Heteronormative vs Heterosexist - What's the difference?
heteronormative | heterosexist |
Of or pertaining to the practices and institutions that legitimize and privilege heterosexuality, heterosexual relationships, and traditional gender roles as fundamental and "natural" within society.
* {{quote-journal
, year = 1997
, month = Summer
, title = “Stop Reading Films!”: Film Studies, Close Analysis, and Gay Pornography
, first = John
, last = Champagne
, journal = (Cinema Journal)
, issn = 0009-7101
, volume = 36
, issue = 4
, jstor = 1225614
, page = 82
, passage = This suggests both that film studies can be heteronormative even when it is analyzing homosexual representations and that close textual analysis is itself structured by heterosexual presumptions and assumptions.
}}
* {{quote-book
, date = 1998-02-28
, chapter = Philadelphia : AIDS, Representation, Organization
, first = Ruth
, last = Holliday
, title = Organization-Representation: Work and Organizations in Popular Culture
, editors = John Hassard, Ruth Holliday
, publisher = SAGE
, isbn = 9780761953920
, ol = 8030203M
, page = 102
, pageurl = http://books.google.com/books?id=OEFuP4LgavAC&pg=PA102&dq=heteronormative
, passage = In the same way, homosexuality and bisexuality will always be seen as problematic in heteronormative organizations.
}}
*
As an adjective heteronormative
is of or pertaining to the practices and institutions that legitimize and privilege heterosexuality, heterosexual relationships, and traditional gender roles as fundamental and "natural" within society.As a noun heterosexist is
a homophobic heterosexual.heteronormative
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Much of the language used when discussing wedding planning is heteronormative , which can alienate homosexual couples.