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Here we go...


HomophobiaIndex is a mixture of negative LGBT portrayals, InUniverse discrimination, and "this might carry UnfortunateImplications for LGBT". See [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16128956480A77000500&page=1#comment-7 Index Cleanup]] and [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1426750858042389600&page=346#comment-8633 the main TRS thread]] for more information. In addition, both the scope and the contents significantly overlap with QueerAsTropes.

[[header: Key]]
* Total: 99/99

to:

HomophobiaIndex is a mixture of negative LGBT portrayals, InUniverse discrimination, and "this might carry UnfortunateImplications for LGBT". The latter kind is subjective and complainy, and is similar to what led to HandleThisIndexWithCare getting cut and added to the Administrivia/PermanentRedLinkClub, as well as the circumstances in the TRS threads for the ScrappyIndex and the BadWritingIndex (now WritingPitfallIndex). In addition to the complaining about tropes, both the scope and the contents of HomophobiaIndex significantly overlap with its parent QueerAsTropes, which contains 55 of the 99 items listed here.

See [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16128956480A77000500&page=1#comment-7 Index Cleanup]] and [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1426750858042389600&page=346#comment-8633 the main TRS thread]] for more information. In addition, both the scope and the contents significantly overlap with QueerAsTropes.

[[header: Key]]
information.

! Analysis of index contents

!! Key
* Total: 99/9999



! By membership in QueerAsTropes
!! Non-members (44/99)

to:

! !! By membership in QueerAsTropes
!! !!! Non-members (44/99)



!! Members (55/99)

to:

!! !!! Members (55/99)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Total: 86/99
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia, including stereotypes and negative portrayals (33/99)
* [[green:Green]]: In-universe homophobia (12/99)

to:

* Total: 86/99
99/99
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia, including stereotypes and negative portrayals (33/99)
(40/99)
* [[green:Green]]: In-universe homophobia (12/99)(14/99)



* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic (8/99)
* [[pink:Pink]]: Sexism or gender conformity (9/99)

to:

* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic (8/99)
(11/99)
* [[pink:Pink]]: Sexism or gender conformity (9/99)(10/99)



# DepravedBisexual: If they're having gay sex, and gay sex is among the worst sins on the calendar, they'll stick at nothing. The presumed promiscuity of bisexuals turns up the volume on this one.
# NoBisexuals: This trope holds that there are only two choices: straight and gay. It tells bisexuals (and the rest of the culture) that they don't actually exist, and if they don't exist, who needs to worry about mentioning them? Besides, if they don't exist, they can't be offended.
# CreepyCrossdresser: Associating crossdressing with immediate sexuality, evil or abnormality in fiction can feed the notion that crossdressing is done only by strange or predatory people. Aside from that, it reinforces sexist gender ideals and that differing from those norms is creepy and bad.
# {{Crossdresser}}: Sometimes people who crossdress are held up to ridicule because their bodies don't match their clothing, particularly if their dressing is associated with sexual satisfaction. Transgender people (particularly those who transition after experiencing puberty) can also get tarred with this brush when other people refuse to accept their gender identity. More successful gender presentations, once revealed, may prompt [[UnsettlingGenderReveal accusations of deception or worse]].
# DragQueen: Often, cis people will rather respect a drag queen's gender than the gender of an actual trans woman, when really most drag queens just play a character for comedy and only a few are actually trans. This also causes trans women to be seen as a joke instead of a real person. It should be noted that terminology and understanding of gender has changed over time; in the 70s and 80s, many trans women instead identified as 'drag queens' due to not having another word for themselves. (A famous example would be Marsha P. Johnson, the woman who threw the first brick in the Stonewall riot.)
# NonHumanNonBinary: The trope has implications that non-binary people are inhuman or are otherwise "other". It can dehumanize non-binary people.
# SissyVillain: Villains with effeminate characteristics can lead viewers to equate effeminacy (in men) with evil. Since effeminacy is also often equated with homosexuality, this trope can tend to associate homosexuality with evil as well.
# SupernaturallyValidatedTransPerson: Effectively exists as a counter to the idea that a trans person isn't a "real" member of their gender, although it can also come across as transphobic when it's handled poorly (for example if it conforms to transmedicalist[[note]]A "philosophy" within the trans community that older, heavily medicalised definitions of trans people are the only way someone can be trans[[/note]] or enforces a gender binary -- which excludes nonbinary folk, even if it is somewhat accepting of binary trans people).
# TransEqualsGay: When one thinks that heterosexuality is the norm, it's easy to believe that gay people must have a gender identity opposite of their assigned gender at birth.
# TransEqualsHypersexual: Transgender or gender-nonconforming characters are depicted as having an ExtremeLibido, no sexual boundaries, [[FetishesAreWeird bizarre kinks]], or otherwise over-the-top sexual proclivities.
# TransRelationshipTroubles: Being trans causes drama when it comes to romantic relationships.
# TransTribulations: Transgender characters going through a multitude of hardships, implying being transgender comes with endless misery.
# NoLoveForTheWicked: An aro-ace character is villainous, with their lack of interest in romance and sex being a sign of their villainy.

to:

# DepravedBisexual: If they're having gay sex, and gay sex is among the worst sins on the calendar, they'll stick at nothing. The presumed promiscuity of bisexuals turns up the volume on this one.
one. [[blue:Negative portrayal]]
# NoBisexuals: This trope holds that there are only two choices: straight and gay. It tells bisexuals (and the rest of the culture) that they don't actually exist, and if they don't exist, who needs to worry about mentioning them? Besides, if they don't exist, they can't be offended. \n [[blue:Not true in real life]]
# CreepyCrossdresser: Associating crossdressing with immediate sexuality, evil or abnormality in fiction can feed the notion that crossdressing is done only by strange or predatory people. Aside from that, it reinforces sexist gender ideals and that differing from those norms is creepy and bad.
bad. [[blue:Negative stereotype]]
# {{Crossdresser}}: Sometimes people who crossdress are held up to ridicule because their bodies don't match their clothing, particularly if their dressing is associated with sexual satisfaction. Transgender people (particularly those who transition after experiencing puberty) can also get tarred with this brush when other people refuse to accept their gender identity. More successful gender presentations, once revealed, may prompt [[UnsettlingGenderReveal accusations of deception or worse]].
worse]]. [[gold:Transgender-related, but not necessarily transphobic]]
# DragQueen: Often, cis people will rather respect a drag queen's gender than the gender of an actual trans woman, when really most drag queens just play a character for comedy and only a few are actually trans. This also causes trans women to be seen as a joke instead of a real person. It should be noted that terminology and understanding of gender has changed over time; in the 70s and 80s, many trans women instead identified as 'drag queens' due to not having another word for themselves. (A famous example would be Marsha P. Johnson, the woman who threw the first brick in the Stonewall riot.)
) [[gold:Just a drag queen, no discrimination inherent in the trope]]
# NonHumanNonBinary: The trope has implications that non-binary people are inhuman or are otherwise "other". It can dehumanize non-binary people.
people. [[blue:Can indeed be used to marginalize RealLife non-binary people]]
# SissyVillain: Villains with effeminate characteristics can lead viewers to equate effeminacy (in men) with evil. Since effeminacy is also often equated with homosexuality, this trope can tend to associate homosexuality with evil as well.
well. [[pink:Gender nonconformity portrayed negatively, description does not imply transphobia]]
# SupernaturallyValidatedTransPerson: Effectively exists as a counter to the idea that a trans person isn't a "real" member of their gender, although it can also come across as transphobic when it's handled poorly (for example if it conforms to transmedicalist[[note]]A "philosophy" within the trans community that older, heavily medicalised definitions of trans people are the only way someone can be trans[[/note]] or enforces a gender binary -- which excludes nonbinary folk, even if it is somewhat accepting of binary trans people).
people). [[gold:No discussion of UnfortunateImplications in the trope description]]
# TransEqualsGay: When one thinks that heterosexuality is the norm, it's easy to believe that gay people must have a gender identity opposite of their assigned gender at birth.
birth. [[blue:Misconception]]
# TransEqualsHypersexual: Transgender or gender-nonconforming characters are depicted as having an ExtremeLibido, no sexual boundaries, [[FetishesAreWeird bizarre kinks]], or otherwise over-the-top sexual proclivities.
proclivities. [[blue:Stereotype]]
# TransRelationshipTroubles: Being trans causes drama when it comes to romantic relationships.
relationships. [[green:Discrimination antics]]
# TransTribulations: Transgender characters going through a multitude of hardships, implying being transgender comes with endless misery.
misery. [[green:Trans people being discriminated against]]
# NoLoveForTheWicked: An aro-ace character is villainous, with their lack of interest in romance and sex being a sign of their villainy. [[blue:Negative portrayal of asexuality/aromanticism]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Total: 67/99
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia, including stereotypes and negative portrayals (17/99)

to:

