Gender symbol
A gender symbol [ ˈdʒɛndɐ ] is a symbol with which the biological sex ( English sex ) of a living being or the social sex (gender) of a person is identified. The gender symbols in typography are mostly either identical to or derived from astronomical symbols . In gender research , a gender symbol can also designate people or things if these symbolize certain aspects of a social gender.
origin
Gender symbols have been known mainly from horoscopes since the 4th century ; in astrology they still refer to the classic planets Mars and Venus . Since the Renaissance they have also been common abbreviations in astronomy . Alchemists used the symbols to denote the most important metals of the time, namely iron and copper (female).
The Swedish naturalist Carl von Linné took up the symbols for the first time in a biological and thus sexual context, namely for the sex of plants. They can be found in his basic work Philosophia Botanica , published in 1751 .
Typographic symbols
symbol | description | Unicode characters | meaning |
---|---|---|---|
Mars symbol | U + 2642 ♂ |
Male gender , man . Planet mars |
|
Venus symbol in the pose of the Martian symbol | Trans man , transsexual man | ||
Combination of masculinity and femininity symbols (Mars and Venus symbols) in the pose of the masculinity symbol | U + 26A6 ⚦ | Transgender , male androgyny . | |
Double Mars symbol | U + 26A3 ⚣ | Male homosexuality , gay , gay | |
Venus with double Mars symbol | Male bisexuality |
symbol | description | Unicode characters | meaning |
---|---|---|---|
Venus symbol | U + 2640 ♀ |
Feminine , woman . Planet venus |
|
Mars symbol in the pose of the Venus symbol | U + 29EC ⧬ | Trans woman , transsexual woman | |
Combination of masculinity and femininity symbols (Mars and Venus symbols) in the pose of the femininity symbol | Female androgyny | ||
Double Venus symbol | U + 26A2 ⚢ | Lesbian , female homosexuality | |
Mars with double Venus symbol | Female bisexuality |
symbol | description | Unicode characters | meaning |
---|---|---|---|
A combination of Venus and Mars symbols | U + 26A5 ⚥ | Transgender , hermaphrodite in entomology , intersexuality . | |
Wheel cross / sun wheel | U + 1F728 ⊕ | Alternative symbol for intersexuality (“Intersexual” means between the sexes , and the earth is between Mars and Venus) Planet Earth |
|
Combination of Venus and Mars symbols with an additional "arm" | U + 26A7 ⚧ | Another transgender symbol; the third arm represents the transgender. | |
Mercury symbol | U + 263F ☿ | Symbol for a third gender , also for transgender or intersexuality Planet Mercury |
symbol | description | Unicode characters | meaning |
---|---|---|---|
The core of most gender symbols: a circle and a line | U + 26B2 ⚲ | Symbol for the Neutrois (desire for the absence of sexual characteristics) | |
Horizontal crossed Mars symbol | U + 26A9 ⚩ | Gender neutrality | |
Transgender symbol with stroke | Transgender symbol, which includes people without gender identity | ||
Core of the other gender symbols | U + 26AA ⚪ | Asexuality , Agender , Genderlessness Neutrois, Intersexuality | |
Diameter sign / average sign | U + 2300 ø U + 2205 ∅ |
Neutrois symbol for gender-specific articles Letter Ø , symbols for diameter , average or an empty quantity can also be seen as an androgyny symbol without endings |
symbol | description | Unicode characters | meaning |
---|---|---|---|
Combination of Venus, Mars and Sagittarius symbols | Androgyny | ||
Simplified androgyny symbol | U + 26A8 ⚨ | Androgyny |
symbol | description | Unicode characters | meaning |
---|---|---|---|
Venus and Mars symbol | U + 26A4 ⚤ | Bisexuality , heterosexuality | |
Double Venus and double Mars symbols | Bisexuality | ||
Gender symbol with X | non-binary gender identity | ||
Double O | Gender undefined or unknown | ||
Questioning symbol | |||
Transgender symbol with question mark |
Gender symbols in genograms
Only the biological sex is shown in a genogram . There is a square for male, a circle for female and a question mark for an unknown gender.
Gender research
In gender research , the term “gender symbols” is also used for symbols of daily life that describe the division of the world of work according to sexual aspects. For example, in the farming division of labor, the tractor symbolizes the farmer in the field whose wife works on the farm. Gender symbols in this sense can only be understood by placing them in the context of a larger system of symbols and meanings. Cultural beliefs, concepts, classifications, and assumptions play a role here.
See also
literature
- Ann Olga Koloski-Ostrow, Claire L. Lyons (Eds.): Naked Truths. Women, Sexuality, and Gender in Classical Art and Archeology. Routledge, London a. a. 2000, ISBN 0-415-21752-0 .
Web links
- The 3 Transgender symbols (English)
- Symbols of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Movements. (No longer available online.) Www.lambda.org, December 26, 2004, archived from the original on October 22, 2014 ; accessed on November 14, 2016 .
- More gender symbols (English)
- Gender symbols in the Nonbinary.org Wiki (English)
- Gender symbols on the website of the "German Society for Transidentity and Intersexuality "
Individual evidence
- ↑ See also The Origin of the Male and Female Symbols of Biology , William T. Stearn, Taxon, Vol. 11, no. 4 (May 1962), pp. 109-113
- ↑ a b c d e f g h Michael Everson : Second revised proposal to encode symbols for genealogy and gender studies in the UCS. (PDF) Unicode Technical Committee, October 17, 2003, accessed November 14, 2016 . (The special characters suggested here were actually included in Unicode with a code point value increased by 5. )
- ↑ a b c d e f g h The Unicode Standard - Miscellaneous Symbols. (PDF) Unicode Technical Committee, June 2016, accessed November 14, 2016 .
- ↑ Transgender Symbol - Where did it come from? www.gendertalk.com, accessed November 14, 2016 .
- ↑ Anne McMurray, Jill Clendon: Community Health and Wellness. Primary Health Care in Practice. 4th edition. Elsevier Australia, Chatswood NSW 2010, ISBN 978-0-7295-3954-8 , p. 417.
- ↑ David Morgan, Berit Brandth, Elin Kvande (eds.): Gender, Bodies, and Work. Ashgate Publishing, Aldershot et al. a. 2005, ISBN 0-7546-4439-1 , p. 92.
- ↑ Sherry B. Ortner, Harriet Whitehead (eds.): Sexual Meanings. The Cultural Construction of Gender and Sexuality. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge u. a. 1981, ISBN 0-521-28375-2 , p. 2.