棄名錯稱 (Chinese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "棄名錯稱" in Chinese language version.

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  • Sinclair-Palm, Julia. "It's Non-Existent": Haunting in Trans Youth Narratives about Naming. Occasional Paper Series. 2017-05-01, 2017 (37) [2022-04-23]. ISSN 2375-3668. (原始内容存档于2022-01-11). Originating in the trans community, the term "deadnaming" describes calling a trans person by their birth name after they have adopted a new name. The act of deadnaming has the effect of "outing," or making public, a trans person's identity. Deadnaming is sometimes accidental, as when a friend or family member is still adjusting to a trans person's new name and unintentionally calls them by their birth name. However, there are also many times when trans people are addressed by their birth name as a way to aggressively dismiss and reject their gender identity and new name. 

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  • Oh my days! It's the OED June 2021 update. Oxford English Dictionary. 2021-06-08 [2022-02-23]. (原始内容存档于2022-03-18) (英语). This update also adds a cluster of new entries reflecting wider discussion and understanding of gender—and especially trans—identities which does represent a fairly recent lexical development. Deadname as both noun and verb and the verbal noun deadnaming make their OED debut this quarter. The noun deadname is first recorded from a 2010 Twitter post, while the verb and deadnaming both date to 2013. 

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  • Reed, Christopher. Axiomatic (PDF). 2018-11-22 [2020-05-26]. (原始内容 (PDF)存档于2018-11-22). Pronouncing death sentences may fulfill fantasies of authority, but describing parts of anyone's history and experience as "dead" inhibits efforts toward self-acceptance and integration. 

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  • Sinclair-Palm, Julia. "It's Non-Existent": Haunting in Trans Youth Narratives about Naming. Occasional Paper Series. 2017-05-01, 2017 (37) [2022-04-23]. ISSN 2375-3668. (原始内容存档于2022-01-11). Originating in the trans community, the term "deadnaming" describes calling a trans person by their birth name after they have adopted a new name. The act of deadnaming has the effect of "outing," or making public, a trans person's identity. Deadnaming is sometimes accidental, as when a friend or family member is still adjusting to a trans person's new name and unintentionally calls them by their birth name. However, there are also many times when trans people are addressed by their birth name as a way to aggressively dismiss and reject their gender identity and new name. 
  • Freeman, Lauren; Stewart, Heather. Toward a Harm-Based Account of Microaggressions. Perspectives on Psychological Science. 2021-09, 16 (5): 1008–1023 [2022-04-23]. ISSN 1745-6916. PMID 34498530. S2CID 237454133. doi:10.1177/17456916211017099. (原始内容存档于2022-02-24). Such microaggressions consist in more than simply using the wrong name; rather, they cut to the core of and question the recipient’s identity and self-understanding. 
  • Crawford, Lucas. What's Next is the Past. A/B: Auto/Biography Studies. 2019-01-02, 34 (1): 147–150. ISSN 0898-9575. S2CID 188098200. doi:10.1080/08989575.2019.1542845. by insisting on the primacy of the present, by seeking to erase the past, or even by emotionally locating their 'real self' in the future, that elusive place where access (to transition, health care, housing, a livable wage, and so on) and social viability tend to appear more abundant.