* Total: 67/99
86/99
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia, including stereotypes and negative portrayals (17/99)(33/99)



* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic (6/99)

to:

* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic (6/99)(8/99)



* [[purple:Purple]]: General discrimination (4/99)

to:

* [[purple:Purple]]: General discrimination (4/99)(5/99)



# ButchLesbian: One example of taking on the gender conventions of the opposite sex. The expectation that one of these must be paired with a LipstickLesbian (a lesbian who dresses and behaves in a conventionally feminine way) is an uncomfortable way to enforce a male/female that is only {{Truth in Television}} for some lesbians.
# DiscountLesbians: Humanoid lesbian characters get an extra layer of Othering by making them also alien, immortal, cybernetic or otherwise not quite human. While this can be a useful trick in a homophobic society, it also suggests being lesbian means being very unlike the [[{{Muggles}} normal folk in the audience]], and not in a good way.
# HideYourLesbians: In addition to the usual concealment of homosexuality, this one can also imply that lesbian women don't want sex (which is defined as heterosexual sex).
# LesbianVampire: The lack of humanity of DiscountLesbians plus the idea that lesbians are predatory (and must be, since they aren't "natural" and must "recruit" others) plus the association with death and decay. Only in more modern interpretations does it come across as empowering young women by letting them [[TookALevelInBadass take a level in badass]].
# PsychoLesbian: Plays on the purported link between homosexuality and insanity, flavoured with the sexist implication of "hysteria", as well as implying that if they're willing to do something as bad as lesbian sex, there's nothing they won't do. Sounds like a toxic trifecta, doesn't it?
# AllGaysArePedophiles: Based partly on the purported hypersexuality of gays and partly on the idea that being gay isn't inherent in anyone, this trope says that gays "recruit" children and "turn" them gay. Never mind that the vast majority of real-life pedophiles (95% or more, depending on the study) are heterosexual.
# AllGaysArePromiscuous: Essentially AllMenArePerverts plus ImAManICantHelpIt. How bad this one is depends a lot on how the authors define a "normal" or ideal sex life.
# AlwaysCamp: The idea that certain professions attract drama queens and people with campy sensibilities verge into the stereotype area (when "camp" is equated with "gay"), which leads to assumptions and rumors about people in those jobs.
# AmbiguouslyGay: So maybe that character is gay, but for heaven's sake don't say so. [[ThinkOfTheChildren Children may be watching]].
# ButNotTooGay: In an effort to appeal to broad audiences without offending too many people, authors impose limits on homosexual expression that are more strict than those on heterosexual expression. This lends support to the idea that being gay is less acceptable than being straight.
# CampGay: First, this equates "effeminate" with "gay". Second, it implies that men who behave this way are deserving of ridicule. Third, in practice, it can be taken to paint all gays with this broad lavender brush, when it is only TruthInTelevision for some gays.
# ClubKid: Young hedonistic gays who spend their nights in dance clubs using copious amounts of drugs (legal and not) and hooking up with as many sex partners as possible. Not a flattering picture of gay youth.
# DepravedHomosexual: If they're having gay sex, and gay sex is among the worst sins on the calendar, they'll stick at nothing.
# FlamingDevil: A triple-serving of the lack of humanity of DiscountLesbians plus the caricature nature of CampGay plus the [[SissyVillain stereotypes associating male femininity with evil]] and male femininity with homosexuality (thus leading to associating homosexuality with evil as well).
# GayBestFriend: Since the sex lives of gay friends are either offscreen or non-existent, this reinforces the notion that they shouldn't have sex at all.
# GymBunny: This trope implies that gay men work out or participate in sports because they're vain (and want to perfect their looks) and horny (and are looking for sex partners), and any other reason is an afterthought at best.
# StraightGay: Just as CampGay can be read as too over-the-top, this trope can be seen as too restrained due to insecurity or a desire to fit in with the mainstream. For some viewers, it also implies that gays are not masculine.
# AmbiguouslyBi: So maybe that character is bi, but for heaven's sake don't say so. [[ThinkOfTheChildren Children may be watching]].
# ButNotTooBi: In an effort to appeal to broad audiences without offending too many people, authors impose limits on bisexual expression that are more strict than those on heterosexual expression. This lends support to the idea that being bi is less acceptable than being straight. For bisexuals, this usually works out so that their attraction to one sex (usually their own) is made much less significant to their attraction to the other.

to:

# ButchLesbian: One example of taking on the gender conventions of the opposite sex. The expectation that one of these must be paired with a LipstickLesbian (a lesbian who dresses and behaves in a conventionally feminine way) is an uncomfortable way to enforce a male/female that is only {{Truth in Television}} for some lesbians.
lesbians. [[gold:Just a role type]]
# DiscountLesbians: Humanoid lesbian characters get an extra layer of Othering by making them also alien, immortal, cybernetic or otherwise not quite human. While this can be a useful trick in a homophobic society, it also suggests being lesbian means being very unlike the [[{{Muggles}} normal folk in the audience]], and not in a good way. \n [[blue:Way of downplaying homosexuality]]
# HideYourLesbians: In addition to the usual concealment of homosexuality, this one can also imply that lesbian women don't want sex (which is defined as heterosexual sex).
sex). [[blue:The discriminatory roots of this trope are explained]]
# LesbianVampire: The lack of humanity of DiscountLesbians plus the idea that lesbians are predatory (and must be, since they aren't "natural" and must "recruit" others) plus the association with death and decay. Only in more modern interpretations does it come across as empowering young women by letting them [[TookALevelInBadass take a level in badass]].
badass]]. [[blue:Subtrope of DiscountLesbians, explanation here is similar to trope description]]
# PsychoLesbian: Plays on the purported link between homosexuality and insanity, flavoured with the sexist implication of "hysteria", as well as implying that if they're willing to do something as bad as lesbian sex, there's nothing they won't do. Sounds like a toxic trifecta, doesn't it?
it? [[blue:Negative stereotype]]
# AllGaysArePedophiles: Based partly on the purported hypersexuality of gays and partly on the idea that being gay isn't inherent in anyone, this trope says that gays "recruit" children and "turn" them gay. Never mind that the vast majority of real-life pedophiles (95% or more, depending on the study) are heterosexual.
heterosexual. [[blue:Negative stereotype]]
# AllGaysArePromiscuous: Essentially AllMenArePerverts plus ImAManICantHelpIt. How bad this one is depends a lot on how the authors define a "normal" or ideal sex life. \n [[blue:Stereotype]]
# AlwaysCamp: The idea that certain professions attract drama queens and people with campy sensibilities verge into the stereotype area (when "camp" is equated with "gay"), which leads to assumptions and rumors about people in those jobs.
jobs. [[purple:Stereotype of occupations, can overlap with CampGay]]
# AmbiguouslyGay: So maybe that character is gay, but for heaven's sake don't say so. [[ThinkOfTheChildren Children may be watching]].
watching]]. [[blue:HideYourLesbians, folks]]
# ButNotTooGay: In an effort to appeal to broad audiences without offending too many people, authors impose limits on homosexual expression that are more strict than those on heterosexual expression. This lends support to the idea that being gay is less acceptable than being straight.
straight. [[blue:Downplaying of gay people]]
# CampGay: First, this equates "effeminate" with "gay". Second, it implies that men who behave this way are deserving of ridicule. Third, in practice, it can be taken to paint all gays with this broad lavender brush, when it is only TruthInTelevision for some gays.
gays. [[blue:Stereotype]]
# ClubKid: Young hedonistic gays who spend their nights in dance clubs using copious amounts of drugs (legal and not) and hooking up with as many sex partners as possible. Not a flattering picture of gay youth.
youth. [[blue:Stereotype]]
# DepravedHomosexual: If they're having gay sex, and gay sex is among the worst sins on the calendar, they'll stick at nothing. \n [[blue:Negative portrayal]]
# FlamingDevil: A triple-serving of the lack of humanity of DiscountLesbians plus the caricature nature of CampGay plus the [[SissyVillain stereotypes associating male femininity with evil]] and male femininity with homosexuality (thus leading to associating homosexuality with evil as well).
well). [[gold:Feels complain-y, compared to the description, which does not mention UnfortunateImplications]]
# GayBestFriend: Since the sex lives of gay friends are either offscreen or non-existent, this reinforces the notion that they shouldn't have sex at all.
all. [[blue:Tokenism]]
# GymBunny: This trope implies that gay men work out or participate in sports because they're vain (and want to perfect their looks) and horny (and are looking for sex partners), and any other reason is an afterthought at best.
best. [[blue:Stereotype]]
# StraightGay: Just as CampGay can be read as too over-the-top, this trope can be seen as too restrained due to insecurity or a desire to fit in with the mainstream. For some viewers, it also implies that gays are not masculine.
masculine. [[blue:Gay counter-stereotype; The trope itself isn't necessarily harmful, but applying it to real people can be. Due to these reasons, along with the growing LGBT representation in Western media, the trope is starting to fall into DiscreditedTrope terrority as such characters have been criticized as making gay or lesbian characters more palatable for straight audiences, [[ButNotTooGay especially if they aren't depicted with love interests]].]]
# AmbiguouslyBi: So maybe that character is bi, but for heaven's sake don't say so. [[ThinkOfTheChildren Children may be watching]].
watching]]. [[blue:Related to AmbiguouslyGay]]
# ButNotTooBi: In an effort to appeal to broad audiences without offending too many people, authors impose limits on bisexual expression that are more strict than those on heterosexual expression. This lends support to the idea that being bi is less acceptable than being straight. For bisexuals, this usually works out so that their attraction to one sex (usually their own) is made much less significant to their attraction to the other. [[blue:Related to ButNotTooGay]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Closer!


