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LGBTQ+ and Esperanto

fra punkmat,2015 8 20

Meldinger: 110

Språk: English

rikforto (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 21 00:35:47

Tempodivalse:I always understood that one "Q" stands for "queer", meaning any sexuality that is not heterosexual - kind of a catch-all. (Out of curiosity, would this also include asexuality?)

When there are two Qs, I understand that the second means "questioning". (The extended acronym seems to be rarer nowadays, though.)
I held various positions in a college advocacy group for LGBT (our preferred acronym) people. But early in the school year, we would do "alphabet soup". We would have people think of every letter they could that would fit under the LGBT umbrella. It got going good conversation about identities and the difficulties and benefits of labels---and just about everyone learned a new label that night. Point is, we stopped at 32 letters (repeats were allowed) the last time we did it. Needless to say, we did not proceed to use that when we spoke with the press.

I would say that the canonical understanding of LGBTQA is Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Ally. But the alternatives put forward on here are used by people and understood to fall under the umbrella, so yes, it includes asexuality. It's a large, complicated, diverse movement.

erinja (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 21 00:47:56

At least the Esperanto "GLAT" is nice and pronounceable ridulo.gif

punkmat (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 21 01:23:14

VOllOV:
jagr2808:
Vestitor:What does the 'Q' stand for in that acronym?
its queer
Q = Questioning.
Hi, it's pretty common for members of this community to define the "Q" as both Queer and Questioning. The reason "Queer" is important to the acronym is to include individuals who are non binary (neither male or female, under a spectrum of genders and pronouns. I can explain this in further detail if needed!), asexual/aromantic, pansexual, intersex, etc. The added "Q" is a good way to include people of a variety of genders and sexualities without referring to the community as just plainly "queer", since many members of this community do not like that term because of the bigotry behind it. If you need more information, feel free to ask me, I'd be happy to help! ridulo.gif

punkmat (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 21 01:27:23

erinja:Hi, Matt. Welcome! I don't know Kik. But there is an LGBTQ Esperanto group, Ligo de Samseksemaj Geesperantistoj. Sorry their website is so out of date but this is it: LSG

Our community here at lernu is pretty diverse, too, so perhaps someone else can share some good resources with you.

Sonja Kisa has a great dictionary that includes a lot of LGBT (the Esperanto acronym is GLAT) terms. Sonja's English-Esperanto Dictionary
Thank you so much! I'll be sure to check out these links!

Kik is a messaging app that is available for most smartphones and I believe there is also an extension for Chrome users (under a different name, though). I check mine often, and I thought it would be a great place for LGBTQ+ Esperantists to chat! There actually are a couple of Esperanto chat rooms there already (under several hashtags), I am a member of the #esperanto group, but the rooms are limited to 50 people and I believe that room is either full or almost full.

punkmat (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 21 01:28:13

whysea:You should check out Egalecen: https://egalecen.wordpress.com/ (articles about equality)

and Aliuloj: http://aliuloj.alketo.info/ (place for art and story sharing among queer esperantists, for example: http://aliuloj.alketo.info/wp-content/uploads/2015...)

and the youtube of Rolando: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7k7rqQWo4cA

Also join in on the Tumblr #esperanto tag and you're likely to find more queer esperantists ridulo.gif
Thank you so much!!

Alkanadi (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 23 09:50:21

rikforto:I would say that the canonical understanding of LGBTQA is Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Ally.
I think these long acronyms don't help. At first I thought that the Q was for Queer but Questioning seems better in my opinion. I thought the A was for Animal, but I guess it means Ally. I had to look up Ally on Google. So it is just a person who defends their rights?

Demian (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 23 13:20:30

Admin: racism, sexism, and homophobia are forbidden here. You risk losing your account if you post racist, sexist, or homophobic messages here.

FractalBloom (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 23 16:30:48

Tempodivalse:I always understood that one "Q" stands for "queer", meaning any sexuality that is not heterosexual - kind of a catch-all. (Out of curiosity, would this also include asexuality?)
I'm asexual and I refer to myself as queer. Granted, I'm comfortable in a [romantic] relationship with someone of either gender, so...I don't know what a hetero-romantic asexual would call him/herself.

Sometimes I see the abbreviation written "LGBTQIA" to specifically include asexuals and intersex. I prefer to stick with "LGBT+" for the sake of simplicity.

jagr2808 (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 23 18:21:19

FractalBloom:

I'm asexual and I refer to myself as queer. Granted, I'm comfortable in a [romantic] relationship with someone of either gender, so...I don't know what a hetero-romantic asexual would call him/herself.
In Norwegian we differ between the terms hetro/homo/bi -fil and hetro/homo/bi -seksuell.
Where the first one mean you fall in love with opposite/same/both genders, and the latter means you can become sexually atracted to them.

Does any other languages have anything similar?

Rajzino (Å vise profilen) 2015 8 23 19:42:55

jagr2808:Does any other languages have anything similar?
Just slightly change the spelling (-fil to -fiel and -seksuell to -seksueel), and it's almost exactly the same for Dutch. Although -fiel words are old fashioned, a little rare (and I've never heard of bifiel before), and usually considered to be perfect synonyms to the -seksueel words.

English actually also has the words homophile (= homosexual) and homophilia (= homosexuality), but similar to Dutch they are old fashioned and very rare.

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