Rainbow flag: Difference between revisions
Ross Burgess (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Ross Burgess (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
| Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
The rainbow flag has given rise to a number of variants for different sections of the LGBT community. | The rainbow flag has given rise to a number of variants for different sections of the LGBT community. | ||
In January 2019 [[Manchester Pride]] announced that they would be promoting a variant of the flag with black and brown stripes to symbolise the struggles of queer people of colour. This had a mixed reception.<ref>[https://www.mygwork.com/en/my-g-news/should-the-pride-flag-be-updated "Should the Pride Flag Be Updated"], [[myGwork]]. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20190118182954/https://www.mygwork.com/en/my-g-news/should-the-pride-flag-be-updated Archived] as at 18 January 2019).</ref> | |||
See also: [[trans flag]]. | See also: [[trans flag]]. | ||
Revision as of 19:30, 18 January 2019

The rainbow flag has been a symbol for LGBT people since the 1970s. it originated in California. Originally it had eight stripes, but it now normally has six, representing the diversity of the LGBT community.
The different stripes are sometimes reckoned to have symbolic meaning:
- red (representing "life")
- orange (representing "healing")
- yellow (representing "sunlight")
- green (representing "nature")
- blue (representing "art")
- purple (or violet; representing "spirit").
The original version also had also a "hot pink" stripe representing "sexuality", and an indigo stripe representing "harmony".[1]
The rainbow flag has given rise to a number of variants for different sections of the LGBT community.
In January 2019 Manchester Pride announced that they would be promoting a variant of the flag with black and brown stripes to symbolise the struggles of queer people of colour. This had a mixed reception.[2]
See also: trans flag.

References
<references>
- ↑ http://www.lambda.org/symbols.htm#Rainbow
- ↑ "Should the Pride Flag Be Updated", myGwork. (Archived as at 18 January 2019).