2017, Jason Orne, Boystown: Sex and Community in Chicago, page 233:
If queernormative spaces keep people constantly on guard, fearful others will attack them for a wrong move, then those spaces will be alienating, even for those who stay within them.
Making sexuality and gender performativity a norm is not just limited to the larger heterosexual society. The same also stands true for the homonormative/transnormative/queernormative culture where it is assumed that everyone in a space is a homosexual/transgender/queer, unless they declare their identity otherwise.
2020, Kaustav Chakraborty, Queering Tribal Folktales from East and Northeast India, page ix:
Apart from rediscovering/decolonising the queernormative heritage of the Indian Indigenous past, […]
2020, Alex Stitt, ACT for Gender Identity: The Comprehensive Guide, page 202:
Defying this, Western queer culture actively defuses from cisnormative values, yet in so doing may also fuse with their new, queernormative value constructs.