fbpx
Wikipedia

Sissy

Sissy (derived from sister), also sissy baby, sissy boy, sissy man, sissy pants, etc., is a pejorative term for a boy or man who does not demonstrate masculine traits, and shows possible signs of fragility. Generally, sissy implies a lack of courage, strength, athleticism, coordination, testosterone, male libido, and stoicism, all of which have typically been associated with masculinity and considered important to the male role in Western society. A man might also be considered a sissy for being interested in typically feminine hobbies or employment (e.g., being fond of fashion), displaying effeminate behavior (e.g., using hair products, hydrating products, or displaying limp wrists), being unathletic or being homosexual.[1]

Sissy is, approximately, the male converse of tomboy (a girl with masculine traits or interests), but carries more strongly negative connotations. Research published in 2015 suggests that the terms are asymmetrical in their power to stigmatize: sissy is almost always pejorative and conveys greater severity, while tomboy rarely causes as much concern but also elicits pressure to conform to social expectations.[2] In some communities, especially ones whose members are prominently part of Generation Z, highly effeminate males are referred to as "femboys" (feminine boy), a term which aims to provide a way to refer to effeminate males without negative connotations.

Affectionate diminutive

Sissy is also a term of endearment used as a diminutive for the female given name Cecilia. Its usage as a diminutive for Cecilia dates back to at least the late 19th century. Its usage is explicitly called out in Charles Dickens' Hard Times: For These Times[3] (first published in 1854), and remained in common usage at least in the United States until the 1950s and 1960s[citation needed], although it has since fallen out of favor (coinciding with the rise in its usage as a pejorative).

History and usage

The term sissy has historically been used among school children as a "relentlessly negative" insult, implying immaturity and gender or sexual deviance.[4] It has been identified as sexist in guidance issued to schools in the United Kingdom[5] and described as "just as unacceptable as racist and homophobic language."[6] The terms gender creative,[7] pink boy,[8] and tomgirl[9] have been suggested as polite alternatives. The Japanese word bishōnen (literally "beautiful youth") and the Korean word kkonminam (literally "flower boy") are also polite terms for a man or boy with gentle or feminine attributes.

The word sissy in its original meaning of "sister" entered American English around 1840-1850 and acquired its pejorative meaning around 1885–1890; the verb sissify appeared in 1900–1905.[10] In comparison, the word tomboy is approximately three centuries older, dating to 1545–55.[11]

By the 1930s, "there was no more damning insult than to be called a sissy" and the word was widely used by American football coaches and sports writers to disparage rival teams and encourage ferocious player behavior.[12] The use of the word sissy was "ubiquitous" among delinquent American youth of the 1930s; the term was used to provoke boys to join gangs, demean boys who violated group norms, force compliance with the mandates of masculinity, and justify violence (including sexual violence) against younger and weaker children.[13] Good students were taunted as sissies and clothing styles associated with higher social classes were demeaned as sissified. Among members of a Detroit, Michigan youth gang in 1938–39, sissy was "the ultimate slur" used to tease and taunt other boys, as a rationalization for violence against rivals, and as an excuse for not observing the dicta of middle-class decorum and morality.[13]

By the late 1980s, some men began to reclaim the term sissy for themselves.[14] The spelling variation cissy was used in British English, at least prior to the mid 1970s.[15] In the United States, the Comedy Central television series South Park inverted its meaning in a 2014 episode titled "The Cissy", which lampooned the controversy over transgender students' use of school restrooms;[16] in the episode, a restroom initially designated for use by transgender students is later re-designated as "the cissy bathroom" for use by transphobic cisgender students.

As threats to masculine dominance

Sissies are sometimes perceived as threats to masculine power. For example, in 2018, official Chinese state media derided "sissy pants" young men (who use makeup, are slender, and wear androgynous clothing) as part of a "sickly" culture that threatened the future of the nation by undermining its militaristic image.[17][18] In 2021, China's Ministry of Education issued guidelines for the "cultivation of students' masculinity" to "prevent the feminization of male adolescents" through sports, physical education, and "health education" in schools.[19][20]

In 2021 the National Radio and Television Administration of China added a ban on "sissy men and other abnormal esthetics" to its rules using the offensive term niang pao.[21]

