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The NYC Trans Oral History Project provides a publicly accessible collection of original interviews with trans and gender non-conforming people who have lived in New York City. | The NYC Trans Oral History Project provides a publicly accessible collection of original interviews with trans and gender non-conforming people who have lived in New York City. | ||
The project has featured many interviewees who fall under the non-binary umbrella, including scholar and archivist Che Gossett, former ACT-UP member Jamie Bauer, writer Andrea Lawlor, and writer/playwright [[Kate Bornstein]].<ref>"Interview of Jamie Bauer". NYC Trans Oral History Project. https://nyctransoralhistory.org/interview/jamie-bauer/</ref> | The project has featured many interviewees who fall under the non-binary umbrella, including scholar and archivist Che Gossett, former ACT-UP member Jamie Bauer, writer Andrea Lawlor, and writer/playwright [[Kate Bornstein]].<ref name=":0">"Interview of Jamie Bauer". NYC Trans Oral History Project. https://nyctransoralhistory.org/interview/jamie-bauer/</ref> | ||
== Quotes == | == Quotes == | ||
<blockquote>Yes, and so I also really—my gender feels very galactic. I’m wearing a shirt that has the galaxy on it, and, um, the galaxy and like, space, and like, the expansiveness of space plays a lot into, um, how I envision myself and my gender, and other people’s gender, and gender in general.</blockquote><blockquote>And I still had this, like—I still—I think I struggled with this idea like, “Well, I’m— I don’t feel like I’m a trans man,” and so like, that still—I still fought it for a long time. I was like, “You have, you know, funny gender feelings, but like, everybody does,” and I think I realized like, not everybody does. And I think I—my like, path in life is to like, figure out how to like, actually listen to the things I feel inside, as opposed to just being like, “It’s okay. Just let it go. Let it go. It’s fine.</blockquote>- Lenni<ref>"Interview of Lenni". NYC Trans Oral History Project. https://nyctransoralhistory.org/interview/lenni/</ref><blockquote>So my understanding of my gender has gone through a few reiterations as I’ve been figuring it out and I’m sure that it will go through several more but I went from thinking that I was probably internally a guy to realizing that it changes, and that I’m probably more frequently somewhere in the middle in the great gender expanse. But sometimes I’m delightfully feminine and I like it, and that's okay.</blockquote>- Dezi<ref>"Interview of Dezi". NYC Trans Oral History Project.https://nyctransoralhistory.org/interview/dezi/</ref><blockquote>I consider myself to be gender non-conforming, but since I transitioned and started hormones earlier than that was a terminology that was used, I’ve sort of always thought of myself as genderqueer, but with a very consistent gender that’s slightly masculine of center. So I tend towards not dictating how people use pronouns about me or with me when we’re in conversation, but I in print prefer to not use pronouns or to now use neutral pronouns because that’s now become sort of more standardized.</blockquote>- Lauren Simkin Birke<ref>"Interview with Lauren Simkin Burke". NYC Trans Oral History Project. https://nyctransoralhistory.org/interview/lauren-simkin-berke/</ref> | <blockquote>Yes, and so I also really—my gender feels very galactic. I’m wearing a shirt that has the galaxy on it, and, um, the galaxy and like, space, and like, the expansiveness of space plays a lot into, um, how I envision myself and my gender, and other people’s gender, and gender in general.</blockquote><blockquote>And I still had this, like—I still—I think I struggled with this idea like, “Well, I’m— I don’t feel like I’m a trans man,” and so like, that still—I still fought it for a long time. I was like, “You have, you know, funny gender feelings, but like, everybody does,” and I think I realized like, not everybody does. And I think I—my like, path in life is to like, figure out how to like, actually listen to the things I feel inside, as opposed to just being like, “It’s okay. Just let it go. Let it go. It’s fine.</blockquote>- Lenni<ref>"Interview of Lenni". NYC Trans Oral History Project. https://nyctransoralhistory.org/interview/lenni/</ref><blockquote>So my understanding of my gender has gone through a few reiterations as I’ve been figuring it out and I’m sure that it will go through several more but I went from thinking that I was probably internally a guy to realizing that it changes, and that I’m probably more frequently somewhere in the middle in the great gender expanse. But sometimes I’m delightfully feminine and I like it, and that's okay.</blockquote>- Dezi<ref>"Interview of Dezi". NYC Trans Oral History Project.https://nyctransoralhistory.org/interview/dezi/</ref><blockquote>I consider myself to be gender non-conforming, but since I transitioned and started hormones earlier than that was a terminology that was used, I’ve sort of always thought of myself as genderqueer, but with a very consistent gender that’s slightly masculine of center. So I tend towards not dictating how people use pronouns about me or with me when we’re in conversation, but I in print prefer to not use pronouns or to now use neutral pronouns because that’s now become sort of more standardized.</blockquote>- Lauren Simkin Birke<ref>"Interview with Lauren Simkin Burke". NYC Trans Oral History Project. https://nyctransoralhistory.org/interview/lauren-simkin-berke/</ref><blockquote>But I was– actually there was a little demonstration this morning Uptown at the Indonesian Mission about the 140 in Jakarta who had been arrested in a spa. And so I was talking with one of the guys there who is my age, a gay man, and he was like, “Oh, I know you use they but it just, it’s hard for it to roll off my tongue and I said, “Jay,” that’s his name, and I said, “Jay, do you want to be part of the problem or part of the solution?”</blockquote>- Jamie Bauer<ref name=":0" /> | ||
== Further reading == | == Further reading == |
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