The Challenge of Implementing Preferred Gender Pronouns: Queer Autonomy in the Age of Information Technologies

A preferred gender pronoun or PGP is the gender pronoun, or set of gender pronouns, an individual uses to represent themselves and by which they would like others to use when they represent them (PFLAG). The use of PGPs is meant to show respect to the autonomy of individuals whose gender identity ma...

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Main Author: Zooey Sophia Pook
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ośrodek Studiów Amerykańskich Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego 2020-01-01
Series:InterAlia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://interalia.queerstudies.pl/issues/15_2020/InterAlia_15-2020_Pook.pdf
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spelling doaj-a8094fb734e44a7698f0040884a236632021-09-02T09:05:11ZengOśrodek Studiów Amerykańskich Uniwersytetu WarszawskiegoInterAlia1689-66372020-01-011561610.51897/interalia/BTAW6071The Challenge of Implementing Preferred Gender Pronouns: Queer Autonomy in the Age of Information TechnologiesZooey Sophia Pook0New Mexico State UniversityA preferred gender pronoun or PGP is the gender pronoun, or set of gender pronouns, an individual uses to represent themselves and by which they would like others to use when they represent them (PFLAG). The use of PGPs is meant to show respect to the autonomy of individuals whose gender identity may not conform to the appearance of others, or individuals whose identity is gender non-binary (HRC). The use of PGPs is suggested as a best practice by nearly every major LGBT+ organization in the US (PFLAG, HRC, etc.). Today, systems for implementing PGPs exist everywhere from college applications, hospital intake forms, dating websites, and beyond. While the use of PGPs shows respect for transgender and gender nonconforming individuals, these practices have unintended consequences as they contribute to the ever-expanding economies of data collection, made possible through the rise of information technologies. This work will explore questions of economy and power related to the collection of PGPs and the challenge of queer autonomy in the age of neoliberal capitalism. https://interalia.queerstudies.pl/issues/15_2020/InterAlia_15-2020_Pook.pdfpreferred pronounsneoliberalismqueer theoryalgorithmsinformation capital
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zooey Sophia Pook
spellingShingle Zooey Sophia Pook
The Challenge of Implementing Preferred Gender Pronouns: Queer Autonomy in the Age of Information Technologies
InterAlia
preferred pronouns
neoliberalism
queer theory
algorithms
information capital
author_facet Zooey Sophia Pook
author_sort Zooey Sophia Pook
title The Challenge of Implementing Preferred Gender Pronouns: Queer Autonomy in the Age of Information Technologies
title_short The Challenge of Implementing Preferred Gender Pronouns: Queer Autonomy in the Age of Information Technologies
title_full The Challenge of Implementing Preferred Gender Pronouns: Queer Autonomy in the Age of Information Technologies
title_fullStr The Challenge of Implementing Preferred Gender Pronouns: Queer Autonomy in the Age of Information Technologies
title_full_unstemmed The Challenge of Implementing Preferred Gender Pronouns: Queer Autonomy in the Age of Information Technologies
title_sort challenge of implementing preferred gender pronouns: queer autonomy in the age of information technologies
publisher Ośrodek Studiów Amerykańskich Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
series InterAlia
issn 1689-6637
publishDate 2020-01-01
description A preferred gender pronoun or PGP is the gender pronoun, or set of gender pronouns, an individual uses to represent themselves and by which they would like others to use when they represent them (PFLAG). The use of PGPs is meant to show respect to the autonomy of individuals whose gender identity may not conform to the appearance of others, or individuals whose identity is gender non-binary (HRC). The use of PGPs is suggested as a best practice by nearly every major LGBT+ organization in the US (PFLAG, HRC, etc.). Today, systems for implementing PGPs exist everywhere from college applications, hospital intake forms, dating websites, and beyond. While the use of PGPs shows respect for transgender and gender nonconforming individuals, these practices have unintended consequences as they contribute to the ever-expanding economies of data collection, made possible through the rise of information technologies. This work will explore questions of economy and power related to the collection of PGPs and the challenge of queer autonomy in the age of neoliberal capitalism.
topic preferred pronouns
neoliberalism
queer theory
algorithms
information capital
url https://interalia.queerstudies.pl/issues/15_2020/InterAlia_15-2020_Pook.pdf
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