In gender and LGBT studies

In his The "Sissy Boy Syndrome" and the Development of Homosexuality (1987), the sexologist Richard Green compared two groups of boys: one group was conventionally masculine; the other group, who Green called "feminine boys" and other children called "sissy", engaged in doll play and other behavior typical for girls.[22] In his 15-year longitudinal study, Green looked at cross-gender behavior in boys who later turned out to be transgender, or homosexual as well as a control group, and analyzed such features as interest in sports, playroom toy preferences, doll-play fantasy, physical behavior ("acting like a girl" vs rough-and-tumble play), cross-dressing, and psychological behavior,[22]: 21–29  using tests, questionnaires, interviews, and follow-ups. He also looked at the influence of parental relationships[22]: 353–369  and reaction to atypical behavior. Later follow-ups found that, ultimately, 34 of the feminine or "sissy" boys developed into gay or bisexual men, whereas only one of the control group did. Analysis of the nature/nurture issue was inconclusive.[22]: 385 

The term sissyphobia denotes a negative cultural reaction against "sissy boys" thought prevalent in 1974.[23] Sissyphobia has more recently been used in some queer studies;[24] other authors in this latter area have proposed effeminiphobia,[25] femiphobia,[26] femmephobia, or effemimania[27][28] as alternative terms.

Gregory M. Herek wrote that sissyphobia arises as a combination of misogyny and homophobia.[29] Communication scholar Shinsuke Eguchi (2011) stated:

The discourse of straight-acting produces and reproduces anti-femininity and homophobia (Clarkson. 2006). For example, feminine gay men are often labeled "fem," "bitchy," "pissy," "sissy," or "queen" (e.g., Christian, 2005; Clarkson, 2006; Payne,2007). They are perceived as if they perform like "women," spurring straight-acting gay men to have negative attitudes toward feminine-acting gay men (Clarkson, 2006; Payne, 2007;Ward, 2000). This is called sissyphobia (Bergling, 2001). Kimmel (1996) supports that "masculinity has been (historically) defined as the flight from women and the repudiation of femininity" (p. 123). Thus, sissyphobia plays as the communication strategy for straight-acting gay men to justify and empower their masculinity. (p. 38).[30]

Eguchi added, "I wonder how 'sissyphobia' particularly plays into the dynamic of domestic violence processes in the straight-acting and effeminate-acting male same-sex coupling pattern." (p. 53).[30]

In sexual subcultures

In the BDSM practice of forced feminization, the male bottom undergoing cross-dressing may be called a sissy as a form of erotic humiliation, which may elicit guilt and/or sexual arousal.

In paraphilic infantilism, a sissy baby is a man who likes to play the role of a baby girl.[31]

