Nonbinary gender in fiction: Difference between revisions
→Books and Literature
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* In ''Seven Minutes in Vegas'', by Grace Kilian Delaney, the character Devon wears makeup and skirts while identifying himself as a guy. Content note: explicit sexual scenes, instances of physical/verbal abuse, discrimination, gun violence, use of deadly weapons, anger issues, and substance abuse. | * In ''Seven Minutes in Vegas'', by Grace Kilian Delaney, the character Devon wears makeup and skirts while identifying himself as a guy. Content note: explicit sexual scenes, instances of physical/verbal abuse, discrimination, gun violence, use of deadly weapons, anger issues, and substance abuse. | ||
* ''Tabitha and Magoo Dress Up Too''. A children's book in which siblings Tabitha and Magoo meet a [[drag queen]] named Morgana who helps them "learn to defy restrictive [[gender roles]]".<ref>https://www.allshewrotebooks.com/product-page/tabitha-and-magoo-dress-up-too-by-michelle-tea-ellis-van-der-does</ref> | * ''Tabitha and Magoo Dress Up Too''. A children's book in which siblings Tabitha and Magoo meet a [[drag queen]] named Morgana who helps them "learn to defy restrictive [[gender roles]]".<ref>https://www.allshewrotebooks.com/product-page/tabitha-and-magoo-dress-up-too-by-michelle-tea-ellis-van-der-does</ref> | ||
* In children's book ''The Boy & The Bindi'' by Vivek Shraya, "A five-year-old South Asian boy becomes fascinated with his mother’s bindi, the red dot commonly worn by Hindu women to indicate the point at which creation begins. He wishes to have one of his own bindi, which his mother agrees to."<ref>https://www.adl.org/education/educator-resources/childrens-literature/the-boy-the-bindi</ref> | |||
===Comics and graphic novels=== | ===Comics and graphic novels=== |