Project:Transgender Intersex & Gender-Diverse: An Encyclopedia, Qq
Q56
- See indeterminate sex and pseudohermaphroditism.
QAP
- See Queer Archives Project.
QDCC
- See Queer Digital Community Catalog.
quality of life … intersex … trans … trans men Başar, Koray, Gökhan Öz, and Jale Karakaya. “Perceived Discrimination, Social Support, and Quality of Life in Gender Dysphoria” (1 July 2016). The Journal of Sexual Medicine. Vol. 13, No. 7. pp. 1133-41. Received 22 November 2015. Accepted 23 April 2016.Published 24 May 2016. DOI: 10.1016/j.jsxm.2016.04.071 PMID: 27235282 … trans women Ainsworth, Tiffany A. and Jeffrey H. Spiegel. “Quality of life of individuals with or without facial feminization surgery or gender reassignment surgery” (September 2010). Quality of Life Research. Vol. 19, No. 7. pp. 1019-24. Accepted 19 April 2010. Published online 12 May 2010. DOI: 10.1007/s11136-010-9668-7 PMID: 20461468 Başar, Koray, Gökhan Öz, and Jale Karakaya. “Perceived Discrimination, Social Support, and Quality of Life in Gender Dysphoria” (1 July 2016). The Journal of Sexual Medicine. Vol. 13, No. 7. pp. 1133-41. Received 22 November 2015. Accepted 23 April 2016.Published 24 May 2016. DOI: 10.1016/j.jsxm.2016.04.071 PMID: 27235282 … nonbinary queen … in reference to feminine gay men Legman, Gershon. “The Language of Homosexuality: An American Glossary” in Sex Variants (1941). Vol. 2. Edited by George W. Henry. P. B. Hoeber, Incorporated. p. 1174. [Defines ‘queen’ as “[a] male homosexual, especially one of the effeminate type, and a pedicant or fellator. The term is not applied to virile homosexuals or to pedicators.”] Google Books: DqWGAAAAIAAJ … in reference to gay men generally Legman, Gershon. “The Language of Homosexuality: An American Glossary” in Sex Variants (1941). Vol. 2. Edited by George W. Henry. P. B. Hoeber, Incorporated. p. 1174. [Defines ‘queen’ as “[a] male homosexual, especially one of the effeminate type, and a pedicant or fellator. The term is not applied to virile homosexuals or to pedicators.”] Google Books: DqWGAAAAIAAJ Dynes, Wayne R. “Queen” in Homolexis: A History and Cultural Lexicon of Homosexuality (1 January 1985). Scholarship Committee, Gay Academic Union. p. 119. ISBN-10: 0932879020 ISBN-13: 9780932879028 Annie. “Annotated Glossary of Terms” (24 October 2000). [Defines ‘queen’ as “[a] male homosexual… This term has been in use since the 1920s to refer to a gay man. Today’s usage has broadened somewhat, but the original usage continues.”] “queen” in Fantabulosa: A Dictionary of Polari and Gay Slang (2002). Written by Paul Baker. Continuum. p. 182. [Defines ‘queen’ as “any gay man.”] Google Books: U6kdAQAAIAAJ ISBN-10: 0826459617 ISBN-13: 9780826459619 … in reference to drag queens Annie. “Annotated Glossary of Terms” (24 October 2000). [Defines ‘queen’ as “A drag queen.”] queen bitch “queen bitch” in Fantabulosa: A Dictionary of Polari and Gay Slang (2002). Written by Paul Baker. Continuum. p. 182. [Defines ‘queen bitch’ as “a purely evil, selfish, flamboyant gay man or drag queen.” and as “a gay man or drag queen who likes to pretend to be a bitch, but only for comic effect.”] Google Books: U6kdAQAAIAAJ ISBN-10: 0826459617 ISBN-13: 9780826459619 “Queen of Mean” queer Dynes, Wayne R. “Queer” in Homolexis: A History and Cultural Lexicon of Homosexuality (1 January 1985). Scholarship Committee, Gay Academic Union. pp. 119-20. ISBN-10: 0932879020 ISBN-13: 9780932879028 Barber, Kristen and Danielle Antoinette Hidalgo. “Queer” in