Here's another installment of Gender in Genre! The first post is
hereIt's not that I wish to complain that femmes are, on the whole, a put upon or oppressed group. We get our fair share of sexism, certainly, but there's a lot of privilege that goes along with being femme
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1) Some people are from environments where the opposite sex is so very much not who you are "supposed" to be socializing with in anything but a romantic way that it is worthy of comment if you have any opposite sex friends at all. (These environments are not notably supportive of intersexed people, to the point of not recognizing their existence, so the binary is entirely accurate in this description.) Some people are strongly heterosocial or strongly homosocial their whole lives, regardless of context, and that's no problem with me as long as they aren't going on and on about it or making sweeping statements about other people and what it all means ( ... )
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But I do know women who live in very small, very insular communities. They're not where I live. But I have some sympathy for them, even as I want them to get themselves out.
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The idea of adults trapped in such small social environments that they can just happen to not have any same-gender friends because of unevenly distributed interests or whatever frankly terrifies me. (Same for no opposite-gender friends, but there I can see the larger social forces at work, so it seems more explicable.)
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It is indeed terrifying.
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