User:Hyacinth
Wikiname: Hyacinth Name: Mikhail Lewis
Location: Helena, Montana.
Interests: playing music, listening to music, writing music, building instruments, reading, cooking, eating...
Astrological sign: Virgo
Adjectives: Queer, vegan, freegan...
I've been working mostly on adding and editing music related entries, specifically on creating new articles for 20th century composers.
from Talk:List of famous gay, lesbian, or bisexual philosophers
Homosexual is a regrettable term coined in 1869 from the Greek for "of the same" and the Latin for "sex". Not only does this word encompass the relationship my boyfriend and I have, but also the Catholic priesthood, or the Boy Scouts. The term was hacked together in a clinical environment and still carries the same negative connotations. Nor does this origin make it scientific and thus NPOV. Very few people actually identify themselves as homosexuals, and so to call living breathing folks homosexuals is insulting. Lastly, and most importantly, calling dead folks homosexuals is just as anachronistic as calling them gay, actually more so, since the use of gay to refer to same-sex romance or sexual activity actually predates homosexual.-Hyacinth
Wikipedia:Can history be truly NPOV?
You will notice that homosexual is also the term representatives of far right groups use when speaking in public. The reason is that it causes a more visceral reaction in the general public, because it is a clinical word that is not the term prefered or used by the very people it is supposed to describe.
From the Safe Schools Coalition of Washington's Glossary for school employees:
"Gay: Preferred synonym for homosexual."
"Homosexual: Avoid this term; it is clinical, distancing and archaic. Sometimes appropriate in referring to behavior (although same-sex is the preferred adj.). When referring to people, as opposed to behavior, homosexual is considered derogatory and the terms gay and lesbian are preferred, at least in the Northwest."
-http://www.safeschoolscoalition.org/RG-glbt-defined.html
From The Guardian style guide edited by David Marsh and Nikki Marshall: "gay: synonymous with homosexual, and on the whole preferable" -http://www.guardian.co.uk/styleguide/0,5817,184913,00.html
from Avoiding Heterosexual Bias in Language by Committee on Lesbian and Gay Concern, American Psychological Association: "Lesbian and gay male are preferred to the word 'homosexual' when used as an adjective referring to specific persons or groups, and lesbians and gay men are preferred terms over 'homosexuals' used as a noun when referring to specific persons or groups. The word 'homosexual' has several problems of designation. First, it may perpetuate negative stereotypes because of its historical associations with pathology and criminal behavior. Second, it is ambiguous in reference because it is often assumed to refer exclusively to men and thus renders lesbians invisible. Third, it is often unclear."
"The terms 'gay male' and 'lesbian' refer primarily to identities and to the modern culture and communities that have developed among people who share those identities. They should be distinguished from sexual behavior. Some men and women have sex with others of their own gender but do not consider themselves to be gay or lesbian. In contrast, the terms 'heterosexual' and 'bisexual' currently are used to describe identity as well as behavior."
"The terms 'gay' as an adjective and 'gay persons' as a noun have been used to refer to both males and females. However, these terms may be ambiguous in reference since readers who are used to the term 'lesbian and gay' may assume that 'gay' refers to men only. Thus it is preferable to use 'gay' or 'gay persons' only when prior reference has specified the gender composition of this term."
"Such terms as 'gay male' are preferable to 'homosexuality' or 'male homosexuality' and so are grammatical reconstructions (e.g., 'his colleagues knew he was gay' rather than 'his colleagues knew about his homosexuality'). The same is true for 'lesbian' over 'female homosexual', 'female homosexuality', or 'lesbianism.'"
"Same-gender behavior, male-male behavior, and female-female behavior are appropriate terms for specific instances of same-gender sexual behavior that people engage in regardless of their sexual orientation (e.g., a married heterosexual man who once had a same-gender sexual encounter). Likewise, it is useful that women and men not be considered 'opposites' (as in 'opposite sex') to avoid polarization, and that heterosexual women and men not be viewed as opposite to lesbians and gay men. Thus, male-female behavior is preferred to the term "opposite sex behavior" in referring to specific instances of other-gender sexual behavior that people engage in regardless of their sexual orientation."
"When referring to sexual behavior that cannot be described as heterosexual, gay, lesbian, or bisexual, special care needs to be taken. Descriptions of sexual behavior among animal species should be termed 'male-male sexual behavior" or 'male-female sexual behavior' rather than 'homosexual behavior' or 'heterosexual behavior,' respectively." -http://www.apastyle.org/sexuality.html
from the Newswatch Diversity Style Guide: "gay: Preferable in all references as a synonym for male homosexual. Lesbian is preferred term for women. To include both, use 'gay men and lesbians. Best to use 'gay' as an adjective, not a noun, such as 'gay man,' 'gay woman,' 'gay people.' In headlines where space is an issue, gay(s) is acceptable to describe both." -http://newswatch.sfsu.edu/guide/g.html
Warren J. Blumenfeld argues in How Homophobia Hurts Everyone that anti-gay sentiment hurts straight people as well as gay, lesbian, bisexual, and queer people. http://www.glsen.org/templates/resources/record.html?section=114&record=322