Citations:queermisia

English citations of queermisia

  • 2018 March 15, Bradford Richardson, “College lists 'God bless you' as a 'microaggression'”, in The Washington Times[1]:
    On its website, the Simmons College library lists six “anti-oppression” categories—“anti-racism,” “anti-transmisia,” “anti-ableism,” “anti-Islamomisia,” “anti-sanism” and “anti-queermisia”—with which students should be familiar.
  • 2019, Anissa Taun Rogers, Human Behavior in the Social Environment: Perspectives on Development and the Life Course, Routledge (→ISBN)
    [] Further, older LGBTQ people may face queermisia, transmisia, and discrimination in care facilities, forcing them back in the closet.
  • 2020 May 21, Drew Perron, “Re: LNH: Classic LNH Adventures #131: Infinite Leadership Cry.Sig Part Seven”, in rec.arts.comics.creative[2] (Usenet):
    [> "Maybe I should stay with him tonight."]
    [> "Umm... okay," Master Blaster said and then looked around uncomfortably.]
    Yeesh there's an uncomfortable amount of "ha ha just kidding" queermisia in Martin's stories. x-x Not surprising things turned out like they did.
  • 2020 October 31, Martin Lorber, Felix Zimmermann, History in Games: Contingencies of an Authentic Past, transcript Verlag, →ISBN, page 187:
    ... with queer stereotypes, queermisia and a lot of problematic mechanics towards queer characters. However, the GTA series deserves a separate investigation about its treatment of queerness and would exceed the scope of this article.
  • 2022, SimonMary Asese A. Aihiokhai, Religion, Women of Color, and the Suffrage Movement: The Journey to Holistic Freedom, Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, page 254:
    A White person who belongs to a particular gender and/or sexual minority will undoubtedly encounter misogyny and queermisia in a patriarchal and cisheteronormative society and thus feel the pain and exclusion of belonging to a []
  • 2022, David Bowles, They Call Her Fregona: A Border Kid's Poems, Penguin, →ISBN, page 20:
    Most girls avoid her, except for her cousins and a few other friends who don't quite fit in because of gender norms and queermisia.
  • 2022, Chloe Resler, "The rise of queermisia in jazz: medicalization, legislation, and its effects", chapter 10 in James Reddan, Monika Herzig, Michael Kahr (editors), The Routledge Companion to Jazz and Gender (Taylor & Francis; →ISBN:
    [see title]
    [] As such, I have opted to use queermisia in place of homophobia or transphobia unless one of those terms is specifically applicable.