Agender: Difference between revisions

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    It is often said that non-gender or genderlessness is the experience of having no gender identity at all, whereas gender neutral or neutrois is the experience of having a gender identity, a gender identity which is not male or female, but neutral. However, these statements don't match the experiences of everyone who has taken up these identities as their own. This is a problem of a difference between word definitions that are prescriptivist (telling everyone how they should use a word, and saying that many people use it wrong) and descriptivist (describing how people have actually been using a word, without telling them to change).
    It is often said that non-gender or genderlessness is the experience of having no gender identity at all, whereas gender neutral or neutrois is the experience of having a gender identity, a gender identity which is not male or female, but neutral. However, these statements don't match the experiences of everyone who has taken up these identities as their own. This is a problem of a difference between word definitions that are prescriptivist (telling everyone how they should use a word, and saying that many people use it wrong) and descriptivist (describing how people have actually been using a word, without telling them to change).


    === All of this is fucking retarded, and people who believe in this shit are mentally disabled. ===
    Overall people have proven that they may be able to create their own forms of race, and or sex, in this day and age.


    == External links ==
    == External links ==

    Revision as of 05:33, 20 May 2017

    Agender flag

    Agender, also called genderblank, genderfree, genderless, gendervoid, non-gendered, or null gender, is an identity under the nonbinary and transgender umbrella terms. Agender individuals find that they have no gender identity, although some define this more as having a gender identity that is neutral.

    History

    In 2014, agender was one of the 56 genders made available on Facebook.[1]

    In 2015, Dictionary.com added an entry for "agender,"[2] which it defined as "a person who does not have a specific gender identity or recognizable gender expression."[3]

    Agender as gender identity or lack of gender identity

    Some agender people feel that they have no gender identity, while others feel that agender is itself a gender identity. This is similar to and overlaps with the experience of being gender neutral or having a neutral gender identity.

    As some agender people have no gender identity, it is important to not talk about nonbinary or transgender people's experiences only in the sense of gender identity.

    Difference between genderless and neutrois

    There is little agreement about the difference between terms such as agender, genderless, non-gender, gender neutral, and neutrois. These terms are often used interchangeably, or defined differently by individual writers in ways that don't necessarily match the self-definitions of others using those terms.

    It is often said that non-gender or genderlessness is the experience of having no gender identity at all, whereas gender neutral or neutrois is the experience of having a gender identity, a gender identity which is not male or female, but neutral. However, these statements don't match the experiences of everyone who has taken up these identities as their own. This is a problem of a difference between word definitions that are prescriptivist (telling everyone how they should use a word, and saying that many people use it wrong) and descriptivist (describing how people have actually been using a word, without telling them to change).

    Overall people have proven that they may be able to create their own forms of race, and or sex, in this day and age.

    External links

    References

    1. Eve Shapiro, Gender circuits: Bodies and identities in a technological age.
    2. "New words added to Dictionary.com." May 6, 2015. Dictionary.com. http://blog.dictionary.com/2015-new-words/
    3. "Agender." Dictionary.com. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/agender?s=t