* Total: 54/99
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia, including stereotypes and negative portrayals (11/99)
* [[green:Green]]: In-universe homophobia (10/99)
* [[teal:Teal]]: Both of the above, or unclear (3/99)
* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic (4/99)

to:

* Total: 54/99
67/99
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia, including stereotypes and negative portrayals (11/99)
(17/99)
* [[green:Green]]: In-universe homophobia (10/99)
(12/99)
* [[teal:Teal]]: Both of the above, or unclear (3/99)
(6/99)
* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic (4/99)(6/99)



* [[purple:Purple]]: General discrimination (3/99)
* [[red:Red]]: Minimal to no relevance (13/99)

to:

* [[purple:Purple]]: General discrimination (3/99)
(4/99)
* [[red:Red]]: Minimal to no relevance (13/99)(12/99)



# GayCruising: Men seeking out anonymous casual sex with other men, oftentimes in public. This trope can be used to highlight homophobia as consenting men having sex with one another are usually targeted by law enforcement unfairly.
# {{Gayngst}}: Linking homosexuality and unhappiness/depression/suicide can imply that being gay causes all those bad consequences (rather than the reactions of other people being the cause). Correlation does not equal causation.
# GayngstInducedSuicide: The suggestion that being gay is a good, common reason to kill oneself. Particularly heinous because of its very real effect on LGBT youth.
# GayRomanticPhase: Treating being gay as some sort of phase one goes through, perhaps to appease moral guardians. It downplays someone's existing sexuality as a "phase" that one goes through, rather than being part of who they are.
# GetBackInTheCloset: When the MoralGuardians get into the editing room, this one helps promote the idea that condemnation of homosexuality is mainstream. It may also be an effort to produce a self-fulfilling prophecy.
# HaveIMentionedIAmGay: The creators want to be inclusive, but are too afraid of the MoralGuardians to show gay behavior, so they rely heavily on stated assertions of homosexuality. So long as there is a difference between the romantic behaviors of straights and gays, the work carries the implication that being gay is wrong or bad.
# HaveYouTriedNotBeingAMonster: The familial rejection in this one is supposed to be well-meaning (assuming the family loves the queer person), but it carries the implication that the queer person can and should change.
# HomoeroticSubtext: When homosexual expressions are forbidden, some authors resort to this to put them in anyway.
# IfItsYouItsOkay: This can be a way to excuse a homosexual or bisexual relationship as a one-off, ''as if the character needs an excuse.''
# MasculineFeminineGayCouple: This can be TruthInTelevision, but when all same-sex couples are assumed to be like this it appeals to outdated gender stereotypes of every romantic relationship needing to have a "man" and a "woman".
# OutOfTheClosetIntoTheFire: Coming out will kill, maim, or otherwise harm you. Supports the idea that if you're gay, you should keep it to yourself.
# QueerPeopleAreFunny: Humour about gay relationships ''because the participants are gay'' (as opposed to jokes about couples that could apply to heterosexual couples, i.e. they are tempermentally mismatched, have different tastes, or the like) suggests such relationships are inherently funny or deserve ridicule.
# RapeAndSwitch: This is based on heteronormative idea that heterosexuality is the "default" state and thus being subject to sexual abuse causes the victim to become homosexual. It also gives the implication that being gay is inherently unhealthy and interferes with a "normal" sex life.
# TransparentCloset: Can be used to suggest a person is "really gay" and "in denial" about it. Alternatively, it may refer to someone who is trying to pass as straight and fails to do so.

to:

# GayCruising: Men seeking out anonymous casual sex with other men, oftentimes in public. This trope can be used to highlight homophobia as consenting men having sex with one another are usually targeted by law enforcement unfairly.
unfairly. [[green:Subtrope of SecretlyGayActivity; often motivated by homophobia]]
# {{Gayngst}}: Linking homosexuality and unhappiness/depression/suicide can imply that being gay causes all those bad consequences (rather than the reactions of other people being the cause). Correlation does not equal causation.
causation. [[teal:Internalized homophobia / PetPeeveTrope of viewers]]
# GayngstInducedSuicide: The suggestion that being gay is a good, common reason to kill oneself. Particularly heinous because of its very real effect on LGBT youth.
youth. [[green:Mostly about the InUniverse side of {{Gayngst}}]]
# GayRomanticPhase: Treating being gay as some sort of phase one goes through, perhaps to appease moral guardians. It downplays someone's existing sexuality as a "phase" that one goes through, rather than being part of who they are.
are. [[blue:A DiscreditedTrope based on a wrong belief]]
# GetBackInTheCloset: When the MoralGuardians get into the editing room, this one helps promote the idea that condemnation of homosexuality is mainstream. It may also be an effort to produce a self-fulfilling prophecy.
prophecy. [[blue:Listed on Administrivia/TropesNeedingTRS as a misclassified {{Trivia}}]]
# HaveIMentionedIAmGay: The creators want to be inclusive, but are too afraid of the MoralGuardians to show gay behavior, so they rely heavily on stated assertions of homosexuality. So long as there is a difference between the romantic behaviors of straights and gays, the work carries the implication that being gay is wrong or bad.
bad. [[blue:A type of tokenism]]
# HaveYouTriedNotBeingAMonster: The familial rejection in this one is supposed to be well-meaning (assuming the family loves the queer person), but it carries the implication that the queer person can and should change.
change. [[purple:General discrimination]]
# HomoeroticSubtext: When homosexual expressions are forbidden, some authors resort to this to put them in anyway.
anyway. [[gold:Is this discriminatory?]]
# IfItsYouItsOkay: This can be a way to excuse a homosexual or bisexual relationship as a one-off, ''as if the character needs an excuse.''
'' [[blue:Quoth the description: "When it's made explicit, it's usually referred to as 'We're Not Gay We Just Love Each Other' (WNGWJLEO) in ficdom, where it's often criticized for its homophobia. As such, it's now an almost thoroughly DiscreditedTrope in SlashFic."]]
# MasculineFeminineGayCouple: This can be TruthInTelevision, but when all same-sex couples are assumed to be like this it appeals to outdated gender stereotypes of every romantic relationship needing to have a "man" and a "woman".
"woman". [[blue:A stereotype of same-sex relationships]]
# OutOfTheClosetIntoTheFire: Coming out will kill, maim, or otherwise harm you. Supports the idea that if you're gay, you should keep it to yourself.
yourself. [[teal:Can involve a HomopphobicHateCrime or BuryYourGays]]
# QueerPeopleAreFunny: Humour about gay relationships ''because the participants are gay'' (as opposed to jokes about couples that could apply to heterosexual couples, i.e. they are tempermentally mismatched, have different tastes, or the like) suggests such relationships are inherently funny or deserve ridicule.
ridicule. [[blue:Homosexuality is PlayedForLaughs — there's a long history of racial analogs, such as AsianSpeekeeEngrish]]
# RapeAndSwitch: This is based on heteronormative idea that heterosexuality is the "default" state and thus being subject to sexual abuse causes the victim to become homosexual. It also gives the implication that being gay is inherently unhealthy and interferes with a "normal" sex life.
life. [[teal:This doesn't work in RealLife]]
# TransparentCloset: Can be used to suggest a person is "really gay" and "in denial" about it. Alternatively, it may refer to someone who is trying to pass as straight and fails to do so. [[gold:Hard to tell how this is discriminatory, if it can happen in RealLife]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
revise header


The distinction between HomophobiaIndex and QueerAsTropes is unclear. Every item on the list is already in

to:

The distinction between HomophobiaIndex is a mixture of negative LGBT portrayals, InUniverse discrimination, and QueerAsTropes is unclear. Every item on "this might carry UnfortunateImplications for LGBT". See [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16128956480A77000500&page=1#comment-7 Index Cleanup]] and [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1426750858042389600&page=346#comment-8633 the list is already in
main TRS thread]] for more information. In addition, both the scope and the contents significantly overlap with QueerAsTropes.

Added: 661

Changed: 4478

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Lost two!


* Total: 33/99
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia, including stereotypes and negative portrayals (6/99)
* [[green:Green]]: In-universe homophobia (6/99)
* [[teal:Teal]]: Both of the above, or unclear (2/99)
* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic (0/99)

to:

* Total: 33/99
54/99
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia, including stereotypes and negative portrayals (6/99)
(11/99)
* [[green:Green]]: In-universe homophobia (6/99)
(10/99)
* [[teal:Teal]]: Both of the above, or unclear (2/99)
(3/99)
* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic (0/99)(4/99)



* [[red:Red]]: Minimal to no relevance (7/99)
* [[gray:Gray]]: Mixed/unclear (0/99)

to:

* [[red:Red]]: Minimal to no relevance (7/99)
(13/99)
* [[gray:Gray]]: Mixed/unclear (0/99)
(1/99)



# GayGuyDiesFirst: The minority included to be immediately killed off is a queer character. It’s almost explicitly giving the message that creators feel pushed to include them but actively want to erase them. [[blue:Not unlike BlackDudeDiesFirst]]



# ArmouredClosetGay: A closeted gay who's prompted by InternalizedCategorism to express homophobia against others and aggressively assert his heterosexual bona fides. Their self-loathing can make the homophobia of such characters particularly vicious.
# TheBeard: When practised by lesbians and gay men, this kind of deception can divert suspicions and thus avoid homophobic bigotry.
# BaitAndSwitchLesbians: Two characters are subject to heavy and deliberate HomoeroticSubtext, but are never explicitly confirmed as sexual partners, and one or both of them is in a heterosexual relationship by the end of the show. Despite the title, there are an increasing number of male examples. Tends to trivialize the same-sex romance, as if [[GirlOnGirlIsHot it's only there to entertain]] the [[GuyOnGuyIsHot demographic titillated]] by the idea of people of the same sex behaving homoerotically together. Since in female examples the mere appearance of an available male often leads to the switch, it can imply that the women are only interested in each other until a man comes along. Commonly associated with PseudoRomanticFriendship, in which case it may also imply that they're engaging in lesbian-ish behaviour only because they don't know any better.
# BuryYourGays: If being gay is (one of) the worst thing(s) you can be and fiction is only satisfying if virtue is rewarded and vice is punished, then the gay characters deserve to die because they're gay.
# ClosetGay: A character has to hide their orientation and appear straight.
# CureYourGays: The idea that homosexuality is a form of disease or insanity that can and must be "cured" (In RealLife, it has been discredited by professional organizations, including the American Psychiatric Association). Since it can be used to justify "treatments" that are difficult to distinguish from torture, depictions of this can be particularly [[{{Squick}} squick-making]].
# GayAesop: Learning that anti-gay discrimination is bad is the lesson in this type of morality tale. As with all tropes, this can be handled badly or well.
# {{Gayborhood}}: As with ethnic neighbourhoods, the residents live in a concentrated area and have local businesses that appeal to their common interests. If the residents of a Gayborhood are depicted engaging in stereotypically predatory behaviours, such a place (with its large numbers of gays) comes across as threatening to a heterosexual audience.

to:

# AdaptationalSexuality: A character in a work is changed to fit heterosexual norms when the work is adapted to a different medium. Though this can be a capitulation to MoralGuardians, it nevertheless lends credence to heterosexism (the work is "improved" by making it less queer). [[gold:Can go both ways (pun not intended)]]
# ArmouredClosetGay: A closeted gay who's prompted by InternalizedCategorism to express homophobia against others and aggressively assert his heterosexual bona fides. Their self-loathing can make the homophobia of such characters particularly vicious.
vicious. [[green:Homophobic character]]
# TheBeard: When practised by lesbians and gay men, this kind of deception can divert suspicions and thus avoid homophobic bigotry.
bigotry. [[gold:Not seeing anything about discrimination in there]]
# BaitAndSwitchLesbians: Two characters are subject to heavy and deliberate HomoeroticSubtext, but are never explicitly confirmed as sexual partners, and one or both of them is in a heterosexual relationship by the end of the show. Despite the title, there are an increasing number of male examples. Tends to trivialize the same-sex romance, as if [[GirlOnGirlIsHot it's only there to entertain]] the [[GuyOnGuyIsHot demographic titillated]] by the idea of people of the same sex behaving homoerotically together. Since in female examples the mere appearance of an available male often leads to the switch, it can imply that the women are only interested in each other until a man comes along. Commonly associated with PseudoRomanticFriendship, in which case it may also imply that they're engaging in lesbian-ish behaviour only because they don't know any better.
better. [[blue:"Queerbaiting is usually considered quite homophobic, or at least patronising and cynical when it's done these days..."]]
# BuryYourGays: If being gay is (one of) the worst thing(s) you can be and fiction is only satisfying if virtue is rewarded and vice is punished, then the gay characters deserve to die because they're gay.
gay. [[blue:Making a homosexual character expendable because they are homosexual]]
# ClosetGay: A character has to hide their orientation and appear straight.
straight. [[gold:Just hiding in the closet]]
# CureYourGays: The idea that homosexuality is a form of disease or insanity that can and must be "cured" (In RealLife, it has been discredited by professional organizations, including the American Psychiatric Association). Since it can be used to justify "treatments" that are difficult to distinguish from torture, depictions of this can be particularly [[{{Squick}} squick-making]].
squick-making]]. [[teal:Out-of-universe if it works, in-universe if it is forced upon a character]]
# GayAesop: Learning that anti-gay discrimination is bad is the lesson in this type of morality tale. As with all tropes, this can be handled badly or well.
well. [[green:Positive portrayal that invokes homophobia]]
# {{Gayborhood}}: As with ethnic neighbourhoods, the residents live in a concentrated area and have local businesses that appeal to their common interests. If the residents of a Gayborhood are depicted engaging in stereotypically predatory behaviours, such a place (with its large numbers of gays) comes across as threatening to a heterosexual audience. [[gold:Not necessarily negative or invoking discrimination]]

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[[header: By membership in QueerAsTropes]]
! Non-members (44/99)

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[[header: ! By membership in QueerAsTropes]]
!
QueerAsTropes
!!
Non-members (44/99)



! Members (55/99)

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!
!!
Members (55/99)
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Non-members done


# AManIsAlwaysEager: Masculinity is based on how much a man wants sex. The implication is that if a man isn't constantly seeking out sex (often to an extent that most allosexual men don't reach), that's because there's something wrong with him. In addition to being hateful to asexual men, it is derived from a sexist idea that sex is something men are compelled to try to ''take'' from women, with the manliest men being the ones who are most successful at it, and less successful men being worthy of hatred and mockery.
# NatureAdoresAVirgin: Applying various aspects of this trope to asexuals is a very common way to misunderstand the orientation: fact that asexuality doesn't always mean virginity or even sex-repulsion aside, it gives those who ''are'' virgins, which include many sex-repulsed aces, the type of attention that they often ''don't'' want to get. At a broader social level, this trope also erases some the struggles asexuals face in real life, due to creating an assumption that they have an easier time in environments that frown at sex outside of wedlock than they actually do[[note]]In many such environments, the social imperative to "save oneself" for marriage comes with an obligation to eventually get married and have sex within said marriage. Asexuals who ''do'' want to get married might have to deal with laws that, in practice, require the people involved in a marriage to have sex for it to be valid.[[/note]].
# PlayingHardToGet: The presence of "pretend you're not interested" among known seduction methods results in many claims of asexuality not being taken seriously because they are mistaken for an extreme form of the method.
# SexIsInteresting: A work adds in loads of sexual characters under the impression that sexuality is the only thing that makes a story worth telling. The implication is that people who don't want sex are too boring to matter. Related to this is creators arguing that characters need to have, and fulfil, sexual desires to be a RoundedCharacter, or that you can't have a full life without having sex.
# SexlessMarriage: If a married couple isn't having sex in fiction, it frequently means one of the following: they don't love each other anymore, it's a MarriageOfConvenience in the first place, the couple is unable/unwilling to sleep in the same bed or at the same time for whatever reason or at least one half is in a situation that prevents them from having sex even if they wanted to. As a result, a marriage in which the couple is having sex is portrayed as inherently going better than one in which the couple isn't, leading to a real-life assumption that marriages in which at least one partner is asexual are never as happy as those involving two allosexual people who regularly have sex.
# SourPrudes: People who don't engage in much sex are portrayed as looking down on people who have significantly more sex than they do. This results in a "asexuals don't want anybody to have sex" stereotype, when in reality even asexuals who don't engage in sex at all can be favor of other people having the amount of sexual activity they wish, as long as said sexual activity doesn't involve them.
# TokenRomance: Insistence on tacking a romantic subplot onto every story, regardless of how well it can be executed or how it fits the setting or genre, sends a message to aromantic people that if they don't have a love interest, their story is not one worth telling.
# VirginityMakesYouStupid: Between the assumption that all asexuals are virgins and the fact that a number of them actually are, the association between virginity and stupidity/naïvety results in asexuals getting treated as if they have those traits by others.
# VirginShaming: Social stigma against virgins becomes even more of a problem when an orientation that often results in little to no interest in sex exists.
# YouNeedToGetLaid: Sex as a stress reducer can range from ineffective to counter-productive for asexuals. It's also frequently suggested as a "solution" to the asexuality itself.

to:

# AManIsAlwaysEager: Masculinity is based on how much a man wants sex. The implication is that if a man isn't constantly seeking out sex (often to an extent that most allosexual men don't reach), that's because there's something wrong with him. In addition to being hateful to asexual men, it is derived from a sexist idea that sex is something men are compelled to try to ''take'' from women, with the manliest men being the ones who are most successful at it, and less successful men being worthy of hatred and mockery.
mockery. [[blue:Mentioned in description]]
# NatureAdoresAVirgin: Applying various aspects of this trope to asexuals is a very common way to misunderstand the orientation: fact that asexuality doesn't always mean virginity or even sex-repulsion aside, it gives those who ''are'' virgins, which include many sex-repulsed aces, the type of attention that they often ''don't'' want to get. At a broader social level, this trope also erases some the struggles asexuals face in real life, due to creating an assumption that they have an easier time in environments that frown at sex outside of wedlock than they actually do[[note]]In many such environments, the social imperative to "save oneself" for marriage comes with an obligation to eventually get married and have sex within said marriage. Asexuals who ''do'' want to get married might have to deal with laws that, in practice, require the people involved in a marriage to have sex for it to be valid.[[/note]].
[[/note]]. [[red:Nothing in the description about LGBT discrimination]]
# PlayingHardToGet: The presence of "pretend you're not interested" among known seduction methods results in many claims of asexuality not being taken seriously because they are mistaken for an extreme form of the method.
method. [[red:Not an integral part of the trope]]
# SexIsInteresting: A work adds in loads of sexual characters under the impression that sexuality is the only thing that makes a story worth telling. The implication is that people who don't want sex are too boring to matter. Related to this is creators arguing that characters need to have, and fulfil, sexual desires to be a RoundedCharacter, or that you can't have a full life without having sex.
sex. [[gray:Unclear if this trope is about characters who find sex interesting, or writers finding sex interesting. See also [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16779797300A19293100]].]]
# SexlessMarriage: If a married couple isn't having sex in fiction, it frequently means one of the following: they don't love each other anymore, it's a MarriageOfConvenience in the first place, the couple is unable/unwilling to sleep in the same bed or at the same time for whatever reason or at least one half is in a situation that prevents them from having sex even if they wanted to. As a result, a marriage in which the couple is having sex is portrayed as inherently going better than one in which the couple isn't, leading to a real-life assumption that marriages in which at least one partner is asexual are never as happy as those involving two allosexual people who regularly have sex.
sex. [[red:Mischaracterizes asexuality, comparing against the description: "For that matter, people with an UsefulNotes/{{Asexual}} orientation can still experience romantic attraction and have perfectly healthy relationships where sex simply isn’t an interest."]]
# SourPrudes: People who don't engage in much sex are portrayed as looking down on people who have significantly more sex than they do. This results in a "asexuals don't want anybody to have sex" stereotype, when in reality even asexuals who don't engage in sex at all can be favor of other people having the amount of sexual activity they wish, as long as said sexual activity doesn't involve them.
them. [[red:Prove it.]]
# TokenRomance: Insistence on tacking a romantic subplot onto every story, regardless of how well it can be executed or how it fits the setting or genre, sends a message to aromantic people that if they don't have a love interest, their story is not one worth telling.
telling. [[blue:Quoth the description: "Meanwhile, more cynical voices will claim that the romance is merely there to make absolutely sure that audience knows what canon sexuality the given character has."]]
# VirginityMakesYouStupid: Between the assumption that all asexuals are virgins and the fact that a number of them actually are, the association between virginity and stupidity/naïvety results in asexuals getting treated as if they have those traits by others.
others. [[red:Prove it.]]
# VirginShaming: Social stigma against virgins becomes even more of a problem when an orientation that often results in little to no interest in sex exists.
exists. [[green:Discrimination on the basis of sexuality]]
# YouNeedToGetLaid: Sex as a stress reducer can range from ineffective to counter-productive for asexuals. It's also frequently suggested as a "solution" to the asexuality itself. [[green:Generally insensitive]]

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1/3 done


* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia
* [[green:Green]]: In-universe homophobia
* [[teal:Teal]]: Both of the above
* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic
* [[red:Red]]: Not necessarily LGBT-related
* [[pink:Gray]]: Unclear

to:

* Total: 33/99
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia
homophobia, including stereotypes and negative portrayals (6/99)
* [[green:Green]]: In-universe homophobia
homophobia (6/99)
* [[teal:Teal]]: Both of the above
above, or unclear (2/99)
* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not necessarily homophobic
homophobic (0/99)
* [[pink:Pink]]: Sexism or gender conformity (9/99)
* [[purple:Purple]]: General discrimination (3/99)
* [[red:Red]]: Not necessarily LGBT-related
Minimal to no relevance (7/99)
* [[pink:Gray]]: Unclear
[[gray:Gray]]: Mixed/unclear (0/99)



# GayPanic: In Website/TVTropes, this is when queer plotlines and/or characters that were airing are suddenly changed or dropped entirely, it suggests moral disapproval is behind their disappearance. In RealLife, the phrase refers to a legal defence used to partially or completely excuse crimes such as murder and assault on the grounds that the victim's sexual orientation or gender identity is to blame for the defendant's violent reaction. [[note]]In August 2013, the American Bar Association passed a resolution condemning the use of such defenses in court, however as of 2018 only two US states have outright banned it (one of which specifically amended the bill to still allow the trans panic defence before passing it).[[/note]]
# HeteronormativeCrusader: The "crusader" part implies a morally-sanctioned combative attitude; the "heteronormative" part implies the enemy is anyone who doesn't follow conventional rules about sex and gender performance.
# HomophobicHateCrime: The unfortunate situation of people being attacked or killed because of homophobia towards them on the attacker's part.
# SexualDevianceIsEvil: A catch-all for tropes where nonstandard sexual behavior (which generally encompasses LGBTQIA+) is conflated with evil or villainous characters.
# ShesAManInJapan: This is not always homophobic in motivation, but a large proportion of examples involve changing a character's gender or cis/trans status in order to avoid provoking MoralGuardians by having non-cis characters and/or non-straight romantic relationships.
# {{Bowdlerise}}: Generally, this involves any editing of language and sexual themes from an existing work and is generally performed by MoralGuardians, or at their request. Specifically for [=LGBTI=] people, it means removing queer content from existing works because it is queer, such as removing instances of BoysLove and lesbians from {{anime}} works, effectively turning a {{seinen}} anime into a {{shonen}}--[[ThinkOfTheChildren to "protect" the children in the audience]].
# CondescendingCompassion: Among the many groups that can be on the receiving end of this are people with disabilities and members of racial and religious minorities. When directed at homosexuals, it can allow the "compassionate" person to feel superior to those who have the "misfortune" to be queer. Their pity may only last so long as their targets go along with this.
# GenderedInsult: While not exclusive to queer characters, there's often a homophobic and/or transphobic suggestion to these sorts of insults. The trope can also include instances where trans characters are intentionally misgendered.
# InternalizedCategorism: This can affect members of racial, ethnic and religious minorities as well as women, and the problem can be compounded when a person fits more than one category and believes the worst of more than one group. When a queer person believes all the worst stereotypes about queer people, trouble follows, often for them and occasionally for others.
# NotThatTheresAnythingWrongWithThat: The "that" can be any number of things, not only race and religion but also including the enjoyment of unusual hobbies and participation in [=BDSM=] play. A backpedaling move to avoid being called a bigot, this trope can come across as insincere, especially if paired with "[[SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX No really, some of my best friends are gay!]]".
# SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX: As the "X" indicates, this can be used with racial or ethnic groups and religious adherents as well as cisgender men and women. In an [=LGBTI=] context, some people claim this as a defense against a charge of homophobic bigotry. When it's clear they aren't really that friendly with any gay people, it isn't much of a defense.
# ValuesDissonance: As noted on this trope's page, this problem is very widespread. Even food is not immune: a vegan and an omnivore will look at the same plate of baby back ribs and have vastly different reactions. In the [=LGBTI=] context, for some people, tropes that depict queer people in a bad light are offensive, while for others they're simply funny or even true.
# TragicAIDSStory: In cases where gay men are often shown to necessarily suffer from, and ultimately die from, HIV/AIDS.
# GenderNormativeParentPlot: A boy wants to pursue feminine interests, but is pushed to be manly.
# IncrediblyConspicuousDrag: Because men in dresses are considered funny.
# IntersexTribulations: Characters are perceived as unusual because they are born intersex. If not that, then they internalize negative feelings towards being intersex.
# NoGuyWantsAnAmazon: Men find masculine women unattractive.
# OtherworldlyAndSexuallyAmbiguous: These characters can be powerful {{escapist character}}s for trans, intersex and gender-nonconforming people, but can also carry the implication that not fitting neatly into a binary gender makes you not quite a real human being. This isn't helped by the fact that many characters like this have BlueAndOrangeMorality, implying that being outside a strict gender binary is so mysterious and different to the normal human experience that it's [[GoMadFromTheRevelation incomprehensible to ordinary people]].
# PinkIsForSissies: When a male character is ridiculed for wearing the feminine color.
# StayInTheKitchen: When a character or the narrative insists that women should stay out of action and be a domestic.
# ThereAreNoGirlsOnTheInternet: An assumption that any female-identifying person met anonymously on the internet is actually "a dude", doing it for perverted reasons. In addition to harming cis women, this erases or vilifies large numbers of transgender or non-binary persons on the internet who may have been assigned male at birth but now identify as more feminine or outright female. This can be especially harmful since many trans women begin socially transitioning online before coming out as a woman in the real world.
# TomboyAngst: A female character hates being too "masculine".
# UnsettlingGenderReveal: This kind of revelation is unsettling because the other person is attracted to the person who's doing the revealing. It can result in violence, even death.
# WantedAGenderConformingChild: A character wishes their daughter were more feminine or their son were more masculine.
# AllWomenArePrudes: Several asexual traits (In particular sex repulsion) are portrayed as universal among women, which erases the fact that there are differences between asexual and allosexual women.
# AloneAmongTheCouples: Single characters who stumble into a situation where they are surrounded by couples are almost never ''happily'' single and hence almost always in a position in which they are envying the couples to some extent. This also reinforces the idea that singlehood is something undesirable, which results in asexuals and aromatics being pressured into finding a sexual/romantic partner they sometimes don't want at all by friends and relatives.
# BetterThanSex: Properly handled, it can create a moment relatable to asexuals who have sex (or experienced it at some point in their lives), but genuinely find other activities more enjoyable. Poorly handled, it can deride the very idea of something being more enjoyable than sex and/or people sincerely preferring another activity to it.
# BlackJezebelStereotype: Black people are stereotyped as being a sexually promiscuous population, resulting in asexual people being even less likely to be believed about their orientation if they happen to also have dark skin.
# CelibateEccentricGenius: Asexual and aromatic behavior are depicted as going hand in hand with high intelligence, interest in intellectually stimulating activities and lack of interest in ''platonic'' socializing. The personalities of real-life asexuals and aromatics are much more diverse than that. The fact that asexuality and aromanticism don't always overlap mean that even partner-seeking socializing can still be engaged in.
# DeconfirmedBachelor: Never wanting to get married is quite common among asexuals and aromantics, especially if the two orientations overlap. The belief that members of those populations "just haven't met the right person yet" is also quite widespread. It's hence extremely easy for that trope slip into asexual or aromantic erasure, especially if the narrative is closer to "this character had never fallen in love before, until they met that person" than to "this character dated plenty of people, but this is the first time they meet someone they want to settle down with."
# EveryoneMustBePaired: Asexuals and aromantics are much more likely to be happily single or in relationships that qualify for HeterosexualLifePartners or PlatonicLifePartners. This makes narratives that insist upon having every single member of the cast in a romantic and/or sexual relationship by the end of the story a mix of erasure and something on par with having every single final pair be heterosexual in a setting that has been shown to allow for same-sex pairs on some level.
# LousyLoversAreLosers: Being unable to sexually satisfy a partner is portrayed as a major character flaw that can only be redeemed via being improved upon and implies the absence of other character traits that are desirable in a romantic partner. This one can actually hurt both sides of a relationship involving at least one asexual person, as asexuality affects both one's capacity to perform satisfactorily and one's ability to enjoy sex. Asexuals identifying as such to cover up that they are lousy lovers and/or because they have yet to have sex with a satisfying partner are also common misconceptions.
# MadonnaWhoreComplex: Women who want sex are Whores. Therefore, women who don't desire sex are treated as perfect, holy, pure, and an EmbodimentOfVirtue with no real agency or personality... in fact, so perfect and pure that they're the only women men should want to marry and have sex with. The idea that asexual women are ideal breeding partners also carries the implication that asexual women secretly ''do'' want sex, deep down... which has the logical conclusion that asexual women are also Whores. In reality, whether a woman desires or doesn't desire sex has absolutely nothing to do with her moral character, and asexual women are sincere about their lack of desire, not 'guarding their virtue' or 'waiting for the right man'.

to:

# GayPanic: In Website/TVTropes, this is when queer plotlines and/or characters that were airing are suddenly changed or dropped entirely, it suggests moral disapproval is behind their disappearance. In RealLife, the phrase refers to a legal defence used to partially or completely excuse crimes such as murder and assault on the grounds that the victim's sexual orientation or gender identity is to blame for the defendant's violent reaction. [[note]]In August 2013, the American Bar Association passed a resolution condemning the use of such defenses in court, however as of 2018 only two US states have outright banned it (one of which specifically amended the bill to still allow the trans panic defence before passing it).[[/note]]
[[/note]] [[blue:{{Trivia}} item about a reaction]]
# HeteronormativeCrusader: The "crusader" part implies a morally-sanctioned combative attitude; the "heteronormative" part implies the enemy is anyone who doesn't follow conventional rules about sex and gender performance.
performance. [[green:Character trait]]
# HomophobicHateCrime: The unfortunate situation of people being attacked or killed because of homophobia towards them on the attacker's part.
part. [[green:'Nuff said]]
# SexualDevianceIsEvil: A catch-all for tropes where nonstandard sexual behavior (which generally encompasses LGBTQIA+) is conflated with evil or villainous characters.
characters. [[blue:An supertrope to various items, some of which are negative portrayals of LGBT]]
# ShesAManInJapan: This is not always homophobic in motivation, but a large proportion of examples involve changing a character's gender or cis/trans status in order to avoid provoking MoralGuardians by having non-cis characters and/or non-straight romantic relationships.
relationships. [[blue:This is not necessarily LGBT-related, but this comment describes appealing to transphobia]]
# {{Bowdlerise}}: Generally, this involves any editing of language and sexual themes from an existing work and is generally performed by MoralGuardians, or at their request. Specifically for [=LGBTI=] people, it means removing queer content from existing works because it is queer, such as removing instances of BoysLove and lesbians from {{anime}} works, effectively turning a {{seinen}} anime into a {{shonen}}--[[ThinkOfTheChildren to "protect" the children in the audience]].
audience]]. [[red:Can be anything offensive]]
# CondescendingCompassion: Among the many groups that can be on the receiving end of this are people with disabilities and members of racial and religious minorities. When directed at homosexuals, it can allow the "compassionate" person to feel superior to those who have the "misfortune" to be queer. Their pity may only last so long as their targets go along with this.
this. [[purple:General discrimination]]
# GenderedInsult: While not exclusive to queer characters, there's often a homophobic and/or transphobic suggestion to these sorts of insults. The trope can also include instances where trans characters are intentionally misgendered.
misgendered. [[green:Can include transphobia]]
# InternalizedCategorism: This can affect members of racial, ethnic and religious minorities as well as women, and the problem can be compounded when a person fits more than one category and believes the worst of more than one group. When a queer person believes all the worst stereotypes about queer people, trouble follows, often for them and occasionally for others.
others. [[purple:General discrimination]]
# NotThatTheresAnythingWrongWithThat: The "that" can be any number of things, not only race and religion but also including the enjoyment of unusual hobbies and participation in [=BDSM=] play. A backpedaling move to avoid being called a bigot, this trope can come across as insincere, especially if paired with "[[SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX No really, some of my best friends are gay!]]".
gay!]]". [[green:Specific to homosexuality]]
# SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX: As the "X" indicates, this can be used with racial or ethnic groups and religious adherents as well as cisgender men and women. In an [=LGBTI=] context, some people claim this as a defense against a charge of homophobic bigotry. When it's clear they aren't really that friendly with any gay people, it isn't much of a defense.
defense. [[purple:General discrimination]]
# ValuesDissonance: As noted on this trope's page, this problem is very widespread. Even food is not immune: a vegan and an omnivore will look at the same plate of baby back ribs and have vastly different reactions. In the [=LGBTI=] context, for some people, tropes that depict queer people in a bad light are offensive, while for others they're simply funny or even true.
true. [[red:Can include many things beyond discrimination]]
# TragicAIDSStory: In cases where gay men are often shown to necessarily suffer from, and ultimately die from, HIV/AIDS.
HIV/AIDS. [[blue:Often overlaps with BuryYourGays]]
# GenderNormativeParentPlot: A boy wants to pursue feminine interests, but is pushed to be manly.
manly. [[pink:Discrimination against gender nonconformists]]
# IncrediblyConspicuousDrag: Because men in dresses are considered funny.
funny. [[teal:From trope description: "...it's often been used to mock transgender women who fail to pass"]]
# IntersexTribulations: Characters are perceived as unusual because they are born intersex. If not that, then they internalize negative feelings towards being intersex.
intersex. [[green:The "I" in some expansions of the LGBT acronym]]
# NoGuyWantsAnAmazon: Men find masculine women unattractive.
unattractive. [[pink:Might include trans women, but this is general discrimination against gender nonconformists]]
# OtherworldlyAndSexuallyAmbiguous: These characters can be powerful {{escapist character}}s for trans, intersex and gender-nonconforming people, but can also carry the implication that not fitting neatly into a binary gender makes you not quite a real human being. This isn't helped by the fact that many characters like this have BlueAndOrangeMorality, implying that being outside a strict gender binary is so mysterious and different to the normal human experience that it's [[GoMadFromTheRevelation incomprehensible to ordinary people]].
people]]. [[blue:This is a bit weak, but discrimination against non-binary people is described in the description]]
# PinkIsForSissies: When a male character is ridiculed for wearing the feminine color. \n [[pink:Discrimination against gender nonconformists]]
# StayInTheKitchen: When a character or the narrative insists that women should stay out of action and be a domestic.
domestic. [[pink:Sexism]]
# ThereAreNoGirlsOnTheInternet: An assumption that any female-identifying person met anonymously on the internet is actually "a dude", doing it for perverted reasons. In addition to harming cis women, this erases or vilifies large numbers of transgender or non-binary persons on the internet who may have been assigned male at birth but now identify as more feminine or outright female. This can be especially harmful since many trans women begin socially transitioning online before coming out as a woman in the real world.
world. [[pink:Sexist stereotype]]
# TomboyAngst: A female character hates being too "masculine".
"masculine". [[red:This involves gender, but without a clear discrimination]]
# UnsettlingGenderReveal: This kind of revelation is unsettling because the other person is attracted to the person who's doing the revealing. It can result in violence, even death.
death. [[teal:This often leads to transphobia, and the description discusses UnfortunateImplications]]
# WantedAGenderConformingChild: A character wishes their daughter were more feminine or their son were more masculine.
masculine. [[pink:Gender conformity]]
# AllWomenArePrudes: Several asexual traits (In particular sex repulsion) are portrayed as universal among women, which erases the fact that there are differences between asexual and allosexual women.
women. [[pink:Gender stereotype; description mentions a lesbian stereotype, but connection to LGBT is not "obvious"]]
# AloneAmongTheCouples: Single characters who stumble into a situation where they are surrounded by couples are almost never ''happily'' single and hence almost always in a position in which they are envying the couples to some extent. This also reinforces the idea that singlehood is something undesirable, which results in asexuals and aromatics being pressured into finding a sexual/romantic partner they sometimes don't want at all by friends and relatives.
relatives. [[red:Gosh, there's a lot of shoehorning going on here]]
# BetterThanSex: Properly handled, it can create a moment relatable to asexuals who have sex (or experienced it at some point in their lives), but genuinely find other activities more enjoyable. Poorly handled, it can deride the very idea of something being more enjoyable than sex and/or people sincerely preferring another activity to it.
it. [[red:Well, Administrivia/TropesAreTools, and how is this homophobic?]]
# BlackJezebelStereotype: Black people are stereotyped as being a sexually promiscuous population, resulting in asexual people being even less likely to be believed about their orientation if they happen to also have dark skin.
skin. [[pink:Black women, more specifically, but not related to LGBT]]
# CelibateEccentricGenius: Asexual and aromatic behavior are depicted as going hand in hand with high intelligence, interest in intellectually stimulating activities and lack of interest in ''platonic'' socializing. The personalities of real-life asexuals and aromatics are much more diverse than that. The fact that asexuality and aromanticism don't always overlap mean that even partner-seeking socializing can still be engaged in.
in. [[blue:I guess this is an asexual/aromantic stereotype?]]
# DeconfirmedBachelor: Never wanting to get married is quite common among asexuals and aromantics, especially if the two orientations overlap. The belief that members of those populations "just haven't met the right person yet" is also quite widespread. It's hence extremely easy for that trope slip into asexual or aromantic erasure, especially if the narrative is closer to "this character had never fallen in love before, until they met that person" than to "this character dated plenty of people, but this is the first time they meet someone they want to settle down with."
" [[red:This one actually put me on the fence, but it seems marginal]]
# EveryoneMustBePaired: Asexuals and aromantics are much more likely to be happily single or in relationships that qualify for HeterosexualLifePartners or PlatonicLifePartners. This makes narratives that insist upon having every single member of the cast in a romantic and/or sexual relationship by the end of the story a mix of erasure and something on par with having every single final pair be heterosexual in a setting that has been shown to allow for same-sex pairs on some level.
level. [[red:Just more PoliticalOvercorrectness]]
# LousyLoversAreLosers: Being unable to sexually satisfy a partner is portrayed as a major character flaw that can only be redeemed via being improved upon and implies the absence of other character traits that are desirable in a romantic partner. This one can actually hurt both sides of a relationship involving at least one asexual person, as asexuality affects both one's capacity to perform satisfactorily and one's ability to enjoy sex. Asexuals identifying as such to cover up that they are lousy lovers and/or because they have yet to have sex with a satisfying partner are also common misconceptions.
misconceptions. [[green:This sounds more plausible]]
# MadonnaWhoreComplex: Women who want sex are Whores. Therefore, women who don't desire sex are treated as perfect, holy, pure, and an EmbodimentOfVirtue with no real agency or personality... in fact, so perfect and pure that they're the only women men should want to marry and have sex with. The idea that asexual women are ideal breeding partners also carries the implication that asexual women secretly ''do'' want sex, deep down... which has the logical conclusion that asexual women are also Whores. In reality, whether a woman desires or doesn't desire sex has absolutely nothing to do with her moral character, and asexual women are sincere about their lack of desire, not 'guarding their virtue' or 'waiting for the right man'. [[pink:Gender stereotype]]

