2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2021.104887
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Gender essentialism and the mental representation of transgender women and men: A multimethod investigation of stereotype content

Abstract: NOTE: This is an unpublished preprint that has not yet completed peer-review. This preprint is a working paper shared to facilitate timely dissemination of science, and thus is subject to change.

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Cited by 27 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…The lack of gender inversion was also accompanied by reduced gender differences between gay men and lesbian women, compared to straight men and women. The relatively smaller gender differences between gay men and women are in line with other studies on gender differences in minoritized groups (Gallagher & Bodenhausen, 2021;Hudson & Ghani, 2022), suggesting that for minoritized groups, gender is not as salient of a category as it is for prototypical groups. In the case of sexual orientation, "de-gendering" (Gallagher & Bodenhausen, 2021) is in line with stereotype muting (Hall et al, 2019) that occurs when oppositional stereotypes are combined for intersectional identities.…”
Section: Implications For Theorysupporting
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The lack of gender inversion was also accompanied by reduced gender differences between gay men and lesbian women, compared to straight men and women. The relatively smaller gender differences between gay men and women are in line with other studies on gender differences in minoritized groups (Gallagher & Bodenhausen, 2021;Hudson & Ghani, 2022), suggesting that for minoritized groups, gender is not as salient of a category as it is for prototypical groups. In the case of sexual orientation, "de-gendering" (Gallagher & Bodenhausen, 2021) is in line with stereotype muting (Hall et al, 2019) that occurs when oppositional stereotypes are combined for intersectional identities.…”
Section: Implications For Theorysupporting
confidence: 89%
“…The relatively smaller gender differences between gay men and women are in line with other studies on gender differences in minoritized groups (Gallagher & Bodenhausen, 2021;Hudson & Ghani, 2022), suggesting that for minoritized groups, gender is not as salient of a category as it is for prototypical groups. In the case of sexual orientation, "de-gendering" (Gallagher & Bodenhausen, 2021) is in line with stereotype muting (Hall et al, 2019) that occurs when oppositional stereotypes are combined for intersectional identities. Stereotype muting can explain why gay men and women are perceived similarly in terms of their competences if any aspect of masculinity (perceived gender or gender expression) is seen as having higher competence compared to femininity.…”
Section: Implications For Theorysupporting
confidence: 89%
“…For others, membership is more 'fuzzy'; people belong to the category in varying degrees." et al (2010), Yzerbyt, Corneille, andEstrada (2001), Pauker et al (2016), andGallagher andBodenhausen (2021) for findings that support a positive relationship between essentialism and stereotyping. See Ritchie and Knobe (2020) and Bailey and Knobe (2021) for alternative views.…”
Section: Orcidmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Numerous researchers have applied Meyer’s (2003) model of minority stress, which posits that distal and proximal stressors related to one’s sexual minority status contribute to negative mental health outcomes, to gender minority populations (e.g., Griffin et al, 2019; Hendricks & Testa, 2012; Lefevor et al, 2019; McLemore, 2018; Testa et al, 2015). Overall, research suggests that people hold moderate to negative attitudes toward transgender people (Anderson, 2022; Clark & Hughto, 2020; Norton & Herek, 2013), and those negative attitudes may be rooted in beliefs such as gender essentialism (Ching & Chen, 2022; Gallagher & Bodenhausen, 2021; Worthen, 2022), religiosity (Gegenfurtner, 2021; Norton & Herek, 2013), and political conservatism (Billard, 2018; Gegenfurtner, 2021; Molin et al, 2021; Norton & Herek, 2013; Perez-Arche & Miller, 2021). Though sexual and gender minority people and women generally report more positive attitudes toward transgender people (Anderson, 2022; Billard, 2018; Gegenfurtner, 2021; Norton & Herek, 2013; Perez-Arche & Miller, 2021), there is a current uptick in trans-exclusionary ideology in some queer spaces, especially with cisgender lesbian women (Worthen, 2022).…”
Section: A Note About Languagementioning
confidence: 99%