LGBT topics
What does the term LGBT mean?
- Ally
- A person, regardless of his or her sexual orientation or
gender identity, who supports and stands up for the human and civil rights
of LGBT people.
- Bisexual
- A person who is attracted physically and emotionally to
both males and females.
- Closet
- Hiding one's sexual orientation or gender identity from
others in the workplace, at school, at home and/or with friends
- Coming out
-
- The process through which LGBT people recognize and acknowledge their
non-heterosexual orientation and integrate this understanding into their
personal and social lives.
- The act of disclosing this orientation or identity to others.
- Gay
- A person who is physically and emotionally attracted to
someone of the same sex. The word "gay" is used to refer to both males and
females or to males only.
- Gender identity
- A person's internal sense or feeling of being
male or female. Gender expression relates to how a person presents his or
her sense of gender to the larger society. Gender identity and gender
expression are often closely linked with the term
transgender. "Many
transgender people seek support and acceptance from the gay and lesbian
community, where gender norms are often more inclusive" (Ryan & Futterman,
1998, p. 48).
- Heterosexism
- The assumption that everyone is heterosexual and
that this sexual orientation or gender identity is superior. Heterosexism
is often expressed in more subtle forms than homophobia and can be
characterized by the "denial, denigration, and stigmatization of
non-heterosexual identity, behaviour, relationships or community"
(Ryan & Futterman, 1998, p. 12).
- Heterosexual
- A person who is sexually and emotionally attracted
to someone of the opposite sex. Also commonly referred to as "straight".
- Homophobia
- Fear and/or hatred of homosexuality in others, often
exhibited by prejudice, discrimination, bullying or acts of violence. Ryan &
Futterman (1998) also define homophobia as "institutionalized fear, hatred,
prejudice, or negative attitudes towards [LGBT persons or] homosexuality that
results in invisibility, discrimination, neglect or mistreatment" (p. 12)
- Homosexual
- A person who is sexually and emotionally attracted to
someone of the same sex. Because the term is associated historically with a
medical model of homosexuality and can have a negative connotation, most
people prefer such other terms as lesbian, gay or bisexual.
- Intersexual
- A person who is born with anatomy or physiology that
does not conform with cultural or societal expectations of a distinctly male
or female gender. Historically, the medical community labeled these
individuals as hermaphrodites and performed sex reassignment surgery in early
infancy. Contemporary perspectives have sought to question and challenge the
arbitrary practice of gender reassignment surgery as a form of compulsory
identity and/or genital mutilation.
- Lesbian
- A female who is attracted physically and emotionally to
other females. (Refer to What is lesbianism?.)
- LGBT/GLBT
- Commonly used acronyms that are shorthand for lesbian,
gay, bisexual, transgender, transsexual and two-spirited identities. Sexual
minority is a synonymous term.
- Outing
- The public disclosure of another person?s sexual orientation or gender
identity without that person's permission or knowledge. Such
disclosure is very disrespectful and is potentially dangerous
to the outed person.
- Queer
- Historically, a negative term for homosexuality, More
recently, the LGBT movement has reclaimed the word to refer to itself.
Increasingly, the word queer is popularly used by LGBT youth as a positive
way to refer to themselves. (Refer to The meaning of
queer: Moving beyond our resistance to language.)
- Questioning
- A person who is unsure of his or her sexual
orientation or gender identity.
- Rainbow flag
- A symbol of the LGBT movement designed in 1978. The
rainbow flag is recognized by the International Congress of Flag Makers.
- Reclaimed language
- Taking terms or symbols that have had a
derogatory connotation and using them in a positive way to name one?s self
or one's experience. For example, LGBT persons often uses the words "dyke"
and "queer" in a positive and affirming way to refer to themselves. Pink
and black inverted triangles that were once used to identify gay and lesbian
prisoners in Nazi concentration camps have been reclaimed to serve as an
enduring symbol of gay and lesbian pride and as a reminder to the world to
speak up against abuses directed at gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
people.
- Transgender
- A person whose gender identity, outward appearance,
expression and/or anatomy do not fit into conventional expectations of male
or female. Often used as an umbrella term to represent a wide range of
non-conforming gender identities and behaviours. (Refer to
Cross-gender identity: The meaning of
transgender and transsexual.)
- Transsexual
- A transgendered person who has had treatments to
alter the sex of his or her body. Many transsexual people report feeling
"trapped in the wrong body" such that their internal feelings and emotions
do not match their external biological sex. (Refer to
Cross-gender identity: The meaning of
transgender and transsexual.)
- Two-spirited
- Some Aboriginal people identify themselves as
two-spirited rather than as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered or
transsexual.
About this article:
Some terms and definitions in this article have been adapted from the
booklet Safe and Caring Schools for Lesbian and Gay Youth:A
Teacher's Guide, published by the Alberta
Teachers' Association.
Similar articles and publications are available from the Alberta
Teachers' Association web site on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity. Readers may
also wish to order a copy of the special double issue of
Canadian Woman Studies (Volume 24,
Numbers 2,3). The issue is a great reference on LGBTQ issues in Canadian
and other contexts across a variety of topics.
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LGBT topics
Resources
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