(that you can read for free)
Bisexual Politics: theories, queries, and visions, Naomi Tucker, (1995)
Bisexuality: a reader and sourcebook, Thomas Geller, (1990)
Women and bisexuality, Sue George, (1993)
View From Another Closet: Exploring Bisexuality in Women, Janet Bode (1976)
Bisexuality: The Psychology and Politics of an Invisible Minority, Beth Firestein, (1996)
Closer to Home: Bisexuality & Feminism, Elizabeth Reba Weise, (1992)
Bi Any Other Name: Bisexuals Speak Out, Loraine Hutchins & Lani Ka'ahumanu, (1991)
The Very Inside: An Anthology of Writings By Asian and Pacific Islander Lesbian and Bisexual Women, Sharon Lim-Hing, (1994)
i just realized smth and idk if it'll make sense but
if 'bi' as in bisexual means two, and 'tri' as in triangle means three, then surely this symbol is inconsistent (yes it's actually just meant to be two triangles and the third one isn't real, but this is about the number of sides, just stay with me here)
that being said, just like how bilingual doesn't mean there's only two languages, bisexual doesn't mean there's only two genders
bisexuality is inclusive ─ boys, girls, other, all, in-between, neither
bisexuality is not limited to its prefix
bi flag colorpicked from the original '80s triangle symbol!
Happy bisexual visibility month 💙💜💖
As a nonbinary bisexual in a long term relationship with another nonbinary bisexual this is important and I’m v tired of the biphobia and transphobia coming from the “bisexual people are only attracted to (cis) men and women” take I’m sure we’ve all seen too often
Etsy | Patreon
Controversal opinion, I don't think it's really ever appropriate for people to theorize about groups they're not apart of.
That's how you get things like "non binary people aren't oppressed" and "trans men are exactly like cis men in every way and therefore have male privilege" and "asexuals aren't LGBT" and "bisexuals have straight privilege" like maybe like, include the group you're theorizing about to talk about their experiences because it always ends up exclusionary otherwise.
One of my posts about last year's Poison Ivy bi erasure debacle got a like again, and man...
You cannot convince me that fandoms don't have a problem with bisexual people, when the response to a prominent bisexual character seemingly having their bisexuality erased by a new writer calling her a lesbian was calls for celebration, and telling upset bisexual fans to get over it, or trying to gaslight them with claims that "Ivy was never bisexual in the main continuity" despite evidence to the contrary.
Like, fandom has had a biphobia problem for a long time, but I think that incident was probably the most blatant example of it I've ever seen.
Like, look at it
It looks like a sunset
just
#the sky is bi confirmed
☽☾ bi blog ✗ learn ur historyop (pride-cat, whom you can call aster) goes by he/she and identifies as butch (but is often inactive) icon credit: n7punk | header credit: mybigraphics
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