PSA: Queer

Jun. 18th, 2010 11:38 am
[personal profile] rm
(This is an outgrowth of a comment thread I'm having with someone in their journal. If that someone is you, no worries, we're cool).

Queer (as an adjective, we will not be using the noun here) is not inherently synonymous with gay and lesbian or LGBT.1

Many LGBT people do not like or choose to use queer and/or feel it to represent something additional or instead of gay and lesbian or LGBT.

Because queer was originally a slur and not all LGBT people like to use it,2 it's generally best that straight people don't use the word unless talking about people and groups that self-identify as queer.

Queer can be considered a non-assimilationist word. Some LGBT people who are not interested in getting equal rights by proving we're just like straight people prefer the term. (This is like when I rant about how "I'm queer and you can tell and I like it that way.")

Some non-trans people who are gender non-conforming use the term or variations there of (i.e., genderqueer).

Some trans people who are additionally not straight use the term as a shorthand way of encompassing multiple identities.

Some people who would traditionally be called "bisexual" use the term to avoid the reinforcement of a binary gender dichotomy.

Some people prefer queer because it removes the separation between men and women in the LGBT community, breaks down barriers between bisexual and other orientation identities, and can be more inclusive of the T part of the LGBT (which often gets pushed aside, because oppressed groups can be crappy to each other too).

Others like it because it's only one syllable.

Additionally queer is sometimes used to encompass kink, polyamorous and other non-traditional relationship styles in a way that may or may not be related to LGBT individuals depending on the community.3

As usual, I don't speak for all LGBT or queer people, just myself and my experience of our communities. If you have questions or more to add, consider the comments a free for all. I'm particularly interested in other people's sense and connotations for the word as ongoing discussion in the original thread is revealing that they are highly varied.




1 A commenter reminds me that LGBT is just not enough these days, nor is LGBTQ, which you'll also often see. The full acronym these days often includes not just LGBT, but Queer, Questioning, Intersex, Asexual and more.
2 It's also just been brought to my attention that age may be a factor in how one reacts to queer so this PSA might seem more or less peculiar to you depending on your age.
3 Please see comments for additional discussion of this as there is disagreement on this one. It is problematic for many, and I tend to agree, although the arguments for its inclusion in queer also make a lot of sense.

ETA: Please read the comments. This is such an awesome display of diverse identities, respectful discussion about fraught issues and random people making friends I can't quite get over it. I am loving the LJ today.

Date: 2010-06-21 07:04 pm (UTC)
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
From: [personal profile] eredien
If you think that every part of a person's life is equally important, and that no one part ought to be larger than another for the whole to remain in balance, I can see how it would be very hard for you see understand how someone could remain in balance if any part of their life were genuinely more important than another part--and how hard it might be for you to interact with those people.

But just because pieces that are all about the same size can balance doesn't mean that the only things that can balance are pieces that all the same size:

An average book weighs about a pound. 260 books, at 260 pounds, could balance out 260 other identical books--or they could balance out a baby elephant. It might be that one side of their scale has 260 books, like yours, but where the other side of your scale may also have 260 books, they might have a baby elephant. Your scales and their scales are still equally in balance, but if they tell you that they have a baby elephant and you tell them that they can't be right--an elephant is just too large to balance properly, and to balance properly every individual piece needs to be not too large, and not too small--they are going to eventually get tired of arguing with you about the balance of their scales.

When they say, "this gender identity is a big part of my life," and you say, "well, you shouldn't put so much emphasis on that--it's actually just the same as these other pieces of your life over here," you are dismissing the fact that it actually is a bigger part of their life, and dismissing their knowledge of themselves and everything that comes with that, including an understanding of their real feelings.

Relationships built on your idea of a person's real feelings, rather than the person's real feelings, are seldom real relationships.

You are trying to make their baby elephants into books. You are going to be very surprised when you hear a tiny trumpeting noise--even though 260 books weigh the same as a baby elephant, a baby elephant does not act like 260 books.

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