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    Revision as of 11:17, 21 May 2021 by wikia:lgbta>Ddigi (adding links to terms)
    The uranian flag by Twitter user "gay_men_flag".
    An alternate uranian flag.

    Uranian is the term for a homosexual men, meaning a men, men-aligned and/or masculine-aligned person who is attracted to men, men-aligned and/or masculine-aligned people.

    This term appeared in the 19th century on behalf of the ancient goddess Aphrodite Urania, born of a man without the participation of a woman, who was called the patroness of inter-male love.

    Currently, the term has been revived as a designation for homosexual men and is one of many terms, for homosexual men and men-aligned people and is now one of multiple terms used to describe homosexual men, such as vincian and turian.

    It is generally used as a masculine equivalent of lesbian. The term is also sometimes used by neutral-aligned, abinary, or unaligned non-binary people who are attracted to men, men-aligned people, masculine-aligned people, and other non-binary people who self-identify as uranians.

    History

    The term was first published by German sexologist and activist Karl Heinrich Ulrichs in a series of five booklets collected under the title Forschungen über das Räthsel der mannmännlichen Liebe or The Riddle of Man–Manly Love.[1] Ulrichs developed his terminology before the first public use of the term homosexual. Later, another sexologist named Magnus Hirschfeld would use Ulrichs work to create the terms urning, a "male-bodied person with a female psyche" who is attracted to men and urningin (or uranierin, urnin, and urnigin), a "female-bodied person with a male psyche" who is attracted to women.[2] However, by the 1900s, the concept of "women urnings" had fallen out of use.[3]

    John Addington Symonds was the first person to use the term "Uranian" in the English language,[4] and its etymology through Ulrichs is credited to him. However, it has been argued that this usage of the word is unrelated to Ulrichs' coinage and was independently thought of among English speakers familiar with Plato's Symposium.

    The term would define a movement of primarily gay male artists and philosophers in the English-speaking world interested in the study of classics and who dabbled in pederastic poetry from the 1870s to the 1930s, including Oscar Wilde. The writings of this group are now known as Uranian poetry.[5]

    Flag

    Twitter user BelyaevValentin proposed a uranian flag on or before June 2020.[6] The flag is an adjusted version of the early flag of homosexual men, in which mirrored blue stripes denote male homosexuality and inter-male love, which in antiquity was described as sublime and heavenly..[7]

    An alternate uranian flag was created by Tumblr user beyond-mogai-pride-flags on February 19, 2021.[8]

    Etymology

    The word refers to a dialogue in Plato's Symposium on male eros or love. In the dialogue, Pausanias distinguishes between two types of love, symbolized by two different accounts of the birth of Aphrodite, the goddess of love:

    • Heavenly birth, born of Uranus or the heavens, a birth in which "the female has no part." Uranian Aphrodite is associated with a noble love for male youths and is the source of Karl Heinrich Ulrichs's term urning.
    • Common birth, as the daughter of Zeus and Dione. Dionic Aphrodite is associated with a common love which "is apt to be of women as well as of youths, and is of the body rather than of the soul." After Dione, Ulrichs gave the name dioning to men who are sexually attracted to women.

    Ulrichs interpreted Uranian love as leaving urnings with a "feminine soul."[9]

    References

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