Jayy dodd: Difference between revisions

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    | date_birth=1992<ref name="Instagram">https://www.instagram.com/jxzz_hndz/</ref>
    | date_birth=1992<ref name="Instagram">[https://www.instagram.com/jxzz_hndz/ Instagram bio], retrieved May 15 2020</ref>
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    '''jayy dodd''' is a poet and writer. She first came out as nonbinary in 2016.
    '''jayy dodd''' is a poet and writer. She first came out as nonbinary in 2016.<ref name="dodd2016" />


    ==Quotes==
    ==Quotes==

    Revision as of 20:30, 15 May 2020

    Jayy dodd
    Date of birth 1992[1]
    Pronouns she/her[1]
    Gender identity nonbinary[2][3]/trans femme[4]

    jayy dodd is a poet and writer. She first came out as nonbinary in 2016.[3]

    Quotes

    « Even when I was a boy, I wanted to be as pretty and maternal as Pepper LaBeija. I didn’t know what non-binary was. And Pepper LaBeija didn’t say, “I'm a non-binary person.” She probably would have said “trans” — or whatever language was there. No, you were beyond gender. You were a parent. You were a figure. You were razor-bumps and red lip. You were all of it. I was like: I want to be like that. I didn't have language for it. And to imagine how she didn't have language for it either.[5] »


    « Sometimes I believe my gender is the future. But I think I have to call it what it is, which is now. It's here. There are so many misdocumentations of non-binariness. Non-binary beings have been; but the language for us is limited. I feel like here and now are two resources I have to think about gender work — to locate it all as present, urgent. I can imagine futures for my gender, but I also don’t need to. I can hope things are different for gender in the world, but my gender is this. Is alive. Is black. Is here. Is now.[5] »


    « Until recently gender non-conformity was only represented as white. Outside of the occasional drag queen, the only folks allowed to rupture gender were straight white men “expressing” themselves or white women trying to get ahead. Thankfully, we have rappers, writers, actors, activists & more able to live their complete selves. Our families, culture, language is so flexible & resilient despite centuries of oppression. For a people who were never afforded the safeties of gender, we need to more ardently push back on the parameters. We need to see the needs of ALL Black people as urgent, we need to dislocate the ways limited privilege positions us against each other. We need to see each other as whole & living. We need to imagine ourselves more free.[6] »

    References

    1. 1.0 1.1 Instagram bio, retrieved May 15 2020
    2. Kelly, Devin (January 23, 2017). "Interview with jayy dodd, author of Mannish Tongues". entropymag.org. Retrieved May 15, 2020.
    3. 3.0 3.1 dodd, jayy (2 July 2016). "homies don't come out, they let you in". Medium. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
    4. "interview: jayy dodd". fields magazine. 18 December 2017. Retrieved 15 May 2020. I’m not a trans woman, I’m a trans femme, and I’m a trans person, because I am transitioning. I’m going to change my body, but womanhood is not my end goal. I just want to be like a non-binary, whatever post-gender word we’re going to choose today. I’m not going to be a woman, but I’m going to be a more feminine being.
    5. 5.0 5.1 Schwartz, Claire (27 July 2017). "An Interview with jayy dodd". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
    6. dodd., jayy (28 November 2016). "Gender Non Conformity as Peak Blackness". Medium. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
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