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In the decades since the Stonewall riots of 1969, gay
and lesbian lives and lifestyles have seen many changes. In the U.S.,
the last Sunday in June is Gay and Lesbian Pride Day. Many members
of the LGBT community wear their pride openly and literally, inking
symbols of their orientation and lifestyle into their skin. These
can be stand-alone designs or images worn in conjunction with other
pieces of skin art. |
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AIDS Awareness Ribbon
Conceived of in the early 1990s as a symbol of commitment in the
fight against AIDS, the red ribbon was controversial when it first
appeared. Now it is readily recognized and many other causes have
adopted singularly colored ribbons in their own awareness campaigns. |
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Gender Symbols
The astrological symbols for Mars (circle with an arrow coming out
of the upper right) and Venus (circle with a cross below it) have
long been used to stand for male and female. Some gays and lesbians
have adapted these as gay Pride symbols by having them tattooed
in pairs, with the circle interlocking. Bisexual people have used
them in mixed trios, or blended the two shapes so that the arrow
and cross are coming off one circle. The astrological sign for
Mercury is traditionally the symbol used for transgender. This
sign has a crescent on top of the circle and a cross below it.
Hermaphroditus, the child of Hermes and Aphrodite, had both male
and female sexual organs. |
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Labrys
This double-edged ax comes from Greek mythology, where it is associated
with the goddess Demeter, and with the Amazons. Not only were the
Amazons known as fierce warriors, their culture supposedly had
two queens, one who would lead the battles and one who would stay
behind to maintain rule. |
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Lambda
This Greek alphabet letter was chosen as a sign of liberation by
gay activists in the early 1970s and is still used to this day.
The Greeks felt this letter signified unity. Some activists felt
it was appropriate as this character is used in chemistry and physics
to stand for energy. |
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Pink Triangle
This emblem was used during World War II by the Nazis to identify
homosexuals in the concentration camps. This symbol was reclaimed
by the gay community in the 1970s for use in the struggle for gay
rights. |
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Rainbow Flag
The original flag design by San Francisco artist Gilbert Baker contained
eight colors, representing the diversity of the queer community:
hot pink for sex, red for life, orange for healing, yellow for
sun, green for nature, turquoise for art, indigo for harmony and
violet for spirit. Due to constraints of flag-making, the indigo
became royal blue and the hot pink and violet were dropped. Now,
the six color rainbow has been adapted to create gay Pride symbols
of all sorts, and you can take any image you like and color it
this way to turn it into an emblem that can be recognized as being
connected to gay Pride.
This article previously appeared on www.bellaonline.com. |
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