Polygender: Difference between revisions
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{{infobox identity | {{infobox identity | ||
| flag = polygender.png | | flag = polygender.png | ||
| related = [[ | | related = [[Pangender]], [[Trigender]], and [[Multigender]] | ||
| | | umbrella = [[Nonbinary]] | ||
| frequency = 0.2% | |||
| gallery_link = Pride Gallery/Polygender | | gallery_link = Pride Gallery/Polygender | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Polygender''', | '''Polygender''', '''poly-gender''', or '''polygendered''' (from Greek ''poly'' "many" + gender)<ref>"Poly-" ''Dictionary.com.'' https://www.dictionary.com/browse/poly- [https://web.archive.org/web/20230330215225/https://www.dictionary.com/browse/poly- Archived] on 17 July 2023</ref> is a [[nonbinary]] [[gender identity]] in which a person feels that they have more than one gender identity, or that they express "characteristics of multiple genders, deliberately refuting the concept of only two genders,"<ref name="FTM International">Gary Bowen. "A Dictionary of Words for Masculine Women." May 15, 1995. Retrieved November 5, 1996. https://web.archive.org/web/19961105010926/http://www.ftm-intl.org/Wrtngs/ftm-words.gary.html</ref> as it was described in 1995, so it was in use by at least that year, if not earlier.<ref name="FTM International" /> Polygender is one of [[list of nonbinary identities|the common nonbinary identities today]]. In 1998, the word polygender was used in a transgender community on the Internet called [[Sphere]] as an umbrella term for trans people whose genders were outside the binary: | ||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
"Polygendered people are transgendered. [... There are trans men and trans women.] And then there are us, the less well-known transgender folks. We are people who identify as [[bigender|bi-gendered]], [[agender|non-gendered]], or [[third gender|third-gendered]]. We may feel we belong to more than one gender, that we have no gender at all, or that we are our own gender, something neither male nor female. [...] Just like any other transgendered people, we might have a different name for ourselves than the gendered name we were given at birth; we might dress differently than most people of our birth gender and try to 'pass' as another gender on a daily basis; we might take hormones or get operations to modify our bodies. The difference is that we are not 'switching' from female to male or vice versa; we are going from living as female to living as both female and male, or living as a gay man and a lesbian and a teenage boy and a [[drag|drag king]], or living as no gender at all, ambiguously, or as something entirely other. [...] If you live in a big city or one which has a strong queer community, transsexuality is likely to be better understood, and there may even be laws protecting you from discrimination and guidelines for how your place of employment should deal with your transition. But if you live in one of those places and say that you are a male-to-both transsexual, that you want hormones to pass better as both genders or an operation to give you [[intersex|intersexed]] [[bottom surgery|genitalia]], you will get the same reaction as a 'normal' transsexual living in Queerphobiaville." - [http://gender-sphere.0catch.com/polygenderfaq.htm Polygender FAQ.] | "Polygendered people are transgendered. [... There are trans men and trans women.] And then there are us, the less well-known transgender folks. We are people who identify as [[bigender|bi-gendered]], [[agender|non-gendered]], or [[third gender|third-gendered]]. We may feel we belong to more than one gender, that we have no gender at all, or that we are our own gender, something neither male nor female. [...] Just like any other transgendered people, we might have a different name for ourselves than the gendered name we were given at birth; we might dress differently than most people of our birth gender and try to 'pass' as another gender on a daily basis; we might take hormones or get operations to modify our bodies. The difference is that we are not 'switching' from female to male or vice versa; we are going from living as female to living as both female and male, or living as a gay man and a lesbian and a teenage boy and a [[drag|drag king]], or living as no gender at all, ambiguously, or as something entirely other. [...] If you live in a big city or one which has a strong queer community, transsexuality is likely to be better understood, and there may even be laws protecting you from discrimination and guidelines for how your place of employment should deal with your transition. But if you live in one of those places and say that you are a male-to-both transsexual, that you want hormones to pass better as both genders or an operation to give you [[intersex|intersexed]] [[bottom surgery|genitalia]], you will get the same reaction as a 'normal' transsexual living in Queerphobiaville." - [https://web.archive.org/web/20200204005048/http://gender-sphere.0catch.com/polygenderfaq.htm Polygender FAQ.] | ||