Encyclopedia of Gender and Society. Vol. 2. Edited by Jodi A. O’Brien. SAGE Publications, Inc. pp. 689-90. ISBN-10: 1412909163 ISBN-13: 9781412909167 Love, Heather. “Queer” (1 May 2014). TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly. Vol. 1, No. 1-2. pp. 172-6. DOI: 10.1215/23289252-2399938 Hall, Jake. “Tracing the history of the word ‘queer’” (28 July 2016). Dazed. Dazed Media. “The Word ‘Queer’” (18 February 2019). Nancy. WNYC Studios. them. “Tyler Ford Explains The History Behind the Word ‘Queer’ | InQueery | them.” (21 February 2018). YouTube. YouTube, LLC. Perlman, Merrill. “How the word ‘queer’ was adopted by the LGBTQ community” (22 January 2019). Columbia Journalism Review. Columbia Journalism Review. Cheves, Alexander. “9 LGBTQ+ People Explain How They Love, Hate, and Understand the Word ‘Queer’” (4 June 2019). them. Condé Nast. Rocheleau, Juliette. “A Former Slur Is Reclaimed And Listeners Have Mixed Feelings” (21 August 2019). NPR. npr. Zambon, Veronica. “What does ‘queer’ mean?” (25 October 2020). MedicalNewsToday. Reviewed by Emelia Arquilla. Healthline Media UK Ltd. Somerville, Siobhan B. “Queer” in Keywords for American Cultural Studies (November 2020). 3rd Ed. NYU Press. p. 198. ISBN-13: 9781479822942, 9781479897964, 9781479802999 Clarke, Mollie. “‘Queer’ history: A history of Queer” (9 February 2021). The National Archives blog. The National Archives. Klepacki, Greer. “Queer: A 25 Year History, A Blooming Identity” (16 June 2021). Portland State University. B.S. Thesis. DOI: 10.15760/honors.1119 Zeng, Michelle. “Reclaiming the Word: ‘We’re here, we’re queer, get used to it!’” (18 June 2021). The Queen’s Journal. The Queen’s Journal. Ja’ciel, I’Jaz. “The Q Word: A crash course on ‘queer’” (25 June 2021). Spectrum News 1. Charter Communications. Rivero, Soren. “A Brief History of the Term ‘Queer’” (19 April 2022). Queers for a Cause. Queers for a Cause. Wieboldt, Erik. “Redefining the Word ‘Queer’” (8 May 2022). UCSD Guardian. UCSD Guardian. Saint Thomas, Sophie, Carina Hsieh, and Rachel Varina. “What Does the Word ‘Queer’ Actually Mean? Experts Explain Its History” (20 May 2022). Cosmopolitan. Hearst Magazine Media, Inc. Miller, Susan. “Reclaiming a former slur from its history of hate: Is it OK to use the word queer?” (3 June 2022). USA TODAY. USA TODAY. Updated 3 June 2022. Engle, Gigi. “17 LGBTQ+ People Explain What ‘Queer’ Means to Them” (29 June 2022). Men’s Health. Hearst Magazine Media, Inc. “What does ‘Queer’ mean anyway?” (1 September 2022). Minus18. Minus18. Hubbard, Thomas M. “The History Of The Word Queer” (7 October 2022). Sdlgbtn. Sdlgbtn. “What does ‘Queer’ mean? Why are younger generations reclaiming the word Queer?” (12 December 2022). The Center. The LGBTQ Community Center of the Desert. … used to mean weird, odd, or different “queer, adj.1” in OED Third Edition (December 2007). Oxford University Press. Revised December 2022. [Definition 1.a. is given as “[s]trange, odd, peculiar, eccentric…”.] … in reference to gay men Legman, Gershon. “The Language of Homosexuality: An American Glossary” in Sex Variants (1941). Vol. 2. Edited by George W. Henry. P. B. Hoeber, Incorporated. p. 1174. [Defines ‘queer’ as “Homosexual; more often used of male homosexuals than of Lesbians. As an adjective it is the most common in use in America.”] Google Books: DqWGAAAAIAAJ Stanley, Julia P. “Homosexual Slang” (Spring – Summer 1970). American Speech. Vol. 45, No. 1-2. pp. 45-59. [Notes that “queer was cited by homosexuals as the one [term used by heterosexual people to refer to them] that has the strongest connotation of distaste or disgust… One male respondent pointed out that the utterance of the word in his presence was enough to make him visibly flinch”.] DOI: 10.2307/455061 JSTOR: 455061 “queer, n.2” in OED Third Edition (December 2007). Oxford University Press. Revised December 2022. [Definition 2.a. is given as “[a] homosexual person; esp. a homosexual man. Frequently derogatory and offensive”.] … in reference to gay persons generally Legman, Gershon. “The Language of Homosexuality: An American Glossary” in Sex Variants (1941). Vol. 2. Edited by George W. Henry. P. B. Hoeber, Incorporated. p. 1174. [Defines ‘queer’ as “Homosexual; more often used of male homosexuals than of Lesbians. As an adjective it is the most common in use in America.”] Google Books: DqWGAAAAIAAJ “queer” in Fantabulosa: A Dictionary of Polari and Gay Slang (2002). Written by Paul Baker. Continuum. p. 183. [Notes that “by the early-mid twentieth century” that ‘queer’ had “become a popular derogatory term for a homosexual”; then goes on to note that “in the early 1990s queer was reclaimed by members of the gay community and given a more overtly political and academic slant”.] Google Books: U6kdAQAAIAAJ ISBN-10: 0826459617 ISBN-13: 9780826459619 “queer, adj.1” in OED Third Edition (December 2007). Oxford University Press. Revised December 2022. [Definition 3.a. is given as “[o]f a person: homosexual… of, relating to, or associated with homosexual people… [f]requently derogatory and offensive…”.] “queer, n.2” in OED Third Edition (December 2007). Oxford University Press. Revised December 2022. [Definition 2.a. is given as “[a] homosexual person; esp. a homosexual man. Frequently derogatory and offensive”.] McMahon. “Is ‘Queer’ a Derogatory Word?” (7 June 2022). LanguageHumanities. Conjecture Corporation. Updated 21 December 2022. [Notes that “‘[q]ueer’ can be used to talk about someone within the homosexual community…”.] … in reference to sexual practices considered non-normative Stanley, Julia P. “Homosexual Slang” (Spring – Summer 1970). American Speech. Vol. 45, No. 1-2. pp. 45-59. [Notes that “[w]hen homosexuals do use queer, it is reserved for application to individuals… who prey upon children, indulge in sadistic or masochistic sexual practices, voyeurism…, fetishism, or other activities that go beyond the group-defined ‘norm’ for sexual activity”.] DOI: 10.2307/455061 JSTOR: 455061 … as an umbrella term for intersectional identities “queer” in Fantabulosa: A Dictionary of Polari and Gay Slang (2002). Written by Paul Baker. Continuum. pp. 183-4. [Notes that “queer came to stand for the concept of identities as being fluid, multiple, overlapping and interactive… Queer could mean gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, black, Latino, working-class or a combination of any or all of the above at different times, as well as numerous other terms which were related to dispossessed or stigmatized minority groups”.] Google Books: U6kdAQAAIAAJ ISBN-10: 0826459617 ISBN-13: 9780826459619 … as an umbrella term for genders and sexualities considered non-normative “queer, adj.1” in OED Third Edition (December 2007). Oxford University Press. Revised December 2022. [Definition 3.b. is given as “[o]f a person: having a sexual or gender identity that does not correspond to, or that challenges, traditional (esp. heteronormative) ideas of sexuality