Nonbinary identities worldwide: Difference between revisions

    From Nonbinary Wiki
    No edit summary
    Line 2: Line 2:
    The European society is, in general, very [[Binarism|binarist]]. However, there are a lot of cultures that, traditionally, have had more than two genders.
    The European society is, in general, very [[Binarism|binarist]]. However, there are a lot of cultures that, traditionally, have had more than two genders.


    == Bugis society ==
    The Bugis people are one of the three biggest ethnic groups located in South Sulawesi (Indonesia). They recognise five genders: ''makkunrai'', ''oroané'', ''bissu'', ''calabai'', and ''calalai. Makkunrai an''d ''oroané'' are the equivalents of [[cisgender]] [[Man|men]] and [[Woman|women]]. ''Calabai'' is similar to [[Transgender|trans women]]; they are assigned male at birth but take female gender roles and their [[gender expression]] is similar to that of cis women. ''Calalai'', on the other hand, is the equivalent to [[Transgender|trans men]]; they are assigned female at birth, but dress and present as cis men.<ref>Carl, John D. (2011). ''Think Sociology'' (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River: Pearson. </ref>
    ''Bissu'' is a gender identity similar to [[multigender]]: they are seen as a combination of all genders. Usually they are also [[intersex]], but not necessarily.<ref>[http://www.iias.nl/iiasn/29/IIASNL29_27.pdf "Sex, Gender, and Priests in South Sulawesi, Indonesia"] (PDF). [[International Institute for Asian Studies]]. Retrieved 2011-07-25.</ref> Bissu people handle the roles of a shaman or a priest.<ref>http://listverse.com/2015/10/21/10-examples-of-nonbinary-genders-throughout-history/</ref>
    == References ==
    <references />
    [[Category:Nonbinary identities]]
    [[Category:Nonbinary identities]]

    Revision as of 17:26, 21 March 2017

    VisualEditor - Icon - Advanced - white.svg NeoMahler is working on this article right now, so parts of the article might be inconsistent or not up to our standards of quality. You are welcome to help, but please ask in the talk page before performing significant changes to this page.
    Note to editors: If this notice stays here for more than two weeks, feel free to replace it with {{incomplete}} or a similar maintenance template.

    The European society is, in general, very binarist. However, there are a lot of cultures that, traditionally, have had more than two genders.

    Bugis society

    The Bugis people are one of the three biggest ethnic groups located in South Sulawesi (Indonesia). They recognise five genders: makkunraioroanébissucalabai, and calalai. Makkunrai and oroané are the equivalents of cisgender men and women. Calabai is similar to trans women; they are assigned male at birth but take female gender roles and their gender expression is similar to that of cis women. Calalai, on the other hand, is the equivalent to trans men; they are assigned female at birth, but dress and present as cis men.[1]

    Bissu is a gender identity similar to multigender: they are seen as a combination of all genders. Usually they are also intersex, but not necessarily.[2] Bissu people handle the roles of a shaman or a priest.[3]

    References