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Anorm is an expected standard for proper, acceptable behavior as defined by a social group.[1] Norms include things like greetings, vocabulary, and how people are represented. The concept of a norm is not inherently negative or positive, but individuals' norms can be.[2] Something that is normative conforms to the norms[3] of a dominant social group that regards it as "normal" since it reproduces that group's expectations. However, what a culture defines a normative is not necessarily what is the most common, just what is privileged as the default and supposedly "natural" state; norms are still socially constructed. The concept of what is and is not normative is used to shame and punish what is deemed "abnormal" and "non-conforming".[4]Normalization is the social process of an idea or action becoming a norm.[2]

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Examples of norms[]

Gender role[]

Gender roles, orgender norms, are the cultural expectations for how people of differentgenders—presumed to be onlycisgender men or women—should or should not think and behave, and how other people should treat them. These roles are part of thegender binary and reflectgender essentialist beliefs. What people consider to be a "man's role" and a "woman's role" varies by culture.[5]

Types of normativity[]

Cisnormative[]

Cisnormativity is an assumption that everyone is cisgender, often with the implicit belief that being cisgender is "normal" while being another gender[6] or beingtransgender is "abnormal" or "different".Cisnormative beliefs encompass behaviors and bodies; for instance, variations in anatomy may be regarded as too different from what is cisnormative. Some trans people who choose to medicallytransition may base their decisions on whether or not the results are cisnormative.[7]

Heteronormative[]

Heteronormativity is a belief thatheterosexuality is the only normal and natural form ofsexuality,[8] while other sexualities are seen as "abnormal" or "different" compared to heterosexuality.[6]Heteronormative norms include the belief in specific gender roles based on the gender binary.[9] Heterosexism, the discrimination against anyone who is not heterosexual, both produces and is produced by heteronormativty.[4]

Cisheteronormative[]

Cisheteronormativity is the combination ofcisnormativity andheteronormativity, treatingcisgender heterosexuals as the default. This has repercussions throughout society (such as media representation and sex education), law (such as marriage legislation), and medicine (such as reproductive healthcare and "normalcy" of bodies). It punishes any deviation from what iscisheteronormative.[4]

Homonormative[]

Homonormativity is the assimilation of homosexual people into heteronormativity to achieve "respectability" and "inclusion" instead of disrupting the homophobic status quo.[4] It is related to privilege and erasure within theLGBTQIA+ community of members who are further marginalized. For instance, media depictions of queer people focus on white, middle-class,gay, cisgender men.[9] Homonormativity was articulated by trans activists in the 1990s.[4]

Allonormative[]

Allonormativity (also referred to as "acephobia", "acemisia" and "allosexism") is the belief that everyone experiences sexual attraction, has a libido, and desires sexual relationships, and that people who deviate from this are mentally ill, traumatized, suffering from a medical issue, or simply confused.[10] Allonormativity can manifest in a number of ways. Doctors stopping or denying treatment to anasexual patient to "save their sex lives", or recommending them into treatments or therapy to "fix" their asexuality (often leading to misdiagnoses of Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder[11]), sexual assault or harassment under the guise of "fixing" asexuality, dismissal, erasure, and dehumanization as an identity altogether due to views of sexuality as being innately human are all manifestations of allonormativity.[12][13] Allonormativity occurs within both wider society and LGBTQIA+ circles.[14]

Amatonormative[]

Amatonormativity is the belief that romantic, sexual relationships between monogamous married couples are inherently more valuable than other kinds of relationships, and that everyone wants those kinds of relationships, as well as affording special protections and benefits to people in these relationships.[15] This is harmful to more than just one group, as it often harmsaromantic, asexual,polyamorous, and single people.[16] The term was coined by philosopher Elizabeth Brake to describe the pressure to get married, and as a play on the term "heteronormativity". Heteronormativity and amatonormativity often intersect.[15]

Mononormative[]

Mononormativity is a term coined by Pieper and Bauer (2005) and refers to society's standard of monogamy, the practice of emotional and sexual commitment to one individual as the norm for engaging in romantic relationships.[17] Similarly,monosexism refers the reinforcement ofmonosexuality as a norm.[18]

See also[]

References[]

  1. "Definition of norm" by Merriam-Webster Dictionary on<merriam-webster.com>(nobackup information provided)
  2. 2.02.1"Normalization" byThe Trans Language Primer onThe Trans Language Primer(Archived on 2021-10-29)
  3. "Definition of normative" by Merriam-Webster Dictionary on<merriam-webster.com>(nobackup information provided)
  4. 4.04.14.24.34.4The A-Z of Gender and Sexuality: From Ace to Ze by Morgan Lev Edward Holleb. Published 2019 by Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 9781785923425(paperback),ISBN 9781784506636(eBook)
  5. "Gender Roles" byThe Trans Language Primer onThe Trans Language Primer(Archived on 2021-10-30)
  6. 6.06.1"National Glossary of Terms" byPFLAG on<pflag.org>(Archived on 2024-02-20)
  7. "Cisnormativity" byThe Trans Language Primer onThe Trans Language Primer(Archived on 2021-11-07)
  8. "Definition of heteronormativity" by Merriam-Webster Dictionary on<merriam-webster.com>(nobackup information provided)
  9. 9.09.1The Queens' English: The LGBTQIA+ Dictionary of Lingo and Colloquial Phrases by Davis, Chloe O.. Published 2021 by Clarkson Potter/Publishers. ISBN 9780593135013.
  10. Compulsory Sexuality by Emens, Elizabeth. Published 2016 by Columbia Law School. (web archive)
  11. "Ace Week: Asexuality Was Considered A Disorder?!" by Murray, F. on<aceweek.org>. Published 2020-10-29 by Ace Week. (nobackup information provided)
  12. Asexual-Identified Adults: Interactions with Health-Care Practitioners by Flanagan, Shelby, & Peters, Heather. Published 2020-03-28 by Springer. (web archive)
  13. "Acephobia and Anti-asexual Hate Crime" on<galop.org.uk>. Published 2021-06-10 by Galop. (nobackup information provided)
  14. Intergroup bias toward "Group X": Evidence of prejudice, dehumanization, avoidance, and discrimination against asexuals (in English) by MacInnis, Cara, & Hodson, Gordon. Published 2012-04-24 by Sage Journals. (web archive)
  15. 15.015.1"Amatonormativity 101" on<aromanticism.org>. Published 2020-07-24 by Aurea. (nobackup information provided)
  16. "Washington Post: Bugging your friend to get into a relationship? How Amatonormative of you" by Bonos, Lisa on<washingtonpost.com>. Published 2017-07-06 by The Washington Post. (nobackup information provided)
  17. Consensually Nonmonogamous Clients and the Impact of Mononormativity in Therapy (in English and French) by Cassidy, Taya, & Wong, Gina. Published 2018 by Canadian Journal of Counselling and Psychotherapy. (web archive)
  18. "Monosexism: Battling the Biases of Bi/Panphobia" by Tatum, Erin on<everydayfeminism.com>. Published 2013-11-27 by Everyday Feminism. (nobackup information provided)
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