Since gender has been a topic through some of the posts this week — and a topic we talk about frequently here at STACKED — let’s round out this week of contemporary YA with another post about gender. . . and about sex. Welcome to upcoming debut author I. W. Gregorio.
I. W. Gregorio is a practicing surgeon by day, masked avenging YA writer by night. After getting her MD, she did her residency at Stanford, where she met the intersex patient who inspired her debut novel, None of the Above (Balzer & Bray / HarperCollins, 4/28/15). She is a founding member of We Need Diverse Books™ and serves as its VP of Development. A recovering ice hockey player, she lives in Pennsylvania with her husband and two children. Find her online at www.iwgregorio.com, and on Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook and Instagram at @iwgregorio.
Anyone who’s ever walked down the aisles of a toy store knows that the gender binary is a monolith that is almost impossible to topple, and I admit freely to being someone who’s tried and failed. For the first two years of my daughter’s life, I clothed her preferentially in non-pink clothing. I gave away onesies and bibs that had the word “princess” on it (once, I even took scissors to cut them out). Instead of dolls, I got her Thomas the Tank Engine trains and Legos.
By the way: Recently my daughter started Tae Kwon Do lessons. Her favorite color is now black.
Katie L. Carroll says
Such a good post! I struggle so much with the gender binary with my own children. I see my 3-year-old son playing princess and wearing pink and also being obsessed with trains and construction vehicles, and I love how he expresses himself in whatever way feels right to him. I so fear that as he grows older, he will lose that as kids and adults judge what boys and girls are "supposed" to do (often without knowing they're doing it and usually without any malicious intent). I am so tired of everything being labeled for boys or for girls. The toy store is a nightmare, as are toy commercials, for a parent like me. Thank you for writing such a wonderful post and good luck with your book!