Pagan
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The Pagan community as a whole is built upon nature and what nature represents. Many of the gods worshipped have been seen to inhabit both masculine and feminine forms, most notably Loki —though it is unclear as to how Loki identifies in this example.
Much of the Pagan belief system is based around masculine and feminine figures and their heteronormative union. There is however a conscious effort to move the practice is to a more nonbinary inclusive space.[1] A Pagan named Sidney Eileen wrote in 2019 that, "When you entirely drop the concept of the binary, male and female are still included, but instead of placing them in conflict with each other, they become equal parts of a more diverse whole."[2]
Nonbinary and Trans Inclusive Groups[edit | edit source]
The Nonbinary and Trans community have formed groups to build upon the innate inclusivity of Paganism.
Some examples are:
- Trans and Nonbinary Pagans Amino
- Rainbow Pagans Facebook
- Nonbinary, Trans, Intersex and Queer Pagans Facebook
- Trans and Pagan Facebook
Literature[edit | edit source]
Literature on the subject of Nonbinary and Transgender Paganism is always good for further reading.
- Gender and Transgender in Modern Paganism - Circle of Cerridwen
- All-Soul, All-Body, All-Love, All-Power: A TransMythology -P. Sufenas Virius Lupus
- Queer Magic: Power Beyond Boundaries - Lee Harrington
- Casting a Queer Circle: Non-binary Witchcraft - Thista Minai
- Queer Magic : LGBT Spirituality and Culture from Around the World -Tomas Prower
Online Reading[edit | edit source]
- The Balancing Path: Nonbinary Perspective on Gendered Divinity - A Pagan opines on the archetypes of divine feminine, divine masculine, divine intergender/androgyne, divine genderfluid, divine agender, and the possibilities of more.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ Coles, Donyae (19 June 2017). "Beyond the gender binary in Pagan practice". Spiral nature magazine. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
- ↑ Eileen, Sidney (2019). "Gender Diversity Sigil".