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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:Tired-axolotl genderpunkflag.png|thumb|218x218px|Tired-axolotl's genderpunk flag]]
Genderpunks do not care about the [[Binary Genders|gender binary]] and challenge the expectations of society. This does not mean that genderpunks do not respect other people's gender identities. Instead, they do whatever they want with their own gender and openly and vocally do not care what society considers appropriate.
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