Citations:gendery

Adjective: "(informal) of, related to, or characteristic of gender"

 * 2004, Lynne Layton, Who's That Girl? Who's That Boy?: Clinical Practice Meets Postmodern Gender Theory, unnumbered page:
 * Why, to paraphrase Susan Coates (personal communication), are some people "more gendery" than others?
 * 2009, Elzbieta Matynia, Performative Democracy, page 135:
 * One set of performative actions was generated by articles, TV interviews and panel discussions, “gendery” seminars, and above all by books disclosing the cultural blueprints that had facilitated the removal of women from the newly created polis.
 * 2009, Bruces Reis, "Names of the Father", in Heterosexual Masculinities: Contemporary Perspectives from Psychoanalytic Gender Theory (eds. Bruce Reis & Robert Grossmark), unnumbered page:
 * “Some people,” she said, in a flattering manner, “are just more gender-y than others.”
 * 2010, S. Bear Bergman, The Nearest Exit May Be Behind You, page 122:
 * So my working theory is that whatever opportunity I have to close that gap a little bit is a way of activism, as valid as the work I do standing up and lecturing about gendery things and probably, in the final analysis, with a higher success rate.
 * 2011, Thomas Peele, Queer Popular Culture: Literature, Media, Film, and Television, unnumbered page:
 * Before launching into close examinations of the film, I want to complicate the description of Hedwig's gender performances by asserting that they are gender-y, a term I borrow from queer scholar Eve Sedgewick that refers to the quantity rather than quality of gender signifiers.
 * 2017, Joshua Harmon, Significant Other, page 77:
 * You can say what you want, but you're being so gendery and you're like the least gendery person I've ever known, but now you're getting married and it's like there's this whole side of your personality I never, ever – I feel like I don't know you.
 * 2018, Nancy Chodorow, quoted in Mengchun Chiang, "'You Just Know It's the Only Thing You Can Think': A Conversation with Chodorow", in Radical Visionaries: Feminist Therapy Pioneers, 1970-1975 (eds. Claudia Pitts & Debra M. Kawahara), unnumbered page:
 * Of course I'm an advocate for gender equality, but in the consulting room, I'm sensitive to and I hear, I hope, “gendery” and sexual things that are both conscious and unconscious; I hear mother-daughter especially, and I write about that.
 * 2020, Finn Enke, "Stuck in the Paradigm with You: Transfeminist Reflections on the Uses of History and the Spaces of Contradiction", in Gender, Considered Feminist Reflections Across the US Social Sciences (eds. Abigail J. Stewart & Sarah Fenstermaker), page 39:
 * These inquiries evolved into a transgender history that ultimately came to insist on historically contextualizing the concept (transgender) and with it, all gendery manifestations, rather than looking for people in the past to be transgender or not.
 * 2020, endever corbin, "I'm trans and autistic, and yes (for me), they're related", in Spectrums: Autistic Transgender People in Their Own Words (ed. Maxfield Sparrow), page 82:
 * These are not exactly very gendery pieces of clothing.
 * 2021, The Sandbox Revolution: Raising Kids for a Just World (ed. Lydia Wylie-Kellermann), page 234:
 * This queer, gendery, three-parent, unschooling, co-op-living, Mad Pride crew is wholesome as shit.