<ref>Danica Nuccitelli. "Polygender FAQ." ''Sphere.'' May 26, 1998. http://gender-sphere.0catch.com/polygenderfaq.htm</ref> | <ref>Danica Nuccitelli. "Polygender FAQ." ''Sphere.'' May 26, 1998. [https://web.archive.org/web/20200204005048/http://gender-sphere.0catch.com/polygenderfaq.htm http://gender-sphere.0catch.com/polygenderfaq.htm]</ref> | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
In this definition, polygender was an umbrella term that included a variety of kinds of people who identify outside the gender binary, even those who are genderless, who could be transitioning (or not) by a variety of different methods. During the 1990s, any genders outside the binary were not widely recognized. The same article also used the word "queergendered" interchangeably with "polygendered" as umbrella terms for people who identify outside the gender binary in any way, which seems to have been an early permutation of the now widely-known word "[[genderqueer]]." | In this definition, polygender was an umbrella term that included a variety of kinds of people who identify outside the gender binary, even those who are genderless, who could be transitioning (or not) by a variety of different methods. During the 1990s, any genders outside the binary were not widely recognized. The same article also used the word "queergendered" interchangeably with "polygendered" as umbrella terms for people who identify outside the gender binary in any way, which seems to have been an early permutation of the now widely-known word "[[genderqueer]]." | ||
In November 2002, [[Livejournal]] users just_plain_zac and sometimes_nate created a community called polygender-ppl, describing its purpose as follows:<ref name=":0">https://polygender-ppl.livejournal.com/profile/</ref><blockquote>This community is open to any and all bi-gendered, polygendered, genderqueer, third-gendered, and transgender (FTM, MTF, etc.) people, and SOFFA. We, just_plain_zac and sometimes_nate, the co-moderators, started this community as a safe space for support, networking, and, of course, friendship among those of us who identify as more than one gender.</blockquote>The community linked to an offsite Polygender/Genderqueer FAQ (now a [https://web.archive.org/web/20030826044900/http://www.devrandom.net/~aidan/polygenderfaq.html broken link]; inaccessible by Wayback Machine), as well as another defunct site (formerly hosted at genderqueers.com; accessible [https://web.archive.org/web/20020223172902/http://www.genderqueers.com/ via Wayback Machine]). | |||
As of 2025, the Livejournal community had 115 members; the last post was in 2011.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
== Demographics == | |||
In the 2016 Nonbinary/Genderqueer Survey, 7 of the respondents (0.23%) were polygender.<ref name=NBGQ2016>"NB/GQ Survey 2016 - the worldwide results." ''Gender Census.'' March 19, 2016. http://gendercensus.tumblr.com/post/141311159050/nbgq-survey-2016-the-worldwide-results [https://web.archive.org/web/20230525010811/https://gendercensus.tumblr.com/post/141311159050/nbgq-survey-2016-the-worldwide-results Archived] on 17 July 2023</ref> In the 2019 Worldwide Gender Census, 24 of the respondents (0.21%) were polygender.<ref name="2019 Gender Census">"Gender Census 2019 - The Worldwide tl;dr." ''Gender Census'' (blog). March 31, 2019. Retrieved July 7, 2020. https://gendercensus.com/post/183843963445/gender-census-2019-the-worldwide-tldr Archive: https://web.archive.org/web/20200118084451/https://gendercensus.com/post/183843963445/gender-census-2019-the-worldwide-tldr</ref> In the 2020 Gender Census, 48 people (0.20%) were polygender.<ref name="GC2020">[https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1j7mwkZVtQYHxNlgS2J8onVCpVz-l1aJbBzG7msN5rxs/edit#gid=260963482 GC2020 Public Copy], 1 November 2020 [https://web.archive.org/web/20230603184501/https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1j7mwkZVtQYHxNlgS2J8onVCpVz-l1aJbBzG7msN5rxs/edit Archived] on 17 July 2023</ref> | |||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
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* [[Bigender]] | * [[Bigender]] | ||
* [[Genderfluid]] | * [[Genderfluid]] | ||
* [[List of nonbinary identities]] | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
<references /> | <references /> | ||
[[Category:Nonbinary identities]] | [[Category:Nonbinary identities]] |
Latest revision as of 02:26, 16 November 2024
Related identities | Pangender, Trigender, and Multigender |
---|---|
Under the umbrella term | Nonbinary |
Frequency | 0.2% |
Click here to see alternative flags! |
