Citations:transmisia

English citations of transmisia

mentions:
  • 2017, Michele J. Eliason, Peggy L. Chinn, LGBTQ Cultures: What Health Care Professionals Need to Know About Sexual and Gender Diversity, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (→ISBN):
    Sometimes the terms transmisogyny (negative attitudes about trans women) or transmisia (negative attitudes about transgender people in general) are used in the literature.
  • 2018 Spring, Nico Mostella, “What Does It Mean to Be Black & Queer?”, in Uhuru Magazine, Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, page 11:
    [Jordin Manning:] Not everybody is gonna know that I go by they/them pronouns, but there are other people who just have an aversion, or what I have known to be called as, transmisia or homomisia (-misia means aversion,) as opposed to phobia, to not further stigmatize people who have legit phobias.
anti-transmisia:
  • 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.
uses:
  • 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, Cassie Withey-Rila, Megan S. Paceley, Jennifer J. Schwartz, & Lynne M. Alexander, "Trans/nonbinary sexualities and prioritizing pleasure", in Social Work and Health Care Practice with Transgender and Nonbinary Individuals and Communities: Voices for Equity, Inclusion, and Resilience (eds. Shanna K. Kattari, M. Killian Kinney, Leonardo Kattari, & N. Eugene Walls), unnumbered page:
    TNB narratives are negatively impacted by dominant discourses around medicalization, binary thinking, and transmisia (anti-transgender sentiment and systems, an alternative to "transphobia" coined by Simmons University library).