See also

References

  1. ^ Dalzell, Tom (2009) [1st pub. 1937]. The Routledge Dictionary of Modern American Slang and Unconventional English. London, New York: Taylor & Francis. p. 885. ISBN 978-0-415-37182-7. OCLC 758181675. Retrieved 19 March 2017. an effeminate boy or man, especially a homosexual; a coward. US, 1879.
  2. ^ Compton, D. and Knox, E. (2015), "Sissies and tomboys." The International Encyclopedia of Human Sexuality, pp 1115–1354
  3. ^ Dickens, Charles (June 2021). "Chapter IX, Sissy's Progress". Hard Times: For These Times.
  4. ^ Thorne, B. (1993). Gender Play: Girls and Boys in School. Rutgers University Press, pp. 115-116. ISBN 978-0-8135-1923-4.
  5. ^ Goodfellow, M., "New guidelines released to 'counter gender stereotyping' in UK schools". The Independent, 19 October 2015.
  6. ^ Institute of Physics, "Opening Doors: A guide to good practice in countering gender stereotyping in schools" 2020-02-14 at the Wayback Machine. www.iop.org, 2015.
  7. ^ Duron, L. (2013), "Raising My Rainbow".
  8. ^ Hoffman, Sara "My son, the pink boy". Salon. February 22, 2011. Retrieved 10-Mar-2016.
  9. ^ Jeremy Asher Lynch. "About Tom Girl Movie". www.tomgirlmovie.com. Retrieved 10-Mar-2016.
  10. ^ Random House Dictionary, p. 1787.
  11. ^ Random House Dictionary p. 1993.
  12. ^ Oriard, M. (2001), King Football: Sport and Spectacle in the Golden Age of Radio and Newsreels. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0807855454.
  13. ^ a b Grant, J. (2014), The Boy Problem: Educating Boys in Urban America 1870-1970. Johns Hopkins University Press, New York, pp. 143-144. ISBN 978-1-4214-1259-7.
  14. ^ Pronger, B. (1990), The Arena of Masculinity: Sports, Homosexuality, and the Meaning of Sex, New York, St Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0312062934
  15. ^ The World Book Dictionary (1976 Edition), Chicago, IL, Doubleday & Company, Inc., pp. 376 and 1951. ISBN 978-0-5290-5326-8.
  16. ^ Steinmetz, K. (2015). "Everything You Need to Know About the Debate Over Transgender People and Bathrooms". Time.
  17. ^ Kilbride, Jack; Xiao, Bang (14 September 2018). "China's 'sissy pants phenomenon': Beijing fears negative impact of 'sickly culture' on teenagers". ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). from the original on Jan 24, 2019. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  18. ^ Dixon, Robyn (2019-04-26). "To fight K-pop's influence in China, a club teaches young boys to be alpha males". Los Angeles Times. Beijing. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  19. ^ Allen, Kerry (4 February 2021). "China promotes education drive to make boys more 'manly'". BBC News (British Broadcasting Corporation). Retrieved 21 Feb 2021.
  20. ^ "关于政协十三届全国委员会第三次会议第4404号(教育类410号)提案答复的函 - 中华人民共和国教育部政府门户网站". moe.gov.cn. from the original on Nov 30, 2022.
  21. ^ Elliott, Josh K. (September 3, 2021). "China bans 'sissy' and 'effeminate' men under new macho media rules". Global News. from the original on 15 November 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  22. ^ a b c d Green, Richard (1987). The "Sissy Boy Syndrome" and the Development of Homosexuality. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-03696-1. OCLC 898802573. Retrieved 21 March 2017. Other children called them 'sissy.' ...Our boys would have preferred being girls. They liked to dress in girls' or women's clothes. They preferred Barbie dolls to trucks. Their playmates were girls. When they played 'mommy-daddy' games, they were mommy. And they avoided rough-and-tumble play and sports, the usual reasons for the epithet 'sissy.'
  23. ^ Oliven, John F. (1974). Clinical sexuality: a manual for the physician and the professions (3rd ed.). Lippincott. p. 110. ISBN 0-397-50329-6.
  24. ^ Bergling, Tim (2001). Sissyphobia: Gay Men and Effeminate Behavior. Routledge. ISBN 1-56023-990-5.
  25. ^ Fellows, Will (2004). A Passion to Preserve: Gay Men as Keepers of Culture. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 280. ISBN 9780299196837. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
  26. ^ Bailey, Michael (1995). "Gender Identity", The Lives of Lesbians, Gays, and Bisexuals, p. 71–93. New York: Harcourt Brace.
  27. ^ Harrison, Kelby (2013). Sexual Deceit: The Ethics of Passing. Lexington Books. p. 10. ISBN 978-0739177051.
  28. ^ Serano, Julia (2007). Whipping Girl. Berkeley: Seal Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-1580051545.
  29. ^ Wilkinson, Sue; Kitzinger, Celia (1993-02-08). Heterosexuality: A Feminism & Psychology Reader. SAGE. p. 164. ISBN 9781446229576.
  30. ^ a b Eguchi, S. (2011). "Negotiating Sissyphobia: A Critical/Interpretive Analysis of One "Femme" Gay Asian Body in the Heteronormative World". The Journal of Men's Studies. 19: 37–56. doi:10.3149/jms.1901.37. S2CID 147257629.
  31. ^ Taormino, Tristan (2002-08-13). . Village Voice. Archived from the original on Aug 31, 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-10.

Sources

Further reading

  • Padva, Gilad and Talmon, Miri (2008). Gotta Have An Effeminate Heart: The Politics of Effeminacy and Sissyness in a Nostalgic Israeli TV Musical. Feminist Media Studies 8(1), 69–84.
  • Padva, Gilad (2005). Radical Sissies and Stereotyped Fairies in Laurie Lynd's The Fairy Who Didn't Want To Be A Fairy Anymore. Cinema Journal 45(1), 66–78.
  • Jana Katz, Martina Kock, Sandra Ortmann, Jana Schenk and Tomka Weiss (2011). Sissy Boyz. Queer Performance. thealit FRAUEN.KULTUR.LABOR, Bremen.

