English edit

Etymology edit

hetero- +‎ fascist

Adjective edit

heterofascist (comparative more heterofascist, superlative most heterofascist)

  1. Exhibiting or relating to hetero-fascism.
    • 1976, Faggots and Class Struggle: A Conference Report, page 66:
      [] and support for each other in fighting the oppression forced on us by the larger heterofascist society and against those gay men who identify with it.
    • 1991 February 27, John Passaniti, “WRONG WRONG WRONG WRONG WRONG”, in soc.motss[1] (Usenet):
      Also, some time ago, when I first discovered soc.motss, I found out that I was WRONG to advocate monogamy (I was merely part of some crypto-Christian heterofascist breeding ideal).
    • 2000, Frederick Luis Aldama, “Ethnoqueer Rearchitexturing of Metropolitan Space”, in Nepantla: Views from South, volume 1, number 3:
      After Louie describes with horror the father's forcing Virgil (arguably Louie's long unrequited love) to shoot some puppies to make a man out of him, we begin to see how Louie further denaturalizes heterosexualized spaces, here demonstrating the heterofascist fear of dissolution into a female subject constructed as the dark abyss []
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:heterofascist.

Noun edit

heterofascist (plural heterofascists)

  1. (derogatory) A proponent of hetero-fascism.
    • 1976, Faggots and Class Struggle: A Conference Report, page 66:
      Surely radical faggots dedicated to to ending worldwide capitalist oppression can come up with a better solution than the alienating old-age concentration homes of the heterofascists.
    • 1996 January 1, John A. Stanley, “Re: Apuleius FOAMS at the mouth......”, in uk.religion.jewish[2] (Usenet):
      It's funny that all the above mentioned Nazis were all heterofascists.
    • 2010, Tristan Garcia, Hate: A Romance (trans. Marion Duvert & Lorin Stein), Faber and Faber (2010; original French novel published 2008), →ISBN, page 68:
      “I am sick and tired of guys who think it's fine to go and sleep with some girl as if it were nothing, and then hold forth to their students—” He went on to say something about “heterofascists,” according to Jean-Michel.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:heterofascist.

Synonyms edit