Nonbinary gender outside of the transgender community: Difference between revisions
imported>RobotsAndShapeshiftersAmIRight (Added note about the vocaloid fandom, removed period from note about student unions) |
imported>GayFox mNo edit summary |
||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
* Certain parts of the [[pagan]] community | * Certain parts of the [[pagan]] community | ||
* Certain parts of literary science fiction fandom | * Certain parts of literary science fiction fandom | ||
* Left-wing and anarchist groups | * Left-wing and anarchist groups and organizations. | ||
* Some [[feminist]] groups | * Some [[feminist]] groups | ||
* People and places relating to being a student, especially student unions | * People and places relating to being a student, especially student unions |
Revision as of 16:46, 9 November 2021
This article is a stub. You can help the Nonbinary wiki by expanding it! Note to editors: remember to always support the information you proved with external references! |
Communities that may be home to nonbinary people who do not see themselves as part of the transgender or genderqueer communities include:
- Intersex support groups and activist organisations
- Butch/Femme
- Radical faeries
- Transvestite and crossdresser communities (those not following mainstream transgender narratives of gender identity and dysphoria)
- The eunuch and castration communities
- Extreme body modification
- Kink and fetish communities
- Drag and cabaret performer communities
- Empowered multiplicity/plurality/median/mid-continuum
- Otherkin
- Female bodybuilders (Speculative. Cited as gender transgressive in Feinberg's Trans Liberation)
Communities and subcultures that are reported to be accepting of nonbinary people (in addition to the above) include:
- The queer community
- The pansexual community
- The bisexual community
- The asexual community
- The Furry community[1]
- Artist communities, particularly performance art
- Goth and similar subcultures
- Certain parts of the pagan community
- Certain parts of literary science fiction fandom
- Left-wing and anarchist groups and organizations.
- Some feminist groups
- People and places relating to being a student, especially student unions
- Some parts of the Western Vocaloid fandom
References
- ↑ Shrike, Joe (2017). Furry Nation: The True Story of America's Most Misunderstood Subculture.
And for many furs, Furry is more than a community—it's a family, a welcoming place for people whose furriness (or their autism, or their gender fluidity) made them outcasts among their peers.