TIME magazine has been criticized for using what many saw as a ludicrous set of pronouns to describe a 'Gender Queer' author in an article published this week.
The article referred to author Maia Kobabe, 33, who wrote the book 'Gender Queer: A Memoir', by using the 'e/em/eir' pronouns.
The use of the 'e/em/eir' pronouns sparked a massive backlash on Twitter, with professors, journalists and comedians all slamming the magazine for promoting 'unintelligible' words.
The article focused on the controversy surrounding Kobabe's book, which describes and illustrate sexual acts, and came a day after a judge in Virginia dismissed a lawsuit that had sought to declare 'Gender Queer' as obscene for children and to restrict its distribution to minors.
'In the 2019 illustrated graphic memoir, Kobabe, who uses e/em/eir pronouns, explores eir process of coming out as nonbinary and asexual,' the TIME journalist wrote.
The TIME magazine Twitter account also promoted the article and tweeted: 'TIME spoke to 'Gender Queer' author and illustrator Maia Kobabe on about eir work, the efforts to restrict access to eir writing, and what ey make of the current cultural moment.'
Social media users - from the co-founder of Wikipedia to journalists and authors - slammed TIME magazine and virginia accused the publication of using 'made-up' pronouns to suit the 'whims of a narcissist'.
Douglas Murray, the author of 'The War on the West', tweeted: 'Nobody has time for this.
Nobody.'
TIME magazine has been criticized for using what many saw as a ludicrous set of pronouns to describe a 'Gender Queer' author in an article published this week
The article referred to author Maia Kobabe (left), who wrote the book 'Gender Queer: A Memoir', by using the 'e/em/eir' pronouns
The use of the 'e/em/eir' pronouns sparked a massive backlash on Twitter, with professors, journalists and comedians all slamming the magazine for promoting 'unintelligible' words
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS news" data-version="2" id="mol-caa03b70-2ab1-11ed-be71-2f2681e03deb" website magazine is ridiculed for using 'e/em/eir' pronouns in piece