Citations:cissplain


 * 2012, Natalie Reed, "How To Ask A Trans Person Questions Without Being Insensitive About It", quoted in Benjamin Zimmer, Jane Solomon, & Charles E. Carson, "Among the New Words", American Speech, Volume 89, Issue 4 (2014), page 480:
 * Don’t ask us about transgenderism only to cissplain how we’re still “really” our birth sex and always will be.
 * 2016, Michele Angello, Ali Bowman, Raising the Transgender Child: A Complete Guide for Parents, Families, and Caregivers (Seal Press, ISBN 9781580056366):
 * What do people mean when they say something or someone is “transphobic” or “transmisogynistic” or when they sarcastically say, “Thanks for cissplaining”? These words and phrases express the feeling of being marginalized at the hands of someone who has privilege. If you are white, college educated, male, ablebodied, and middle or upper class, you have privilege, whether you are aware of it or not. That privilege can stand between you and your ability to understand and ...
 * 2017, Tuesday G. Meadows, "Becoming Me", LinQ, August 2017, page 8:
 * I will speak out and not compromise one little bit with those who try to cisplain my life to me.
 * 2017, Madison Jones, "On Allyship", What The F (University of Michigan), November 2017, page 8:
 * Instead of whitesplaining, mansplaining, and/or cisplaining, sit back and actually listen to what they are saying without getting defensive.
 * 2021, Zoë Playdon, The Hidden Case of Ewan Forbes: And the Unwritten History of the Trans Experience, page 234:
 * Pop sociology such as Liz Hodgkinson's Bodyshock patronized, cisplained and titillated.
 * 2022, Mia Fournier Pereira, "Dissident Epistemologies: Dialogues around an Affective Research Experience", Journal of International Women's Studies, Volume 23, Issue 2, February 2022, page 50:
 * I like to call it transplaining, in response to the usual mansplaining and cisplaining voices that write trans* history.
 * Instead of whitesplaining, mansplaining, and/or cisplaining, sit back and actually listen to what they are saying without getting defensive.
 * 2021, Zoë Playdon, The Hidden Case of Ewan Forbes: And the Unwritten History of the Trans Experience, page 234:
 * Pop sociology such as Liz Hodgkinson's Bodyshock patronized, cisplained and titillated.
 * 2022, Mia Fournier Pereira, "Dissident Epistemologies: Dialogues around an Affective Research Experience", Journal of International Women's Studies, Volume 23, Issue 2, February 2022, page 50:
 * I like to call it transplaining, in response to the usual mansplaining and cisplaining voices that write trans* history.