Difference between revisions of "Category:Status Roles"

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Status roles are a self given title that represent some aspect of a person's being.  Many status roles indicate some kind of relationship status and thus require a level of [[consent]] to be practiced.  Unlike [[Role-Play]] status roles are generally adopted on a consistent basis, not simply for the duration of a scene, though many role players may adopt a status role for the purpose of a role play scene. On some level, every one of these terms being defined indicates some level of [[role essentialism]] and in many cases language choice may presume gender, though status roles are very rarely gender exclusionary.
 
Status roles are a self given title that represent some aspect of a person's being.  Many status roles indicate some kind of relationship status and thus require a level of [[consent]] to be practiced.  Unlike [[Role-Play]] status roles are generally adopted on a consistent basis, not simply for the duration of a scene, though many role players may adopt a status role for the purpose of a role play scene. On some level, every one of these terms being defined indicates some level of [[role essentialism]] and in many cases language choice may presume gender, though status roles are very rarely gender exclusionary.
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Status roles are broken into three sub categories.
  
 
== [[:Non-Binary Status Roles| Non-Binary]] ==
 
== [[:Non-Binary Status Roles| Non-Binary]] ==
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Non-Binary status roles indicate that the role does not necessarily conform to a dominant or submissive role within the context of [[:Category: Power Exchange| power exchange]] [[:category: Relationships| relationships]].
  
 
*[[Switch]]
 
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[[Category:D-Types]]
 
[[Category:D-Types]]
 
[[Category:s-types]]
 
[[Category:s-types]]
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[[Category: Power Exchange]]

Revision as of 18:36, 18 March 2014

Status roles are a self given title that represent some aspect of a person's being. Many status roles indicate some kind of relationship status and thus require a level of consent to be practiced. Unlike Role-Play status roles are generally adopted on a consistent basis, not simply for the duration of a scene, though many role players may adopt a status role for the purpose of a role play scene. On some level, every one of these terms being defined indicates some level of role essentialism and in many cases language choice may presume gender, though status roles are very rarely gender exclusionary.

Status roles are broken into three sub categories.

Non-Binary

Non-Binary status roles indicate that the role does not necessarily conform to a dominant or submissive role within the context of power exchange relationships.

D-types

s-types

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