Citations:gender-critical

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English citations of gender-critical and gender critical

Adjective: “relating to gender-critical feminism”[edit]

  • 2013 August 2, Elizabeth Hungerford, “Sex Is Not Gender”, in CounterPunch[1], retrieved December 6, 2022:
    As a gender critical feminist and an attorney, I have been analyzing the legal and medical conflation of gender with sex for years.
  • 2014 August 6, Juliet Jacques, “On the ‘Dispute’ Between Radical Feminism and Trans People”, in New Statesmen[2], London, retrieved December 6, 2022:
    I don’t believe that all, or even most, ‘gender-critical’ editorials genuinely set out to make our lives harder: more that their writers don’t realise the impact they can have in the structure outlined above.
  • 2016, Grace Franki & Andy Zephyr, "The ethics debate", Honi Soit (University of Sydney), Semester 1, Week 3 (2016), page 15:
    For a topic with a reasonably broad scope, the entire discussion repeatedly boiled down to trans women and "gender critical" feminists.
  • 2016 June 29, Polly Anna Rocha, “Pride & Prejudice”, in San Antonio Current[3], San Antonio, Texas: Euclid Media Group, retrieved December 6, 2022, page 32:
    This sort of mistreatment reflects the ideologies of trans-exclusionary radical feminism, popular amongst certain gender-critical lesbian groups.
  • 2018 October 30, Anna Fazackerley, “UK Universities Struggle to Deal with ‘Toxic’ Trans Rights Row”, in The Guardian[4], London, retrieved December 6, 2022:
    Selina Todd, professor of modern history at Oxford University, agrees. Recently one delegate cancelled their place at a humanities conference she was due to speak at when they saw her name on the agenda. “It was because the person was concerned that ‘transphobic’ views would be expressed. I assume that this referred to my gender-critical stance.”
  • 2018, Esther Betts, "I regret my tactics at a trans rights protest. Here’s why", The Guardian, 26 November 2018:
    I no longer think that gender-critical voices should be simply censored.
  • 2018 December 3, Ed Southgate, “Disruption at ‘Transphobic’ Social Theorist’s Talk”, in Epigram[5] (University of Bristol), retrieved December 6, 2022, page 3:
    Bristol Free Speech society has so far hosted two gender-critical academics who have been accussed[sic] of transphobia.
  • 2019, Emily Johnson & Stephanie Zhang, "Academic Freedom to Hate", Farrago, Edition 7 (November 2019), page 15:
    When these arguments are questioned, gender-critical feminists like Lawford-Smith say that any attacks on their ideologies are attacks on all cis women.
  • 2019, "In Britain, saying sex is immutable can be a sackable offence | Britain | The Economist", The Economist, 20 December 2019:
    Another explosion in the gender wars went off on December 18th, when an employment tribunal in London ruled that stating “gender-critical” beliefs—for instance, that the words “man” and “woman” properly refer to males and females rather than to anyone who identifies as such—are a legitimate reason to lose one’s job.
  • 2019, Gaby Hinsliff, "Maya Forstater’s case was about protected beliefs, not trans rights", The Guardian, 22 December 2019:
    Forstater’s allies are justified in worrying that debate is being chilled by a small minority of trans activists resorting to aggressive threats online and physical intimidation of gender-critical feminists in real life.
  • 2020 January 3, Damien Gayle, “After Tribunal’s Ethical Veganism Ruling, What Is a Protected Belief?”, in The Guardian[6], London, retrieved December 6, 2022:
    Maya Forstater, a former researcher and writer for a thinktank, is likely to appeal against a ruling that her gender-critical feminist beliefs could not be protected, Chilton suggested.
  • 2020, "Stupefied!", The Varsitarian (University of Santo Tomas), 9 January 2020, page 4:
    Such is the case with gender-critical feminist and tax expert Maya Forstater who was fired at[sic] her job as a researcher for[sic] Centre for Global Development, an international anti-poverty thinktank, for tweeting that "it is impossible to change sex."
  • 2020, Anna Fazackerley, "Sacked or silenced: academics say they are blocked from exploring trans issues, The Guardian, 14 January 2010:
    Dr Kath Murray, a research associate in criminology at Edinburgh University, says there are many obstacles to organising gender-critical events on women’s rights.
  • 2020, Camilla Turner, "Oxford college accused of closing down free speech over transgender event rules", The Telegraph, 21 January 2020:
    Academics have accused Merton College of adopting a “draconian” stance towards free speech by “suppressing gender-critical thought”.