4. 1. Androgyny (also androgynous, bi-gendered, no-
gendered): A person who identifies as both or neither of
the two culturally defined genders, or a person who
expresses merged culturally/stereotypically feminine and
masculine characteristics or neutral characteristics.
2. Anti-Semitism Hostility toward, or prejudice or
discrimination against Jews or Judaism.
3. Assigned (Biological) Sex: A social construct referring
to the state of being intersex, female, or male. A concept
that relies on the dichotomous division of various
genitive, biological, chromosomal, hormonal and
physiological differences in human.
5. 4. Bisexual: A person who is emotionally, physically, and/or
sexually attracted to both men and women. Some people avoid
this term because of its implications that there are only two
sexes/genders to be sexually attracted to and this reinforces the
binary gender system.
5. Cross-Dresser: Someone who enjoys wearing clothing
typically assigned to a gender that the individual has not been
socialized as, or does not identify as. Cross-dressers are of all
sexual orientations and do not necessarily identify as
transgender. “Cross-dresser” is frequently used today in place
of the term “transvestite.” This activity seems more obvious
when men as opposed to women engage in it publicly, because
of an inequity in societal norms concerning attire and other
components of appearance.
6. 6. Cultural Humility: A lifelong commitment to self-evaluation and
critique, to redressing the power imbalances in the [interpersonal
relationship] dynamic[s], and to developing mutually beneficial and
non-paternalistic partnerships with communities on behalf of
individuals and defined populations.
7. FtM (F2M)/MtF (M2F): Generally, abbreviations used to refer to
specific members of the trans community. FtM stands for female-to-
male, as in moving from a female pole of the spectrum to the male.
MtF stands for male-to-female and refers to moving from the male
pole of the spectrum tot eh female. FtM is sometimes, not always,
synonymous with transman. Conversely, someone who identifies as
MtF, may identify as a transwoman.
6. Gay: Someone who is primarily or exclusively attracted to members
of the same sex. In certain contexts, this term is used to refer only to
those who identify as men.
7. 9. Heterosexual Privilege: Being able to kiss or hug your
partner in public without threat or punishment; adopting or
foster-parenting children; dating the person of your desire
during your teen years; receiving validation from your
religious community; receiving social acceptance.
10. Homophobia: The irrational hatred and fear of lesbian and
gay people that is produced by institutionalized biases in a
society or culture.
11. Institutional Oppression: Policies, laws, rules, norms and
customs enacted by organizations and social institutions that
disadvantage some social groups and advantage other social
groups. These institutions include religion, government,
education, law, the media, and health care system.
8. 12.Intersex: An anatomical variation from typical understandings of male
and female genetics. The physical manifestation, at birth, of genetic or
endocrinological differences from the cultural norm. Also, a group of
medical conditions that challenge standard sex designations, proving that
sex, like gender, is a social construct. At least one in 2,000 children is
born with some degree of ambiguity regarding their primary and/or
secondary sex characteristics. In these cases, medical personnel cannot
easily label the child “boy” or “girl.” Most of these children receive
cosmetic surgery so that the child’s genitalia conform to societal and
familial expectations of “normalcy,” even thought such surgeries are not
medically necessary and can damage the child’s reproductive organs. The
number of children born with some degree of intersexuality is difficult to
estimate. Intersex and transgender people share some overlapping
experiences and perspectives, but the terms are not synonymous, and the
issues are not the same. Though intersexed people are opposed to the
word “hermaphrodite” because it is misleading and stigmatizing, it
continues to be widely used in the medical profession.
10. Introduction: Directed Summary
Transition to Thesis Statement
Thesis Statement
Section A
Body Paragraph 1
Body Paragraph 2
Section B
Body Paragraph 3
Body Paragraph 4
Section C
Body Paragraph 5
Body Paragraph 6
Counterargument
Conclusion
12. Directed Summary
• A directed summary provides readers of your
paper with the information they need to
understand your argument and explanation.
• State the title and author of the literary work
near the beginning of the first paragraph,
perhaps in the first sentence. This is essential
so that the reader knows which work you are
discussing.
13. • Hook the reader. In the first sentences, write what
is particularly interesting about the work. This
thought-provoking information must also be
relevant to the topic you will discuss in your
essay.
• Assume that the reader is familiar with the work
about which you are writing. Do not include too
much plot summary in the introduction or in the
rest of the essay. Do include the part of the story
that will support your thesis.
14. • Use transitions throughout the introduction. Because
there are so many aspects of the work that have to be
included, the introduction can end up fragmented
and confusing. Make sure that it makes sense on its
own as a paragraph. Clearly transition from your
introduction into your thesis.
