The term
genderqueer first appeared in
queer zines of the 1980s and early 1990s
. It gained prominence in the mid-1990s through activists, such as
Riki Anne Wilchins, who used it to describe individuals deviating from traditional gender norms. In a 1995 newsletter published by
The Transexual Menace, Wilchins wrote that the new fight against gender oppression was political and:It's about all of us who are genderqueer: diesel dykes and stone butches, leatherqueens and radical fairies, nelly fags, crossdressers, intersexed, transexuals, transvestites, transgendered, transgressively gendered, and those of us whose gender expressions are so complex they haven't even been named yet. In 2002, the term had further dissemination through the anthology
GenderQueer: Voices From Beyond the Sexual Binary.
Genderqueer evolved into both an umbrella term for identities outside the gender binary and an adjective or self-identity term for those who challenge or diverge from conventional gender norms, or who "queer" gender. The rise of the internet and public identification by celebrities brought the term
genderqueer into mainstream awareness during the late 2000s and early 2010s. The term
non-binary was not in widespread use until the early 2010s, when it quickly increased in popularity and surpassed
genderqueer as the most-used umbrella term for all people who do not exclusively identify as women/girls or men/boys. Some critics of
non-binary dislike it because the term itself reinforces the concept of a binary. This inclusive usage dates back to at least 1992, with significant contributions from figures such as
Leslie Feinberg Other related umbrella terms include
gender nonconforming,
gender expansive, and
gender diverse.
Gender nonconforming usually refers to those whose
gender expression does not match masculine or feminine gender norms, but it has been alternately used in some contexts (particularly prior to the widespread use of
non-binary) to refer to people whose gender identities do not match binary gender norms. The term
enby, derived from the
English pronunciation of the acronym
NB for non-binary, is also sometimes used. Additionally, being non-binary is associated with
gender ambiguity. or experience or express themselves in ways that fluidly change between feminine and masculine at different times. although some identify as only non-binary, some identify as non-binary and genderfluid, while others identify as non-binary men or non-binary women. A national UK survey conducted in 2017 found that, of 1,980 intersex respondents, 38% identified as women, 32% as men, and 25% as non-binary. == Theories of non-binary gender ==