Citations:genderphobia

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English citations of genderphobia

Noun: "fear, dislike, or hatred of gender-nonconforming individuals or behaviour"

1999 2001 2005 2008 2009 2015
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  • 1999, This Is What Lesbian Looks Like: Dyke Activists Take on the 21st Century (ed. Kris Kleindienst), Firebrand Books (1999), →ISBN, page 190:
    How ironic that feminism and lesbian-feminism, themselves frequently subject to gender critique, have usually recapitulated impermeable genderedness (to say nothing of virulent genderphobia) to the degree that these communities have often turned a deaf ear to the plight, analysis, and strategies of the emerging gender community.
  • 2001, Virginia Ramey Mollenkott, Omnigender: A Trans-religious Approach, Pilgrim Press (2001), →ISBN, page 4:
    the pages on homophobia fail to mention its most virulent aspect — genderphobia or transphobia;
  • 2005, Vincent Stephens, "Pop goes the rapper: a close reading of Eminem's genderphobia", Popular Music, Volume 24, Issue 1, January 2005, page 23:
    Genderphobia is a more surreptitious form of discrimination than transphobia because it quietly adheres to hegemonic notions of gender behaviour.
  • 2005, Neil Hirschmann-Levy, in Letters from Young Activists: Today's Rebels Speak Out (eds. Dan Berger, Chesa Boudin, & Kenyon Farrow), Nation Books (2005), →ISBN, page 92:
    The disguise of my queer identity at work suggests that homophobia and genderphobia do not exist at the workplace, but this cover-up is the very intolerance it seeks to hide.
  • 2008, Joan Z. Spade & Catherine G. Valentine, The Kaleidoscope of Gender: Prisms, Patterns, and Possibilities, Pine Forge Press (2008), →ISBN, page 29:
    She characterized women's reactions to a masculine person in a public rest room as “an example of genderphobia” (1996, 117), viewing such women as policing gender boundaries rather than believing that there really is a man in the women's rest room.
  • 2009, Carrie Davis, "Introduction to practice with transgender and gender variant youth", in Social Services with Transgendered Youth (ed. Gerald P. Mallon), Routledge (2009), →ISBN, page 13:
    As such, the problems that transgender youth face are similar to those faced by lesbian, gay, bisexual, and questioning youth, where much of the oppression that is casually related to homophobia is actually a fear of gender nonconformity, or genderphobia.
  • 2015, Virginia Nicholson, Perfect Wives in Ideal Homes: The Story of Women in the 1950s, Penguin Books (2015), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
    Genderphobia was no hindrance to her ambitions; her husband took a back seat.