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of sissy at Wiktionary

sissy, other, uses, disambiguation, sissies, redirects, here, band, sissies, derived, from, sister, also, sissy, baby, sissy, sissy, sissy, pants, pejorative, term, does, demonstrate, masculine, traits, shows, possible, signs, fragility, generally, sissy, impl. For other uses see Sissy disambiguation Sissies redirects here For the band see The Sissies Sissy derived from sister also sissy baby sissy boy sissy man sissy pants etc is a pejorative term for a boy or man who does not demonstrate masculine traits and shows possible signs of fragility Generally sissy implies a lack of courage strength athleticism coordination testosterone male libido and stoicism all of which have typically been associated with masculinity and considered important to the male role in Western society A man might also be considered a sissy for being interested in typically feminine hobbies or employment e g being fond of fashion displaying effeminate behavior e g using hair products hydrating products or displaying limp wrists being unathletic or being homosexual 1 Sissy is approximately the male converse of tomboy a girl with masculine traits or interests but carries more strongly negative connotations Research published in 2015 suggests that the terms are asymmetrical in their power to stigmatize sissy is almost always pejorative and conveys greater severity while tomboy rarely causes as much concern but also elicits pressure to conform to social expectations 2 In some communities especially ones whose members are prominently part of Generation Z highly effeminate males are referred to as femboys feminine boy a term which aims to provide a way to refer to effeminate males without negative connotations Contents 1 Affectionate diminutive 2 History and usage 3 As threats to masculine dominance 4 In gender and LGBT studies 5 In sexual subcultures 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksAffectionate diminutive EditSissy is also a term of endearment used as a diminutive for the female given name Cecilia Its usage as a diminutive for Cecilia dates back to at least the late 19th century Its usage is explicitly called out in Charles Dickens Hard Times For These Times 3 first published in 1854 and remained in common usage at least in the United States until the 1950s and 1960s citation needed although it has since fallen out of favor coinciding with the rise in its usage as a pejorative History and usage EditThe term sissy has historically been used among school children as a relentlessly negative insult implying immaturity and gender or sexual deviance 4 It has been identified as sexist in guidance issued to schools in the United Kingdom 5 and described as just as unacceptable as racist and homophobic language 6 The terms gender creative 7 pink boy 8 and tomgirl 9 have been suggested as polite alternatives The Japanese word bishōnen code jpn promoted to code ja literally beautiful youth and the Korean word kkonminam code kor promoted to code ko literally flower boy are also polite terms for a man or boy with gentle or feminine attributes The word sissy in its original meaning of sister entered American English around 1840 1850 and acquired its pejorative meaning around 1885 1890 the verb sissify appeared in 1900 1905 10 In comparison the word tomboy is approximately three centuries older dating to 1545 55 11 By the 1930s there was no more damning insult than to be called a sissy and the word was widely used by American football coaches and sports writers to disparage rival teams and encourage ferocious player behavior 12 The use of the word sissy was ubiquitous among delinquent American youth of the 1930s the term was used to provoke boys to join gangs demean boys who violated group norms force compliance with the mandates of masculinity and justify violence including sexual violence against younger and weaker children 13 Good students were taunted as sissies and clothing styles associated with higher social classes were demeaned as sissified Among members of a Detroit Michigan youth gang in 1938 39 sissy was the ultimate slur used to tease and taunt other boys as a rationalization for violence against rivals and as an excuse for not observing the dicta of middle class decorum and morality 13 By the late 1980s some men began to reclaim the term sissy for themselves 14 The spelling variation cissy was used in British English at least prior to the mid 1970s 15 In the United States the Comedy Central television series South Park inverted its meaning in a 2014 episode titled