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Queer

Queer is an umbrella term for sexual and gender minorities who are not heterosexual or are not cisgender. Originally meaning 'strange' or 'peculiar', queer came to be used pejoratively against those with same-sex desires or relationships in the late 19th century. Beginning in the late 1980s, queer activists, such as the members of Queer Nation, began to reclaim the word as a deliberately provocative and politically radical alternative to the more assimilationist branches of the LGBT community. In the 2000s and on, queer became increasingly used to describe a broad spectrum of non-normative (i.e. anti-heteronormative and anti-homonormative) sexual and gender identities and politics. Academic disciplines such as queer theory and queer studies share a general opposition to binarism, normativity, and a perceived lack of intersectionality, some of them only tangentially connected to the LGBT movement. Queer arts, queer cultural groups, and queer political groups are examples of modern expressions of queer identities. Critics of the use of the term include members of the LGBT community who associate the term more with its colloquial, derogatory usage, those who wish to dissociate themselves from queer radicalism, and those who see it as amorphous and trendy. The expansion of queer to include queer heterosexuality has been criticized by those who argue that the term can only be reclaimed by those it has been used to oppress. Entering the English language in the 16th century, queer originally meant 'strange', 'odd', 'peculiar', or 'eccentric.' It might refer to something suspicious or 'not quite right', or to a person with mild derangement or who exhibits socially inappropriate behaviour. The Northern English expression 'there's nowt so queer as folk', meaning 'there is nothing as strange as people', employs this meaning. Related meanings of queer include a feeling of unwellness or something that is questionable or suspicious. The expression 'in Queer Street' is used in the United Kingdom for someone in financial trouble. Over time, queer acquired a number of meanings related to sexuality and gender, from narrowly meaning 'gay or lesbian' to referring to those who are 'not heterosexual' to referring to those who are either not heterosexual or not cisgender (those who are LGBT+). By late 19th century, queer was beginning to gain a connotation of sexual deviance, used to refer to feminine men or men who were thought to have engaged in same-sex relationships. An early recorded usage of the word in this sense was in an 1894 letter by John Sholto Douglas, 9th Marquess of Queensberry. Queer was used in mainstream society by the 20th century, along with fairy and faggot, as a pejorative term to refer to men who were perceived as 'flamboyant,' who were 'the predominant image of all queers within the straight mind,' as historian George Chauncey notes. Starting in the underground gay bar scene in the 1950s, then moving more into the open in the 1960s and 1970s, the homophile identity was gradually displaced by a more radicalized gay identity. At that time gay was generally an umbrella term including lesbians, as well as gay-identified bisexuals and transsexuals; gender-nonconformity, which had always been an indicator of gayness, also became more open during this time. During the endonymic shifts from invert to homophile to gay, queer was usually pejoratively applied to men who were believed to engage in receptive or passive anal or oral sex with other men as well as those who exhibited non-normative gender expressions. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, queer, fairy, trade, and gay signified distinct social categories within the gay male subculture. Queer was used among gay men in order to claim or self-identify with perceived normative masculine status. Many queer-identified men at the time were, according to Chauncey, 'repelled by the style of the fairy and his loss of manly status, and almost all were careful to distinguish themselves from such men', especially because the dominant straight culture did not acknowledge such distinctions. Trade referred to straight men who would engage in same-sex activity; Chauncey describes trade as 'the 'normal men' claimed to be.'

[ "Psychoanalysis", "Humanities", "Aesthetics", "Gender studies", "Heteronormativity", "Lesbian feminism", "Two-Spirit", "Genderqueer", "Queer theory" ]
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