Polygender, poly-gender, or polygendered (from Greek poly "many" + gender)[1] is a nonbinary gender identity in which a person feels that they have more than one gender identity, or that they express "characteristics of multiple genders, deliberately refuting the concept of only two genders,"[2] as it was described in 1995, so it was in use by at least that year, if not earlier.[2] Polygender is one of the common nonbinary identities today. In 1998, the word polygender was used in a transgender community on the Internet called Sphere as an umbrella term for trans people whose genders were outside the binary:
"Polygendered people are transgendered. [... There are trans men and trans women.] And then there are us, the less well-known transgender folks. We are people who identify as bi-gendered, non-gendered, or third-gendered. We may feel we belong to more than one gender, that we have no gender at all, or that we are our own gender, something neither male nor female. [...] Just like any other transgendered people, we might have a different name for ourselves than the gendered name we were given at birth; we might dress differently than most people of our birth gender and try to 'pass' as another gender on a daily basis; we might take hormones or get operations to modify our bodies. The difference is that we are not 'switching' from female to male or vice versa; we are going from living as female to living as both female and male, or living as a gay man and a lesbian and a teenage boy and a drag king, or living as no gender at all, ambiguously, or as something entirely other. [...] If you live in a big city or one which has a strong queer community, transsexuality is likely to be better understood, and there may even be laws protecting you from discrimination and guidelines for how your place of employment should deal with your transition. But if you live in one of those places and say that you are a male-to-both transsexual, that you want hormones to pass better as both genders or an operation to give you intersexed genitalia, you will get the same reaction as a 'normal' transsexual living in Queerphobiaville." - Polygender FAQ. [3]
In this definition, polygender was an umbrella term that included a variety of kinds of people who identify outside the gender binary, even those who are genderless, who could be transitioning (or not) by a variety of different methods. During the 1990s, any genders outside the binary were not widely recognized. The same article also used the word "queergendered" interchangeably with "polygendered" as umbrella terms for people who identify outside the gender binary in any way, which seems to have been an early permutation of the now widely-known word "genderqueer."
In November 2002, Livejournal users just_plain_zac and sometimes_nate created a community called polygender-ppl, describing its purpose as follows:[4]
This community is open to any and all bi-gendered, polygendered, genderqueer, third-gendered, and transgender (FTM, MTF, etc.) people, and SOFFA. We, just_plain_zac and sometimes_nate, the co-moderators, started this community as a safe space for support, networking, and, of course, friendship among those of us who identify as more than one gender.
The community linked to an offsite Polygender/Genderqueer FAQ (now a broken link; inaccessible by Wayback Machine), as well as another defunct site (formerly hosted at genderqueers.com; accessible via Wayback Machine).
As of 2025, the Livejournal community had 115 members; the last post was in 2011.[4]
Demographics[edit | edit source]
In the 2016 Nonbinary/Genderqueer Survey, 7 of the respondents (0.23%) were polygender.[5] In the 2019 Worldwide Gender Census, 24 of the respondents (0.21%) were polygender.[6] In the 2020 Gender Census, 48 people (0.20%) were polygender.[7]
See also[edit | edit source]
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "Poly-" Dictionary.com. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/poly- Archived on 17 July 2023
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Gary Bowen. "A Dictionary of Words for Masculine Women." May 15, 1995. Retrieved November 5, 1996. https://web.archive.org/web/19961105010926/http://www.ftm-intl.org/Wrtngs/ftm-words.gary.html
- ↑ Danica Nuccitelli. "Polygender FAQ." Sphere. May 26, 1998. http://gender-sphere.0catch.com/polygenderfaq.htm
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 https://polygender-ppl.livejournal.com/profile/
- ↑ "NB/GQ Survey 2016 - the worldwide results." Gender Census. March 19, 2016. http://gendercensus.tumblr.com/post/141311159050/nbgq-survey-2016-the-worldwide-results Archived on 17 July 2023
- ↑ "Gender Census 2019 - The Worldwide tl;dr." Gender Census (blog). March 31, 2019. Retrieved July 7, 2020. https://gendercensus.com/post/183843963445/gender-census-2019-the-worldwide-tldr Archive: https://web.archive.org/web/20200118084451/https://gendercensus.com/post/183843963445/gender-census-2019-the-worldwide-tldr
- ↑ GC2020 Public Copy, 1 November 2020 Archived on 17 July 2023