banner (2006),
Melbourne Gay Pride, Australia In 1969, people in the gay community began to march in the streets to demand
civil rights. Terms such as
dyke and
faggot were used to identify people as political activists for the gay community. During this time,
dyke referred to a woman committed to revolution, the most radical position. A surge of
feminism in the lesbian community led to "
dyke separatism", which emphasized that lesbian women should consider themselves to be separate from men, their ideas and movements. In 1971, the poem
The Psychoanalysis of Edward the Dyke by
Judy Grahn was published by the Women's Press Collective. This use of
dyke empowered the lesbian community because heretofore it had only been employed as a condemnation. Because of the exposure of the word to the public, the term
dyke was reclaimed by the lesbian community in the 1970s. The meaning of
dyke has positively changed over time. Most members of the community have dropped
bull from the term to use it as a positive identifier of one who displays toughness, or as a simple, generic term for all lesbians. This abbreviation does not carry the negative connotations of the full phrase as it previously did. In the late 20th and early 21st century, the term
dyke was claimed by many lesbians as a term of pride and empowerment.
Alison Bechdel, author of comic strip
Dykes to Watch Out For (1983–2008), said use of the term was "linguistic activism". It has been described "as important to new generations of lesbians as landmark novels like
Rita Mae Brown's
Rubyfruit Jungle (1973) and
Lisa Alther's
Kinflicks (1976) were to an earlier one." The term dyke is also important in the
leather community, who use the term
leatherdyke as the counterpart to the gay male "leatherman." For example, in the 1995 documentary
BloodSisters, which is about the leatherdyke community, one of the interview subjects says, "I don't want to be called a lesbian, I'm not a lesbian. . . I'm a dyke. And for me, that's a real power word. It's a source of pride, and strength, and it has history for me." Because of its association with the leather community, some may choose to use the term dyke, rather than lesbian, to indicate a position in the
feminist sex wars. In her 2011 article
The Only Dykey One, Lucy Jones argues that consideration of lesbian culture is core to an understanding of lesbian identity construction. Matters came to a head when the
United States Patent and Trademark Office denied the lesbian motorcycle group
Dykes on Bikes a trademark for its name, on the grounds
dyke was offensive, derogatory and disparaging to lesbians. However, the office reversed itself and permitted the group to register its name after attorneys appealed and submitted hundreds of pages to show the slang word does not disparage lesbians in the way it once did. On December 8, 2005, Dykes on Bikes won the trademark case, and the organization has since gained international recognition for leading gay pride parades from
San Francisco to
Sydney.
Facebook controversy In June 2017,
Facebook censored the use of the word "dyke" on its website as "abusive content". This decision resulted in a
Change.org protest petition created by the
Listening 2 Lesbians collective that was signed by 7,247 supporters. ==Dyke March==