The Cissy which lampooned the controversy over transgender students use of school restrooms 16 in the episode a restroom initially designated for use by transgender students is later re designated as the cissy bathroom for use by transphobic cisgender students As threats to masculine dominance EditSissies are sometimes perceived as threats to masculine power For example in 2018 official Chinese state media derided sissy pants young men who use makeup are slender and wear androgynous clothing as part of a sickly culture that threatened the future of the nation by undermining its militaristic image 17 18 In 2021 China s Ministry of Education issued guidelines for the cultivation of students masculinity to prevent the feminization of male adolescents through sports physical education and health education in schools 19 20 In 2021 the National Radio and Television Administration of China added a ban on sissy men and other abnormal esthetics to its rules using the offensive term niang pao code zho promoted to code zh 21 In gender and LGBT studies Edit Sissyphobia redirects here For the book see Sissyphobia Gay Men and Effeminate Behavior See also Gender dysphoria and Gender dysphoria in children In his The Sissy Boy Syndrome and the Development of Homosexuality 1987 the sexologist Richard Green compared two groups of boys one group was conventionally masculine the other group who Green called feminine boys and other children called sissy engaged in doll play and other behavior typical for girls 22 In his 15 year longitudinal study Green looked at cross gender behavior in boys who later turned out to be transgender or homosexual as well as a control group and analyzed such features as interest in sports playroom toy preferences doll play fantasy physical behavior acting like a girl vs rough and tumble play cross dressing and psychological behavior 22 21 29 using tests questionnaires interviews and follow ups He also looked at the influence of parental relationships 22 353 369 and reaction to atypical behavior Later follow ups found that ultimately 3 4 of the feminine or sissy boys developed into gay or bisexual men whereas only one of the control group did Analysis of the nature nurture issue was inconclusive 22 385 The term sissyphobia denotes a negative cultural reaction against sissy boys thought prevalent in 1974 23 Sissyphobia has more recently been used in some queer studies 24 other authors in this latter area have proposed effeminiphobia 25 femiphobia 26 femmephobia or effemimania 27 28 as alternative terms Gregory M Herek wrote that sissyphobia arises as a combination of misogyny and homophobia 29 Communication scholar Shinsuke Eguchi 2011 stated The discourse of straight acting produces and reproduces anti femininity and homophobia Clarkson 2006 For example feminine gay men are often labeled fem bitchy pissy sissy or queen e g Christian 2005 Clarkson 2006 Payne 2007 They are perceived as if they perform like women spurring straight acting gay men to have negative attitudes toward feminine acting gay men Clarkson 2006 Payne 2007 Ward 2000 This is called sissyphobia Bergling 2001 Kimmel 1996 supports that masculinity has been historically defined as the flight from women and the repudiation of femininity p 123 Thus sissyphobia plays as the communication strategy for straight acting gay men to justify and empower their masculinity p 38 30 Eguchi added I wonder how sissyphobia particularly plays into the dynamic of domestic violence processes in the straight acting and effeminate acting male same sex coupling pattern p 53 30 In sexual subcultures EditIn the BDSM practice of forced feminization the male bottom undergoing cross dressing may be called a sissy as a form of erotic humiliation which may elicit guilt and or sexual arousal In paraphilic infantilism a sissy baby is a man who likes to play the role of a baby girl 31 See also EditButch and femme Cuckoldry as a fetish Effeminacy Feminization activity Girly girl Molly house Pinafore eroticism Queer heterosexuality Sexism Tomboy Toxic masculinity Trans bashing TransphobiaReferences Edit Dalzell Tom 2009 1st pub 1937 The Routledge Dictionary of Modern American Slang and Unconventional English London New York Taylor amp Francis p 885 ISBN 978 0 415 37182 7 OCLC 758181675 Retrieved 19 March 2017 an effeminate boy or man especially a homosexual a coward US 1879 Compton D and Knox E 2015 Sissies and tomboys The International Encyclopedia of Human Sexuality pp 1115 1354 Dickens Charles June 2021 Chapter IX Sissy s Progress Hard Times For These Times Thorne B 1993 Gender Play Girls and