“Small and petite, androgynous, many houseplants”: The pressure to look nonbinary




Jaaksi, Vilja

PublisherSAGE Publications

2025

 European Journal of Women's Studies

European Journal of Women's Studies

13505068251352641

1350-5068

1461-7420

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1177/13505068251352641

https://doi.org/10.1177/13505068251352641

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/499147188



Recent theorizations of nonbinary gender often highlight the radical queerness of the category. This article counters this trend by attending to the ways the nonbinary category is often felt as restrictive rather than liberatory. Drawing on interviews and media diaries with Finnish nonbinary people, it explores the pressures many nonbinary people feel to conform to a specific way of looking nonbinary. The article identifies the figure of an androgynous nonbinary person which functions as the yardstick for being intelligibly nonbinary. The features of this figure—characterized by masculine androgyny, thinness, and whiteness—allow those who embody them to be recognized as nonbinary in broader society, while simultaneously excluding others from such recognition. The article traces how this figure emerges on social media, but does not remain an online phenomenon. Building on the work of Judith Butler, the article argues that while norms around nonbinary gender have shifted, granting certain nonbinary people access to cultural intelligibility and recognition, others remain abject, outside the realm of recognizability


This research has received funding from the Strategic Research Council at the Research Council of Finland, Grant Nos 327392 and 352520.


Last updated on 25/08/2025 01:21:11 PM