[OC] Gendered Movie Favorites: The favorite movies of Letterboxd users broken down by the pronouns they selected for their account
Submitted by throwbarrieaway t3_116auvc in dataisbeautiful
Can anyone explain about these new pronouns? Xe and Ze… I never heard about it!
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Same, why not just use the singular they? It already exists why make something up?
Because it also refers to multiple people, which can be confusing if the subject hasn't been clearly defined each time.
I recently had a stupid interaction about a they/them pronoun, I asked the person I was talking something about 'them' and they misinterpreted who I was talking about since we were discussing a professional whose gender was unknown in addition to a coworker (who I did not know used they/them pronouns and was irrelevant to the question I asked). But my coworker got offended at me on the they/them coworkers behalf for no reason.
You know what would solve this? Literally any other pronoun for non-binary people.
>You know what would solve this? Literally any other pronoun for non-binary people.
Yep, and then they get upset for all being grouped together. The winning move is to not play this game at all.
Clearly we should just bring back thee and thy
I actually unironically support this
Neopronouns are often used by neurodivergent (mainly autistic) people. It helps them define their own sense of identity that they can’t with already established pronouns.
Neurodivergent people are constantly feeling boxed in by things and different social constructs that can be difficult for them to recognize or sometimes understand. Many neurodivergent people feel they don’t quite fit in either category, especially not within neurotypical spaces, neopronouns are just a way to help them break free a little bit, establish their own identity and their own rules, rather then feeling boxed in
Is it your experience that folks who use they/them pronouns, or who don’t identify as cis, are largely neurodivergent anyway? At least that’s been my assumption…
I mean yeah, there is that aspect of being queer that is going against societal and social norms and that falls in line with being neurodivergent and being less likely to adapt to said norms, and more likely to think outside the box, be themselves without worrying about judgement.
Pretty sure there’s a statistic that’s something like 70% of people with autism identify as “non-heterosexual”.
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