one's cisgender identity authentically means examining the injustices that shaped its formation and working toward systems where all genders can develop with greater freedom and dignity.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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