Kuwait Times

He, she, they: Americans and the choice of gender pronoun

-

Afew years ago Emily Gardner, who identifies as “more feminine than not”, instructed family members of a new preference to be referred to as “they” rather than “she”. The 23-year-old represents a growing trend among progressiv­e Americans, who are claiming a right to choose their own pronoun, regardless of their sex at birth. It is a battle playing out on business cards, in email signatures and on social networks, where many people are identifyin­g their preferred pronoun outright.

And “they” is gaining ground as the pronoun of choice by “non-binary” people who identify neither as male or female. The Philadelph­ia bookstore that employs Gardner is on board, with a sign taped to the counter reads: “Please do not assume staffers’ pronouns, ask.”

‘Not something new’ “Non-binary people have existed forever. It’s not something new, not a trend, it’s just who we are,” said Pidgeon Pagonis, a Chicago artists who goes by the pronoun “they”. “When people don’t respect my pronouns I coil up inside, I don’t feel good” said Pagonis, who launched the apparel brand “Too Cute To Be Binary.”

Gender-neutral pronouns, long confined to the LGBTQ community, “are becoming increasing­ly popular, including beyond big cities,” said sociologis­t Carla Pfeffer. “The rise of social media means that cultural transforma­tions can happen faster and disseminat­e more broadly than in earlier eras,” Pfeffer said. It also helps that non-binary people are enjoying increased representa­tion on television and in pop culture, such as British artist Sam Smith, who recently revealed a preference for “they/them” pronouns “after a lifetime of being at war with my gender.”

However use of “they” is not trending in all quarters and can give rise to mockery, with critics denouncing it as politicall­y correct overkill. “At a Starbucks this morning & the baristas had their approved gender pronouns,” pro-Trump conservati­ve activist Charlie Kirk recently tweeted. “We are creating a society of people waiting to be offended,” he said.

‘It makes me angry’

Mallory Cross, whose hair is cut short, said “I think I’m aware of how I look like and how people read me, I’m very masculine”. “When I make such an effort to look that way and people call me ‘ma’am’ or hold the door it makes me angry,” Cross said. In New York, a “genderneut­ral” boutique clothing store called The Phluid Project sells skirts, caps and shoes with large heels, encouragin­g customers “to go beyond binaries.”

The US financial capital in particular has embraced this mindset, offering a new neutral category that people can use to amend the gender on their birth certificat­es since January. Merriam-Webster dictionary meanwhile recently added the word “they” as a non-binary pronoun that can refer to just one person. And Apple has added “neutral” emojis that don’t distinguis­h between genders to the latest version of its operating system.

As the trend catches on, a growing number of binary people are even displaying the pronouns “she/her” or “him/he” on social media accounts and elsewhere as a sign of solidarity. Elizabeth Warren, one of the frontrunne­rs in the crowded 2020 US Democratic primary field, last month became the sixth candidate to add her pronoun, which correspond­s to her birth sex, on her social media.

“Every person deserves to be treated with dignity and respect, and that starts with using correct pronouns. I’m Elizabeth. My pronouns are she/her/hers,” she wrote on Twitter. Candidate Pete Buttigieg, who is gay, has specified that he is a “he/him” and heterosexu­al candidates Julian Castro, Cory Booker, Kamala Harris and Tom Steyer have also indicated their pronouns. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait