Tumblr is a social media platform that gained popularity in the 2010s. Users maintain blogs (potentially multiple per account) that allow them to publish original posts as well as "reblogging" others' posts. Reblogs function similarly to Twitter's "retweet" function but allow optional additions to the post body (which are displayed under the original posts) or to tags (displayed only on the reblogger's blog). This allows multiple discussions to branch off from an original post.

Culturally, Tumblr is extremely popular with LGBTQ people and hosts a wide range of content related to non-binary issues. Many pieces of non-binary language and iconography originated on Tumblr, and there are a large number of single-issue blogs that center on non-binary issues. It is also common for Tumblr users to list their pronouns and gender identities on their personal blogs.

Gender terms originating on Tumblr

Tumblr has a strong culture of coining and promoting new gender terminology.

Iconography originating on Tumblr

Many people use Tumblr to share proposed designs for non-binary flags, some of which gain popularity or status as the "default" flag for a specific identity, traveling far beyond Tumblr. Some users also share alternative flag designs, whether out of a distaste for existing designs or simply for creative enjoyment.

In 2010, Marilyn Roxie posted multiple versions of the genderqueer flag to their Tumblr blog Genderqueer and Nonbinary Identities, settling on the current and most popular version in June 2011.[1]

In 2012, JJ Poole (lostinthoughtspaceandfantasies) submitted an original design for a genderfluid flag to the genderfluidity Tumblr.[2]

In 2014, new designs for agender and nonbinary flags appeared on Tumblr, posted by Salem X (transrants) and Kye Rowan (thejasmineelf) respectively.[3] Both gained popularity.

Single-issue blogs

There are multiple genres of nonbinary-centric blog on Tumblr, both general and focused on specific identities. In addition to blogs that focus on coining and sharing non-binary terminology and iconography like flags, many users maintain blogs related to activism, education, and "discourse", as well as blogs that rely heavily on user-submitted content such as confessions/secrets, selfies, and introduction posts.

Many blogs post content from a mix of genres, making it hard to draw strict distinctions. For example, genderqueer.tumblr.com (active 2009-2013) identified itself as a place to share images of "gender-bending, trans, and queer people of all sorts"; in addition to reblogging photography and allowing users to submit their own selfies, the blog frequently shared written content, including quotes about gender variance, relevant news stories, and analysis of trans issues from other Tumblr users.[4]

Education-related blogs include Genderqueer and Nonbinary Identities (active 2011-2019) and neutrois.tumblr.com (active 2011-2021). Genderqueer Survival Guide for Daily Life (active 2013-2016) answered audience questions about non-binary identity and published audience responses to a survey about their experiences as non-binary people. We are Genderfluidǃ also answered many audience questions, but with a genderfluid focus. Fat Genderqueers (active 2011-2017) combined a focus on body positivity with practical information about gender presentation and transition, including binding and tucking techniques.

Works Cited

  1. Roxie, Marilyn. "About Flag." Genderqueer and Nonbinary Identities. https://genderqueerid.com/about-flag
  2. Poole, JJ (as lostinspacethoughtsandfantasies). Submitted to genderfluidity.tumblr.com/We are Genderfluidǃ August 3 2012.https://web.archive.org/web/20220622041413/https://genderfluidity.tumblr.com/post/28614422659/so-i-couldnt-find-a-flag-that
  3. X, Salem. "my name is salem and i created the agender flag." January 4th, 2019. https://transrants.tumblr.com/post/181711172580/interview-creator-of-the-agender-flag-majestic
  4. genderqueer: beyond the binaries. https://genderqueer.tumblr.com/