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Make your own pronoun buttons for 51社区黑料Multilingual Week

January 30, 2025
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Drop by 51社区黑料Gender, Sexuality, and Women鈥檚 Studies鈥 booth for a fun activity celebrating 51社区黑料Multilingual Week!

Use a button press to make your own buttons sharing your preferred pronouns in various languages. Choose from pre-printed designs or use your language skills to create your own buttons.

No registration; everyone invited. Drop by to make buttons and socialize.

  • Multilingual Pronoun Button Making - Social
    • Tuesday, February 25
    • 11:00am-2:00pm - Booth
    • In person, AQ South Concourse. 

Exploring Language and Gender

Fun ideas and research related to language, multilingualism, and gender identity will be shared at the activity.

Does the commonly used English gender-neutral pronoun 鈥渢hey鈥 translate into world languages?

According to Helen Hok-Sze Leung, professor and chair in 51社区黑料Gender, Sexuality, & Women鈥檚 Studies, there are cultural and political challenges created by this approach. In her research, Leung compares pronouns in Cantonese, English, and French to advocate for a multilingual understanding of fostering gender-inclusive environments.

Did you know many world languages do not have third person, gendered pronouns?

鈥淚n northwestern North America, most Indigenous languages 鈥 such as the Interior Salish, Haida, Tlingit, Dene, and Wakashan languages 鈥 do not have gender in the third person," explains Marianne Ignace, director of SFU鈥檚 Indigenous Languages Program and Indigenous Language Centre'll or 'laa means he-she-it or even 鈥榯hey.鈥 In most languages, the gender pronouns are affixes glued to the verb, rather than independent pronouns, although the latter also exist to some degree.鈥

Saylesh Wesley, a former PhD student in 51社区黑料Gender, Sexuality, & Women鈥檚 Studies, researched the impact of colonization on Coast Salish languages and cultures. Welsey鈥檚 article seeks to name transgender and two-spirit identities in the St贸:l玫 language.

We would love to hear about languages you speak. Learn more and join the conversation about language and gender by dropping by our booth on February 25.