Citations:cissexually


 * 2010, Sheila L. Cavanagh, Queering Bathrooms: Gender, Sexuality, and the Hygienic Imagination ISBN 1442699973:
 * For those invested in dominant, cissexually defined masculine subject positions, there appears to be pride in, or space taken up by, faecal droppings.


 * 2016, Saoirse Caitlin O'Shea, I am not that Caitlin: a critique of both the transphobic media reaction to Caitlyn Jenner's Vanity Fair cover shoot and of passing, in the journal of Culture and Organization:
 * [...] preferences people who are cisgender. A simple example is how the designation of public toilets as 'male' or 'female' recently allowed some USA states to cissexually mandate use to discriminate against trans. Trans is not a [...]
 * 2020, Saoirse Caitlin O'Shea, "'I, Robot?' Or how transgender subjects are dehumanised", in Culture and Organization, volume 26, issue 1:
 * These processual subjects do not align with an original intent but 'effectively expand the boundaries of what is, in fact, culturally intelligible' (Butler [1990] 1999, 39); performativity increases the scope of the heterosexual matrix and a cissexually normative society and, how


 * 2023, O Stephano, "Chapter Ten. SEXUAL DIFFERENCE AS QUALITATIVE BECOMING: Irigaray Beyond Cissexism?", in What Is Sexual Difference? Thinking with Irigaray'':
 * My question, in line with a body of scholarship inquiring into the limits of Irigaray’s focus on cisgender forms of sexual difference with attendant heterosexual schemas of desire, is whether Irigaray’s work provides conceptual resources for reconceiving sexual difference as itself capable of changing in kind, of differentiating bodies and subjectivities in a multiplicity of ways alongside cissexually differentiated morphologies and identities. In response, I argue that Irigaray’s early formulation of “the/a woman” as a subject in becoming outlines a model of becoming to which her own concept of sexual difference is itself susceptible.