• State the thesis near the end of the introduction
(your introduction might be more than one
paragraph). The thesis should clearly state what the
essay will analyze and should be very specific.
15. Transition from Introduction to
the Thesis Statement:
• In Stone Butch Blues, Leslie Feinberg describes the
development of protagonist, Jess Goldberg, through a
series of moments of resistance to a society that cannot,
or will not accept hir. This book shows that social
pressure, oppression, and violence act not only as
forces of conformity, but also as powerful sources of
agency; they can inspire people to challenge injustice in
pursuit of liberty.
16. Try writing your introduction
1. Title and author
2. Hook the reader with a thought-provoking
aspect of the story, one that connects to
your essay.
3. Assuming the reader is familiar with the
text, include a brief summary that provides
support for your paper.
4. Use transitions to keep the introduction clear
and organized.
5. Transition to the thesis.
6. Include your thesis near the end of the
introduction.
18. • When you write an academic essay, you make an argument: you
propose a thesis and offer some reasoning, using evidence, that
suggests why the thesis is true. When you counterargue, you
consider a possible argument against your thesis or some aspect of
your reasoning. This is a good way to test your ideas when drafting,
while you still have time to revise them. And in the finished essay, it
can be a persuasive and disarming tactic. It allows you to anticipate
doubts and pre-empt objections that a skeptical reader might have; it
presents you as the kind of person who weighs alternatives before
arguing for one, who confronts difficulties instead of sweeping them
under the rug, who is more interested in discovering the truth than
winning a point.
• Not every objection is worth entertaining, of course, and you
shouldn't include one just to include one. But some imagining of
other views, or of resistance to one's own, occurs in most good
essays.
19. The Turn Against
A counterargument in an essay has two stages: you turn against your argument to
challenge it and then you turn back to re-affirm it. You first imagine a skeptical
reader, or cite an actual source, who might resist your argument by pointing out a
problem with your demonstration:
1. that a different conclusion could be drawn from the same facts, a key
assumption is unwarranted, a key term is used unfairly, certain evidence is
ignored or played down
2. one or more disadvantages or practical drawbacks to what you propose
3. an alternative explanation or proposal that makes more sense.
You introduce this turn against with a phrase like one of these
• Some might object here that
• It might seem that
• It is true that
• Admittedly
• Of course
20. The Turn Back
Your return to your own argument—which you announce with a
but, yet, however, nevertheless or still—must likewise involve
careful reasoning, not a flippant (or nervous) dismissal. In
reasoning about the proposed counterargument, you may do one
of the following:
1. Refute it, showing why it is mistaken—an apparent but not real
problem
2. Acknowledge its validity or plausibility, but suggest why on balance
it's relatively less important or less likely than what you propose,
and thus doesn't overturn it;
3. Concede its force and complicate your idea accordingly—restate
your thesis in a more exact, qualified, or nuanced way that takes
account of the objection, or start a new section in which you
consider your topic in light of it.
21. Where to Put a Counterargument
A counterargument can appear anywhere in the essay. Try it in several places
and see where it fits best:
1. as part of your introduction—before you propose your thesis—where the existence
of a different view is the motive for your essay, the reason it needs writing.
2. as a section or paragraph just after your introduction, in which you lay out the
expected reaction or standard position before turning away to develop your own.
3. as a quick move within a paragraph, where you imagine a counterargument not to
your main idea but to the sub-idea that the paragraph is arguing or is about to
argue.
4. as a section or paragraph just before the conclusion of your essay, in which you
imagine what someone might object to what you have argued.
But watch that you do not overdo it. A turn into counterargument here and
there will sharpen and energize your essay, but too many such turns will have
the reverse effect by obscuring your main idea or suggesting that you are
ambivalent.
22. Counterargument:
Of course, there are times when social pressure, oppression, and
violence push people to conform, but these examples generally fall into
one of three main categories: One, people bow to social pressure,
oppression, and violence when they do not have a significant reason to
resist; two, people bow to social pressure, oppression, and violence when
the consequences are life threatening; and three, people bow to social
pressure, oppression, and violence until they can strategize their
resistance. This final response is the one that Feinberg illustrates through
Jess Goldberg.
This book shows that social pressure, oppression, and violence act not
only as forces of conformity, but also as powerful sources of agency;
resistance to these forces can inspire people to challenge injustice in
pursuit of liberty.
23. Do you need a counterargument?
1. Is there an obvious argument against your thesis?
2. Is there a different conclusion could be drawn from the
same facts?
3. Do you make a key assumption with which others might
disagree?
4. Do you use a term that someone else might define a
different way?
5. Do you ignore certain evidence that others might believe
you need to address?
