Danaa (Japanese gender and sex term)

Danaa (Japanese: ダナー or ダナ; romanized: danaa or dana) is a Japanese term used in lesbian and transgender communities.[1][2][3]

The term generally refers to a person who was assigned female at birth (AFAB) and is perceived as masculine in appearance, behavior, gender expression, or gender identity. [4]Depending on the context, the term may include masculine lesbians, butch individuals[5], trans men[2], transmasculine people, FTX people[6], and others with masculine gender expressions.

EtymologyEdit

The term is believed to derive from the Japanese word ‘‘danna’’ (旦那), meaning “husband.” [6]It originated within Japanese lesbian communities and was used to describe people who occupied a masculine social or gender role.

HistoryEdit

In Japanese lesbian and transgender communities of the early 2000s, the boundaries between lesbian, trans men, and other gender-diverse identities were often less clearly defined than they are today.[7]

During this period, ‘‘danaa’’ was sometimes used as an umbrella term for people assigned female at birth who expressed masculinity or identified in masculine ways.[1][3][4]

The term appears to be less commonly used in contemporary Japanese LGBTQ communities than it was in the early 2000s.[2][7]

Related termsEdit

Danaazu (ダナーズ) is a related term that generally refers to a danaa who is attracted to another danaa, or to a relationship between two danaa individuals.

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit