#LGaS14: Now Paige Johnson (http://nitter.nl/_paige_j) on the politicisation of online talk about gender: how do people describe and position themselves vis-à-vis #inclusiveLanguage

Key themes in talk rejecting inclusive language include "erasure of women" and "political correctness gone mad"

Paige Johnson (@_Paige_J)

She/Her, EN/FR | PhD researcher @ UoL | My research: narrative and affective positioning, CDS, racism, sexism, gender & identity

Nitter

Edmonton #LGaS14: strangest because #bottomStigma is a thing, so we would expect a queerphobic #slur to focus on that

Edmonton offers several explanations for this, mostly suggesting that this is because agency suggests greater responsibility for the deviant act — and therefore greater deviance

In the end, it matters more that queer sex is taboo than what role exactly you take in it

Edmonton: based on a purposive survey looking at how people recognised and evaluated slurs #LGaS14

Over 160 slurs identified in the data - over 1/4 referring to sexual acts, 1/5 to non normative gender expression, 1/10 to abnormality

(1/9 were trans-specific)

Most slurs are of the form NOUN-VERBER or DYSPHEMISM-NOUN, and a stunning 70% concerns anal sex

Strangest thing is, most are about topping, not bottoming

Now Daniel Edmonton (http://nitter.nl/homotextuality) on the ideologies underlying anti-queer #slurs (in terms of morphology, semantics and metaphor) #LGaS14

(Slurs defined narrowly: insults that punch down on the basis of group membership)

(Edmonton talks glancingly about "tranny", about which @mixosaurus and I found very little research)

Dr Daniel Edmondson (@homotextuality)

Lecturer in Applied Linguistics @ysjschoolofelp. Researching impact of reclamation on cognitive processing of slurs.

Nitter

Douglas #LGaS14: #transmasc folk have sophisticated understandings (and fears) associated with being perceived as male: of taking up space, becoming toxic, betraying confidences they received because of their AGAB

Needless to say, for many of them it feels like *a lot*

Now Rowan Douglas (the Judith Baxter award winner) on #transmasculine folks' experience of negotiating #gender identity in interaction #LGaS14

(Transmasc broadly defined: anyone AFAB who identifies with some masculine role)

Based on phenomenological interviews seeking to understand participants' fraught life world

(Funny how I seem to be coming across #InterpretativePhenomenologicalAnalysis all over the place these days)

There's been a flurry of brilliant 3-minute presentations at #LGaS14 but they were just too fast to toot about — might try to recall some main points afterwards

Bailey & Mackenzie #LGaS14: description of Mermaids shifts from "supporting children" to "transgender lobby group" — possibly reflecting that an organisation provides an easy target for criticism even for those who might shy from overtly attacking trans people themselves

(Not that many transphobes have that many scruples ofc)

Now Aimee Bailey (http://nitter.nl/AimeeFBailey) and Jai Mackenzie (http://nitter.nl/JaiMackenzie) looking at representations of #Mermaids in the UK press #LGas14

~450 articles 2015–2022, with a truly massive spike in the last year, and dominated by the Times (25% of total published)

Keyword analysis shows a generally sympathetic if stereotyped representation up to 2018, shifting since then to fearmongering, centering transphobic groups and questioning claims of discrimination

Dr Aimee Bailey (@AimeeFBailey)

Lecturer @dmuleicester · PhD from @UoNEnglish on queer women’s online media · she/her 🏳️‍🌈🇪🇺

Nitter
It seems clearly a function of exposure, because it disappears in people who use they/them themselves — though it's interesting to see that exposure predicts naturalness ratings a lot better than it does active production #LGaS14