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:''{{Distinguish|F*ckgender}}''
[[File:Genderfck.png|thumb|220x220px|The genderf*ck flag.]]▼
[[File:
[[File:Genderpunk.png|thumb|The genderpunk flag.|alt=]][[File:New genderpunk flag.png|thumb|Snailrat's genderpunk flag|alt=]]'''Genderf*ck''', also known as '''
[[File:Genderpunk.png|thumb|220x220px|The genderpunk flag.]]▼
The main idea of being genderpunk is not caring about the [[Binary Genders|gender binary]] and challenging the expectations of society. This doesn't mean that genderpunks don't respect other people's gender identity, but they do what ever they want with their own gender and don't care what culture/society thinks "a girl should look like" or "how boy should act".▼
==Culture ==
Examples of genderpunk might include [[cisgender]] men who likes traditionally effeminate things. Cis woman who enjoys short hair and dressing butch. Non-binary people who [[Gender Presentation|present]] a 'clashing' way, or in a way to challenge the expectation of people to fit the gender binary. As long as one agrees with the mindset, no matter how they identify, they can be a part of the genderpunk/genderf*ck movement.▼
[[Category:Gender]]▼
Genderf*ck originates from camp culture in the 1970s<ref>[https://www.google.com/books/edition/Gay_Roots/jGRXDlxCdEoC?hl=en "Genderf*ck and its delights" by Christopher Lonc, ''Gay Roots: 20 Years of Gay Sunshine: An Anthology of Gay History, Sex, Politics, and Culture'', edited by Winston Leyland, Gay Sunshine Press.]</ref> and has become widely used in drag culture to describe a distinct type of performance that relies on exploring the grotesqueness of gender as a way to resist gender.<ref>[https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/678149 Scholarly article "'I'm a Cross between a Clown, a Stripper, and a Streetwalker': Drag Tipping, Sex Work, and a Queer Sociosexual Economy" by Sarah Hankins for ''Signs''.]</ref> The origin of the term genderpunk is unknown.
▲[[File:
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▲Examples of genderpunk
==Flag==
The first genderf*ck flag was created by Tumblr user yo-ho-sebastian on July 31, 2016.<ref>[https://pride-color-schemes.tumblr.com/post/148276826255/genderfck Tumblr post announcing the (first) gender*ck flag.]</ref> The purple flag has a pastel yellow border and a stylized pastel yellow skull symbol in the center. The colors are meant to show the different kinds of identities and expressions that go under the term, purple being a mixture of male and female, yellow being outside the binary entirely, and their juxtaposition to show those who experience multiple genders. The skull indicates the rebellious nature of the gender identity.
While the other genderf*ck flag has an unknown origin, it is known that there is a version of the flag without a middle finger in the center from August 19, 2020.<ref>[https://www.wattpad.com/930232898-pride-flag-handbook-part-4-genderfuck A Wattpad publication with another genderf*ck flag.]</ref>
The first appearance of the genderpunk flag was on August 23, 2015, created by DeviantArt user Pride-Flags.<ref>[https://www.deviantart.com/pride-flags/art/Genderpunk-1-555820431 DeviantArt post with the (first) genderpunk flag.]</ref>
Another genderpunk flag was created by FANDOM user [[User:Snailrat|Snailrat]] on April 10, 2021. The top two red stripes are meant to represent femininity, the bottom two blue stripes to represent masculinity, and the two purple stripes to represent androgyny. The black stripe in the middle represents the primarily dark color scheme of many punk subcultures, going along with the toned-down color scheme of the rest of the flag.
==Resources ==
<references />
[[Category:Identity]]
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