A Quote by Bat for Lashes

I quite like androgyny. — © Bat for Lashes
I quite like androgyny.
the term 'androgyny' ... defines a condition under which the characteristics of the sexes, and the human impulses expressed by men and women, are not rigidly assigned. Androgyny seeks to liberate the individual from the confines of the appropriate.
For a long time after childhood ended and before I expressed my femininity through androgyny, I really didn't like looking in the mirror much because I just felt like I wasn't attractive.
Homosexuality, like androgyny, might be an instinctive racial response to overpopulation, crowding, and stress. Both flourish when empire reaches its apogee.
I don't think I look like a boy, but I don't think androgyny is such a bad thing.
There is a certain androgyny to my appeal.
My style is scruffy with a touch of androgyny.
Wearing one hoop earring and playing with the androgyny - that's who I am. That's what I like to do. And I feel the world should see that. I'm not going to put a shield up or be more feminine to make people feel comfortable.
I experimented with fashion as it being more like art, allowing what I wore to express what I was feeling on the inside. Androgyny, rock culture, and grunge - they definitely had an effect on the things that made me feel cool and comfortable.
Androgyny suggests a spirit of reconciliation between the sexes.
I think that androgyny is so amazing. Men's shows I can look at and say, 'I would wear that.' But there's things I see at Nina Ricci, and I'm like, 'They need to make that in men's,' or 'I want those pants.' Everything is inspiring.
I was always into very androgynous things. Guys, girls... I'm into androgyny in general.
I was born and raised in Manhattan; I didn't realize that I, in all my androgyny, was a freak to the rest of this country.
In a sense I portray myself in a very androgynous way, and I love androgyny.
As to sex, the original pleasure, I cannot recommend too highly the advantages of androgyny.
I've always been interested in androgyny and a lot of my work explores gender identity.
I grew up at a time with androgyny in the 1980s; it was easy to pass under the radar as a gay may.
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