Birl
This page is about a gender identity that is not widely used among gender-variant people. This does not mean that the identity is not valid, but that very few people are known to use this term. More information on uncommon identities... |
Related identities | Bigender, Boi, Gender nonconforming, Butch, and Androgyne |
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Frequency | <0.1% |
Birl is an identity often considered as a nonbinary gender.[1][2] The word is made by mixing the words "boy" and "girl".
The term has multiple and overlapping definitions:
- "a girl and a boy [...] a girl-boy."[3]
- "boyish girls [...] who enjoy riding the gender wave and don’t let their gender dictate how to look and act. Birls include the range from hetero tomboys to FTMs and everyone in between." Also includes drag kings.[4]
- "androgynous/boyish/masculine females and those who don't let the stereotypes surrounding their sex define who they are. Whether you're a tomboy or a butch dyke, a boi, genderqueer, or an androgyne, FTM or transgendered, or simply refuse to put a label on your identity".[5]
In the 2018 Gender Census, one respondent identified themself as a birl.[6] There was also one birl among the respondents of the 2019 Gender Census.
Further reading
- The 2007 book Queer Girls and Popular Culture: Reading, Resisting, and Creating Media (by Susan Driver) includes a chapter detailing online birl communities.
References
- ↑ Davidson, Skylar (February 2016). "Gender Inequality: Nonbinary Transgender People in the Workplace".
- ↑ Solovitch, Sara (23 January 2018). "Medical field plays catch-up with trans kids". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
- ↑ Schneider, Sandra B. "Producing Homeplace: Strategic Sites and Liminoid Spaces for Gender-Diverse Children". In Chasing Rainbows: Exploring Gender Fluid Parenting Practices, 2013, edited by F. J. Green. ISBN 9781927335567.
- ↑ "birlzine - Profile". BirlZine!. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
- ↑ "birls - Profile". Birls LJ community. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
- ↑ "Gender Census 2018 Identity words (public)". Google Docs. 21 June 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2020.