Just Another LRC Idiot wrote:
Armstronglivs wrote:
Yes, it is a bit perplexing. I don't quite get how you can be "he" as well as "non-binary", as the former is clearly binary (and to be both singular and plural, through being "he" and "they". Does "they" still include "she"? I'm not sure what else it could refer to). I also find it puzzling that he can call himself "queer" when he is in a relationship with a woman. Does his partner - a lesbian - now see herself as straight?
If gender can now mean whatever you choose it to mean, does it mean anything?
Sometimes a non-binary person feels the need to project the image of the sex opposite to their birth sex, because other people had established their perception. So Page had been seen as a female for many years (in public no less), and one way to erase that image is to project the image of a male. The same happens with a non-binary person who was born male.
So Ellen made a successful career for years playing the parts of females because that was the identity assigned to her and not the one she chose? To now become Elliot seems less like finding his true identity than the assumption of another role - which is what actors do.