6. Is there an alternative explanation or proposal that some
might more readily believe?
25. Strategies for Writing a Conclusion
Conclusions are often the most difficult part of an essay
to write, and many writers feel that they have nothing
left to say after having written the paper. A writer needs
to keep in mind that the conclusion is often what a
reader remembers best. Your conclusion should be the
best part of your paper.
A conclusion should
• stress the importance of the thesis statement,
• give the essay a sense of completeness, and
• leave a final impression on the reader.
26. Create a new meaning
Demonstrating how your ideas work together can
create a new picture. Often the sum of the paper
is worth more than its parts.
Stone Butch Blues shows that social
pressures, oppression, and violence are
appropriate ways neither to create harmony
nor to manage cultural diversity
27. Answer the question "So What?”
Show your readers why this paper was
important.
Stone Butch Blues provides knowledge
that can liberate those people who suffer
social oppression by both providing
models of, and encouraging, successful
resistance.
28. Propose a course of action
Redirect your reader's thought process and help him or
her to apply your info and ideas to her own life or to
see the broader implications.
Finally, Stone Butch Blues inspires people to
challenge injustice in pursuit of liberty for all
people.
29. Let’s try writing a couple of conclusions
1. Answer the question "So What?”: Show your readers why this
paper was important.
2. Synthesize information: Show how the points you made and
the support and examples you used fit together.
3. Challenge the reader: Help readers redirect the information in
the paper, so they may apply it to their own lives.
4. Create a new meaning: demonstrating how your ideas work
together can create a new picture. Often the sum of the paper
is worth more than its parts.
5. Propose a course of action, a solution to an issue, or
questions for further study: Redirect your reader's thought
process and help him or her to apply your info and ideas to her
own life or to see the broader implications.
6. Echo the introduction: If you begin by describing a scenario,
you can end with the same scenario as proof that your essay
was helpful in creating a new understanding.
31. Chesnutt was born in 1858, in Cleveland, Ohio, to free parents of mixed racial heritage.
An excellent student, Chesnutt began teaching at the age of fourteen. He took over as
principal of the school 1880.
Chesnutt studied incessantly, learning several languages and shorthand. In New York
City, he worked briefly as a reporter. In 1883 Chesnutt moved his family to Cleveland,
Ohio. There he worked as a clerk with a railway company, and also as a stenographer.
Chesnutt used this job as an opportunity to study law, and he passed the Ohio bar
exams with the highest marks in his class in 1887. At the same time, Chesnutt built his
own lucrative business.
Although he was light skinned enough to be accepted in white society, Chesnutt never
denied his black ancestry and furthermore was unwilling to accept the elitism of the
rising black and mulatto middle class that was then becoming established in the North.
Early in the 1880s Chesnutt began to write short stories and, later, novels. Well-
received at first, Chesnutt's works were later criticized for overt didacticism and the
use of socially controversial themes. Though he continued to write throughout his life,
finding a publisher became increasingly difficult. Chesnutt died on November 15, 1932.
32. Chesnutt was one of the first black Americans to receive critical and popular
attention from the predominantly white literary establishment and readership of
his day, and he was among the first black writers to be published by a major
American magazine and publishing house.
Chesnutt wrote during a time when many of the hopes raised by emancipation
and the Civil War were dispelled as white supremacy was reasserted in the South,
and blacks were consigned to a second class citizenship not demonstrably better
than they had faced as slaves.
His writings about slavery and mulattos living on the “color line” conveyed implicit
denunciations of slavery while appealing to readers of Plantation School fiction—
work by white authors who wrote nostalgically of the antebellum South.
Chesnutt's short stories were applauded for bringing to readers a deeper
understanding of racial issues. Criticism intensified as he dealt with issues
considered sensitive and controversial for his time, such as miscegenation. He is
recognized and honored as an inaugural American author who sought to probe the
black experience through realist fiction.
33. Helen Lock
Helen Lock is a professor emerita of
English at Northeast Louisiana
University. She received her B.A.
from the University of Liverpool,
England, and her Ph.D. from the
University of Virginia. She has
previously published on Ishmael
Reed and other contemporary
American writers.
34. • Post #17: Directed Summary,
Counterargument, Conclusion
• Bring two complete copies (at least
3.5 pages) of your draft to our next
meeting.
• Read: “The Passing of Grandison”
Chesnutt
• And Helen Lock’s "Transformation
of the Trickster." Links are posted on
webpage.
• Continue to read Chinglish
• Post #18: Using on the essay
"Transformation of the Trickster,"
identify traits of the trickster you may
have noted in “Grandison” Include
cited references to the text.