(critical theory) To endow with gender; to create gender or enhance the importance of gender. [from 20th c.]
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Gender, they emphasize, is socially constructed by our surroundings. We are en-gendered by our families, our teachers, and by the images in our music, films, media and fashions.
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1981 April 11, Group Material Collective Changing Arttistic Definitions, “Philip Shehadi”, in Gay Community News, page 6:
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As such they are an important way of understanding both how texts are engendered (how they articulate particular sex or gender role) and how they engender their consumers.
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1992, Anne Cranny-Francis, Engendered Fictions, page 2:
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I focus on […] the efforts of feminist critics of science to examine the engendered origins and implications of scientific rationality and modern epistemology.
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1996, Steven C Ward, Reconfiguring Truth, page xviii: