Publication | Closed Access
Un/gendering Social Selves: How Nonbinary People Navigate and Experience a Binarily Gendered World
84
Citations
38
References
2019
Year
Gendered PerceptionSocial PsychologyNonbinary‐identified ParticipantsHomosexualityBinarily Gendered WorldEducationQueer TheorySocial SciencesIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)Sexual CulturesGender IdentityGender TheoryGender StudiesIdentity IssueSocial IdentityNonbinary PeopleGendered ContextIntersectionalitySocial SelvesFeminist TheoryIdentity Studies (Memory Studies)Gender StereotypeCultureSexuality StudiesSociologyIn‐depth InterviewsTransgender Study
Based on in‐depth interviews, we explore how people who do not identify exclusively or consistently as either women or men (i.e., nonbinary people) navigate a culture that bifurcates people into women or men. Using an interactionist approach, we first analyze how interviewees employ discourse (e.g., names, identity labels, and pronouns) and the body (e.g., expressions, decoration, and transformation) to present themselves as nonbinary, which we conceptualize as ungendering social selves. Second, we examine the emotional benefits (e.g., authenticity, pride, liberation) and burdens (e.g., fear, rejection, exhaustion) of ungendering. Third, we uncover the emotional, social, and structural conditions under which our nonbinary‐identified participants sometimes present themselves as binarily gendered, which we conceptualize as gendering social selves. We conclude with discussing empirical and theoretical contributions.
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