or gender…”.] “queer, n.2” in OED Third Edition (December 2007). Oxford University Press. Revised December 2022. [Definition 2.b. is given as “[a] person having a sexual or gender identity that does not correspond to, or that challenges, traditional (esp. heteronormative) ideas of sexuality or gender”.] Prager, Sarah. Queer, There, and Everywhere (23 May 2017). Illustrated by Zoe More O’Ferrall. HarperCollins. p. 2. [Notes that “[f]or the purpose of this book, ‘queer’ means anyone not totally straight or not totally cisgender—anyone outside society’s gender and sexuality norms”.] ISBN-10: 0062474316 ISBN-13: 9780062474315 McMahon. “Is ‘Queer’ a Derogatory Word?” (7 June 2022). LanguageHumanities. Conjecture Corporation. Updated 21 December 2022. [Notes that “‘[q]ueer’ … is … used as a more general umbrella term to describe people with other sexual practices, such as asexuals, along with transgendered people, practitioners of BDSM, and other people who engage in activities outside the social norm”.] … as a specific sexual orientation or identity Kolker, Zoe M., Philip C. Taylor, and M. Paz Galupo. “‘As a Sort of Blanket Term’: Qualitative Analysis of Queer Sexual Identity Marking” (October 2020). Sexuality & Culture. Vol. 24, No. 5. pp. 1337-57. Published online 12 December 2019. DOI: 10.1007/s12119-019-09686-4 … as a specific gender identity See also: genderqueer. Queer Archives Project Queer Digital Community Catalog One of the collections available in the Queer Digital History Project. Queer Digital History Project (QDHP) Independent digital history project which currently documents pre-2010 LGBTQ digital spaces online. Maintained by Avery Dame-Griff. See also: Dame-Griff, Avery; The Two Revolutions: A History of the Transgender Internet; Queer Digital Community Catalog; Primary Documents Archive; Mapping TGNet. Queer Nuns: Religion, Activism, and Serious Parody See also: Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence. Eyrich, Tess. “How an order of queer nuns puts a new face on activism” (27 April 2018). UC Riverside News. Regents of the University of California. Wilcox, Melissa. “Queer Nuns: Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence Are ‘Serious Parody,’ Forcing Us to Redefine Nuns” (3 May 2018). Religious Dispatches. Religious Dispatches. Bromberger, Brain. “Book on Sisters looks at intersection of camp, drag” (20 June 2018). Bay Area Reporter. Bay Area Reporter. Queer Omaha Archives queer queen “m-t-f, mtf, M2F” in Fantabulosa: A Dictionary of Polari and Gay Slang (2002). Written by Paul Baker. Continuum. p. 165. [Defines ‘m-t-f’ as “an acronym for male to femmale, referring to a man who either wants to cross-dress as or become a woman. Also queer queen, TGirl.”] Google Books: U6kdAQAAIAAJ ISBN-10: 0826459617 ISBN-13: 9780826459619 quimbanda
Quintero, Yamileth (1994/1995 – 24 May 2018)
- “Aseninan a reina de belleza trans” (25 May 2018). El Universal. EL UNIVERSAL.
- “Asesinan a reina de belleza Yamileth Quintero en Culiacán” (25 May 2018). SDPnoticias.com.
- “Exigen justicia por asesinato de reina de belleza gay en Sinaloa” (25 May 2018). Proseco. Comunicación e Información S.A. de C.V.
- “Matan de 4 balazos a reina de belleza transexual en Culiacán” (25 May 2018). e-consulta.com. CONTRACORRIENTE.
- Hernández, Alonso. “ Yamileth Quintero (¿?-2018) Una Reina de belleza trans y víctima de un atroz crimen” (14 August 2018). Ulisex!Mgzn. Ulisex!Mgzn.
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