Black and white photo of a young Pauli Murray wearing a hat and smiling..

Courtesy of the Schlesinger Library at Harvard University


Context about Pronouns & Gender

Drawings of people standing next to each other with example pronouns beneath them.

Personal pronouns are a way to refer to ourselves and to others.

The most common personal pronouns in the English language are she/her/hers, he/him/his, and they/them/theirs. Many people use other pronouns, such as ze/hir/hirs, which are referred to as “neopronouns.”

Graphic design with this text: Appearance is not gender. Gender is not pronouns. Pronouns are not appearance.

Some people do not use any pronouns and instead prefer to be referred to by their names, titles, or other monikers. Some people use more than one set of pronouns interchangeably.

Pronouns do not necessarily indicate a person’s gender identity. Regardless of pronouns, someone may self-describe as a woman, man, both, neither, or something else.

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"I don't know whether I'm right or whether society (or some medical authority) is right. I only know how I feel and what makes me happy. This conflict rises up to knock me down at every apex I reach in my career. And because the laws of society do not protect me, I'm exposed to any enemy or person who may or may not want to hurt me."

- Pauli Murray in a letter to their Aunt Pauline in 1943


Pronouns, Gender, & Pauli Murray

Photo of young Pauli Murray smiling and looking to the side. Photo has a handwritten note that says: The Imp! 1931

Courtesy of the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard

When the Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray lived, language about LGBTQ+ communities, gender expression, and gender was different than it is today. We don’t know how Pauli Murray would identify if they were living today or which pronouns Murray would use for self-expression.

Murray self-described as a “he/she personality” in correspondence with family members. For years, Murray requested - and was denied - testosterone injections and hormone therapy, as well as exploratory surgery to investigate their reproductive organs, believing that they may have been intersex and had undescended testis. Later in journals, essays, letters and autobiographical works, Murray employed “she/her/hers'' pronouns and self-described as a woman. 

Photo of an older Pauli Murray wearing a cross and smoking, smiling and looking away from the camera.

Courtesy of the Schlesinger Library at Harvard University

During the 20th century, being openly queer in the United States was illegal and dangerous. In efforts to survive and maintain employment and housing, many queer, transgender, and gender nonconforming people were forced to repress or conceal their identities. Respectability politics, widespread homophobia and transphobia, and federal and state policies likely constrained Pauli Murray’s ability to publicly and thoroughly explore their gender. As Naomi Simmons-Thorne writes, “Given the rigid enforcement of the gender binary, we do not, nor will we ever know, Murray’s true gender identity."

Photo of a younger Pauli Murray sitting on a wall and looking serious.

Courtesy of the Schlesinger Library at Harvard University

Several scholars have explored Murray’s personal journals and writings and examined Murray’s relationship to their gender/s. Scholars have used “he/him/his” pronouns (Simmons-Thorne), “they/them/theirs” pronouns (Keaveney), “s/he” pronouns (Fisher), and “she/her/hers” pronouns (Rosenberg, Cooper, Drury). 

This is an ongoing discussion among the Pauli Murray Center. Currently, the Pauli Murray Center chooses to use he/him and they/them pronouns when discussing Pauli Murray’s early life and she/her/hers when discussing Dr. Murray’s later years. When discussing Pauli Murray in general, we interchangeably use she/her/hers, he/him/his, and they/them/theirs pronouns, or we refer to Pauli Murray by their name and title(s). We hope this strategy will encourage readers to embrace the individual and fluid nature of gender.


Resources about Pauli Murray & Pronouns