Boys in School Rutgers University Press pp 115 116 ISBN 978 0 8135 1923 4 Goodfellow M New guidelines released to counter gender stereotyping in UK schools The Independent 19 October 2015 Institute of Physics Opening Doors A guide to good practice in countering gender stereotyping in schools Archived 2020 02 14 at the Wayback Machine www iop org 2015 Duron L 2013 Raising My Rainbow Hoffman Sara My son the pink boy Salon February 22 2011 Retrieved 10 Mar 2016 Jeremy Asher Lynch About Tom Girl Movie www tomgirlmovie com Retrieved 10 Mar 2016 Random House Dictionary p 1787 Random House Dictionary p 1993 Oriard M 2001 King Football Sport and Spectacle in the Golden Age of Radio and Newsreels University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807855454 a b Grant J 2014 The Boy Problem Educating Boys in Urban America 1870 1970 Johns Hopkins University Press New York pp 143 144 ISBN 978 1 4214 1259 7 Pronger B 1990 The Arena of Masculinity Sports Homosexuality and the Meaning of Sex New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0312062934 The World Book Dictionary 1976 Edition Chicago IL Doubleday amp Company Inc pp 376 and 1951 ISBN 978 0 5290 5326 8 Steinmetz K 2015 Everything You Need to Know About the Debate Over Transgender People and Bathrooms Time Kilbride Jack Xiao Bang 14 September 2018 China s sissy pants phenomenon Beijing fears negative impact of sickly culture on teenagers ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on Jan 24 2019 Retrieved 1 July 2019 Dixon Robyn 2019 04 26 To fight K pop s influence in China a club teaches young boys to be alpha males Los Angeles Times Beijing Retrieved 1 July 2019 Allen Kerry 4 February 2021 China promotes education drive to make boys more manly BBC News British Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 21 Feb 2021 关于政协十三届全国委员会第三次会议第4404号 教育类410号 提案答复的函 中华人民共和国教育部政府门户网站 moe gov cn Archived from the original on Nov 30 2022 Elliott Josh K September 3 2021 China bans sissy and effeminate men under new macho media rules Global News Archived from the original on 15 November 2021 Retrieved 15 November 2021 a b c d Green Richard 1987 The Sissy Boy Syndrome and the Development of Homosexuality Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 03696 1 OCLC 898802573 Retrieved 21 March 2017 Other children called them sissy Our boys would have preferred being girls They liked to dress in girls or women s clothes They preferred Barbie dolls to trucks Their playmates were girls When they played mommy daddy games they were mommy And they avoided rough and tumble play and sports the usual reasons for the epithet sissy Oliven John F 1974 Clinical sexuality a manual for the physician and the professions 3rd ed Lippincott p 110 ISBN 0 397 50329 6 Bergling Tim 2001 Sissyphobia Gay Men and Effeminate Behavior Routledge ISBN 1 56023 990 5 Fellows Will 2004 A Passion to Preserve Gay Men as Keepers of Culture Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press p 280 ISBN 9780299196837 Retrieved 2012 02 10 Bailey Michael 1995 Gender Identity The Lives of Lesbians Gays and Bisexuals p 71 93 New York Harcourt Brace Harrison Kelby 2013 Sexual Deceit The Ethics of Passing Lexington Books p 10 ISBN 978 0739177051 Serano Julia 2007 Whipping Girl Berkeley Seal Press p 133 ISBN 978 1580051545 Wilkinson Sue Kitzinger Celia 1993 02 08 Heterosexuality A Feminism amp Psychology Reader SAGE p 164 ISBN 9781446229576 a b Eguchi S 2011 Negotiating Sissyphobia A Critical Interpretive Analysis of One Femme Gay Asian Body in the Heteronormative World The Journal of Men s Studies 19 37 56 doi 10 3149 jms 1901 37 S2CID 147257629 Taormino Tristan 2002 08 13 Still in Diapers Village Voice Archived from the original on Aug 31 2012 Retrieved 2012 02 10 Sources EditRandom House Dictionary of the English Language Second Edition Unabridged Random House New York 1987 ISBN 978 0 3945 0050 8Further reading EditPadva Gilad and Talmon Miri 2008 Gotta Have An Effeminate Heart The Politics of Effeminacy and Sissyness in a Nostalgic Israeli TV Musical Feminist Media Studies 8 1 69 84 Padva Gilad 2005 Radical Sissies and Stereotyped Fairies in Laurie Lynd s The Fairy Who Didn t Want To Be A Fairy Anymore Cinema Journal 45 1 66 78 Jana Katz Martina Kock Sandra Ortmann Jana Schenk and Tomka Weiss 2011 Sissy Boyz Queer Performance thealit FRAUEN KULTUR LABOR Bremen External links Edit Look up sissy in Wiktionary the free dictionary The dictionary definition of sissy at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sissy amp oldid 1145567331, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.