What is Cis
1 2022-08-15T11:38:41-07:00 Margaret Dahlstrom b09d7a6d81572eb5143ab94775de79a428d832d6 40803 3 plain 2022-08-15T11:43:15-07:00 Margaret Dahlstrom b09d7a6d81572eb5143ab94775de79a428d832d6This page is referenced by:
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The Queer Experience
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Queerness inherently defies labels and expectation. Over time, subgroups have formed as people found words that better described their experience, and then communities collected around those words.
The acronym for these experiences, LGBTQ+ is often used as a short hand to describe these communities, but it should not be mistaken as being an absolute or exclusive rule for what it means to be queer. The acronym hasn't always been LGBTQ, LGBT, or even GLBT. There was an era when the inclusion of lesbians, i.e. gay and lesbian, was considered not only radical but overly politically correct!
It's important to remember in the study of queerness that queerness has evolved and will continue to do so, and while this framework might be helpful right now to some people, it should never feel confining or be assumed to be the only way to be queer. As long as it’s consensual and outside of traditional cis-hetero understandings of interpersonal relationships, it's queer.
It is also important to remember that the LGB and T roles are descriptive rather than prescriptive. Even within the established communities there is a lot of cross over, lesbians can be bi, trans people can be straight, and gay people can be queer or ace. With that in mind, the pages linked down below will help you better understand how other people, and maybe even yourself, experience the world as queer people. -
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Why visibility is so important
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One of the recurrent themes of queer history is that when queer people become visible to broader society, they simultaneously become more organized and gain access to support networks and accessibility, but they also become significantly more targeted for discrimination and harassment.
In the case of gay men, oftentimes a suppression of visibility is used as a tool for oppression. During the AIDS epidemic politicians actively refused to acknowledge the existence of the crisis or make any move to fight it, joking at the deaths of millions of gay men who they viewed as unworthy of life, all while evangelical Christian’s celebrated what they saw as God's wrath on the gays.
People with AIDS were seen as lepers and pariahs and often died alone in agony as stigma and ignorance made people afraid to even touch them. The only treatments for HIV were obscenely expensive when they were discovered. Due to lack of legal protections for queer couples, when people died, they would be banned from even attending their partners funerals, trans people were buried under names they didn't use. Even today as HIV (The virus that leads to AIDS) is not only treatable but medications exist to effectively make it invisible and untransmissible, people are often lead to see HIV/AIDS as a death sentence and the people who carry them as ticking biological time bombs. This propaganda effectively works to scare gay men away from coming out as it presents the act of gay love as a death sentence.
Additionally, by stigmatizing gayness and treating it as other, many queer youth don't experience the same basic guidance of what makes for a healthy relationship. By forcing people to hide in the closet and treating their identities as fundamentally wrong, they become incapable of reporting or seeking help after instances of assault, abuse, or trauma.
Visibility is only as effective as the people it reaches, making it absolutely essential to raise awareness for as many people as possible. If a person is cis and straight, this content might make them a better ally and have a better understanding of what queer friends are going through. If a person is queer and has no access to anything but misinformation up to this point, visibility can mean the difference between life and death.
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- 1 media/IMG_3053_thumb.jpeg 2022-08-15T11:42:44-07:00 Cis 1 From Gender Queer By Maia Kobabe media/IMG_3053.jpeg plain 2022-08-15T11:42:45-07:00 Gender Queer Maia Kobabe