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10.6: Glossary

  • Page ID
    308185
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    ace relationships. An asexual person is known as ace, and they have asexual relationships.

    bigotry. Intolerance or bias toward an identity or group of people.

    calling in. Approaching problematic behavior or language with sympathy; asking why the behavior occurred, explaining why it is oppressive, and devising a new course of action collaboratively.

    calling out. Approaching problematic behavior or language combatively; striving to shame a group or individual for their behavior to serve as a warning to others.

    camp. An aesthetic that privileges poor taste, shock value, and irony and poses an intentional challenge to the traditional attributes of high art. It is often characterized by showiness, extreme artifice, and tackiness.

    content. The substance of a story, typically entailing narrative, characters, and dialogue.

    form. The way a story is told, including choices such as editing, cinematography, wardrobe, and framing.

    gender binary. The idea that there are only two genders, male and female, and that everyone should and will identify accordingly.

    gender expression. The external presentation of gender, through body language, pronoun choice, and style of dress.

    heteronormativity. Policies, beliefs, and behaviors that assume everyone adheres to the gender binary, or that everyone is heterosexual.

    heterosexist. Policies, beliefs, or behaviors enacted by straight people that discriminate against queer people.

    homonormativity. A political and sometimes narrative approach that works to establish LGBTQ+ lives as no different from straight lives beyond the genders one is attracted to. It is an assimilation-based approach that invokes the rhetoric of sameness in appeals for civil rights and social acceptance.

    homophobia. Fear or hatred for queerness and queer people.

    marginalized. To be rendered less important, less powerful, and less visible than what is considered the norm or mainstream.

    nuanced. Containing layers of meaning, having subtle differences.

    pathologize. Representing a trait, behavior, or identity as a sickness or inevitable tragedy.

    prejudice. A preconceived positive or (usually) negative feeling toward someone or something.

    privileged. Receiving advantages that are not available to everyone.

    queer. Pertaining to a person or group that does not fall within the gender binary of heterosexuality.

    representation. Portrayal of a person or group by a representative who acts for them or in their interests.

    trope. A pattern, phrase, rhetorical device, or plot point that has been used so often it can be categorized and anticipated.


    This page titled 10.6: Glossary is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Has Arakelyan.