We disembody gender, which refers to the symbolism of masculinity and femininity that we connect to being male-bodied and female bodied (Wade and Ferree 2015:5). Using it as a guiding logic with which to understand not to just people, but the world around us. We understand this through social construction, a process by which we make reality meaningful through shared interpretation (25). For example, social class is a social constructed entity. Even though most agree that class represents a universal situation and its meaning often contextually located because it can vary from one society to another what class really is.
In today’s society, our bodies describe essential pieces of our identity. This social construct surfaced because of the many speculations people make that are connected with parts of our appearance i.e. genitalia, hair &skin color, and clothing we wear. Betsy Lucal uses her biography to examine the social construction of gender, she both illustrates and expands abstract work in this area.
In Lucal’s article “What it Means to Be Gendered Me”, Lucal highly strikes the notion of the binary gender system based on the biology and saying that she knows that her appearance is likely to be read as
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I act out more masculine and I believe it’s because I grew up with a brother and uncles who did what they call “roughing me up” which was them throwing me around, sometimes hitting me playfully and saying “toughen up”. I also started playing basketball at an early age, which also played a role in me being having masculine tendencies and being aggressive. I would play basketball with the neighborhood boys and I would watch other girls who were older than me play basketball and that made me even more aggressively because that’s how boys play, very