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Final sort


[[header: By topic]]
[[folder:LGBT stereotypes (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:In-universe homophobia (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Both of the above (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Not necessarily homophobic (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Not necessarily LGBT-related (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Complaining (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Not enough context (/99)]]
[[/folder]]

to:

[[header: By topic]]
[[folder:LGBT stereotypes (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:In-universe homophobia (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Both
Key]]
* [[blue:Blue]]: Out-of-universe homophobia
* [[green:Green]]: In-universe homophobia
* [[teal:Teal]]: Both
of the above (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Not
above
* [[gold:Gold]]: LGBT-related, but not
necessarily homophobic (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Not
homophobic
* [[red:Red]]: Not
necessarily LGBT-related (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Complaining (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Not enough context (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
LGBT-related
* [[pink:Gray]]: Unclear



[[folder:Non-members (44/99)]]

to:

[[folder:Non-members (44/99)]]! Non-members (44/99)



[[/folder]]
[[folder:Members (55/99)]]
# AdaptationalSexuality: A character in a work is changed to fit heterosexual norms when the work is adapted to a different medium. Though this can be a capitulation to MoralGuardians, it nevertheless lends credence to heterosexism (the work is "improved" by making it less queer).

to:

[[/folder]]
[[folder:Members (55/99)]]
# AdaptationalSexuality: A character in a work is changed to fit heterosexual norms when the work is adapted to a different medium. Though this can be a capitulation to MoralGuardians, it nevertheless lends credence to heterosexism (the work is "improved" by making it less queer).
! Members (55/99)



# NoLoveForTheWicked: An aro-ace character is villainous, with their lack of interest in romance and sex being a sign of their villainy.
[[/folder]]

to:

# NoLoveForTheWicked: An aro-ace character is villainous, with their lack of interest in romance and sex being a sign of their villainy.
[[/folder]]
villainy.

Added: 56

Changed: 68

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Final classification


[[header: By description in the HomophobiaIndex]]
[[folder:Stereotypes (/99)]]

to:

[[header: By description in the HomophobiaIndex]]
[[folder:Stereotypes
topic]]
[[folder:LGBT stereotypes
(/99)]]



[[folder:About in-universe homophobia (/99)]]

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[[folder:About in-universe [[folder:In-universe homophobia (/99)]]



[[folder:Not homophobia-related (/99)]]

to:

[[folder:Not homophobia-related necessarily homophobic (/99)]]



[[folder:Not necessarily LGBT-related (/99)]]
[[/folder]]



# GayGuyDiesFirst: The minority included to be immediately killed off is a queer character. It's almost explicitly giving the message that creators feel pushed to include them but actively want to erase them.

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Copy Homophobia Index descriptions


[[header: By topic]]

to:

[[header: By topic]]description in the HomophobiaIndex]]



[[folder:Non-negative LGBT tropes (/99)]]

to:

[[folder:Non-negative LGBT tropes [[folder:Both of the above (/99)]]



[[folder:Not specifically LGBT-related (/99)]]

to:

[[folder:Not specifically LGBT-related homophobia-related (/99)]]



[[folder:Unclear (/99)]]

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[[folder:Unclear [[folder:Complaining (/99)]]




to:

[[folder:Not enough context (/99)]]
[[/folder]]



# GayGuyDiesFirst
# GayPanic
# HeteronormativeCrusader
# HomophobicHateCrime
# SexualDevianceIsEvil
# ShesAManInJapan
# {{Bowdlerise}}
# CondescendingCompassion
# GenderedInsult
# InternalizedCategorism
# NotThatTheresAnythingWrongWithThat
# SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX
# ValuesDissonance
# TragicAIDSStory
# GenderNormativeParentPlot
# IncrediblyConspicuousDrag
# IntersexTribulations
# NoGuyWantsAnAmazon
# OtherworldlyAndSexuallyAmbiguous
# PinkIsForSissies
# StayInTheKitchen
# ThereAreNoGirlsOnTheInternet
# TomboyAngst
# UnsettlingGenderReveal
# WantedAGenderConformingChild
# AllWomenArePrudes
# AloneAmongTheCouples
# BetterThanSex
# BlackJezebelStereotype
# CelibateEccentricGenius
# DeconfirmedBachelor
# EveryoneMustBePaired
# LousyLoversAreLosers
# MadonnaWhoreComplex
# AManIsAlwaysEager
# NatureAdoresAVirgin
# PlayingHardToGet
# SexIsInteresting
# SexlessMarriage
# SourPrudes
# TokenRomance
# VirginityMakesYouStupid
# VirginShaming
# YouNeedToGetLaid

to:

# GayGuyDiesFirst
GayGuyDiesFirst: The minority included to be immediately killed off is a queer character. It's almost explicitly giving the message that creators feel pushed to include them but actively want to erase them.
# GayPanic
GayPanic: In Website/TVTropes, this is when queer plotlines and/or characters that were airing are suddenly changed or dropped entirely, it suggests moral disapproval is behind their disappearance. In RealLife, the phrase refers to a legal defence used to partially or completely excuse crimes such as murder and assault on the grounds that the victim's sexual orientation or gender identity is to blame for the defendant's violent reaction. [[note]]In August 2013, the American Bar Association passed a resolution condemning the use of such defenses in court, however as of 2018 only two US states have outright banned it (one of which specifically amended the bill to still allow the trans panic defence before passing it).[[/note]]
# HeteronormativeCrusader
HeteronormativeCrusader: The "crusader" part implies a morally-sanctioned combative attitude; the "heteronormative" part implies the enemy is anyone who doesn't follow conventional rules about sex and gender performance.
# HomophobicHateCrime
HomophobicHateCrime: The unfortunate situation of people being attacked or killed because of homophobia towards them on the attacker's part.
# SexualDevianceIsEvil
SexualDevianceIsEvil: A catch-all for tropes where nonstandard sexual behavior (which generally encompasses LGBTQIA+) is conflated with evil or villainous characters.
# ShesAManInJapan
ShesAManInJapan: This is not always homophobic in motivation, but a large proportion of examples involve changing a character's gender or cis/trans status in order to avoid provoking MoralGuardians by having non-cis characters and/or non-straight romantic relationships.
# {{Bowdlerise}}
{{Bowdlerise}}: Generally, this involves any editing of language and sexual themes from an existing work and is generally performed by MoralGuardians, or at their request. Specifically for [=LGBTI=] people, it means removing queer content from existing works because it is queer, such as removing instances of BoysLove and lesbians from {{anime}} works, effectively turning a {{seinen}} anime into a {{shonen}}--[[ThinkOfTheChildren to "protect" the children in the audience]].
# CondescendingCompassion
CondescendingCompassion: Among the many groups that can be on the receiving end of this are people with disabilities and members of racial and religious minorities. When directed at homosexuals, it can allow the "compassionate" person to feel superior to those who have the "misfortune" to be queer. Their pity may only last so long as their targets go along with this.
# GenderedInsult
GenderedInsult: While not exclusive to queer characters, there's often a homophobic and/or transphobic suggestion to these sorts of insults. The trope can also include instances where trans characters are intentionally misgendered.
# InternalizedCategorism
InternalizedCategorism: This can affect members of racial, ethnic and religious minorities as well as women, and the problem can be compounded when a person fits more than one category and believes the worst of more than one group. When a queer person believes all the worst stereotypes about queer people, trouble follows, often for them and occasionally for others.
# NotThatTheresAnythingWrongWithThat
NotThatTheresAnythingWrongWithThat: The "that" can be any number of things, not only race and religion but also including the enjoyment of unusual hobbies and participation in [=BDSM=] play. A backpedaling move to avoid being called a bigot, this trope can come across as insincere, especially if paired with "[[SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX No really, some of my best friends are gay!]]".
# SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX
SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX: As the "X" indicates, this can be used with racial or ethnic groups and religious adherents as well as cisgender men and women. In an [=LGBTI=] context, some people claim this as a defense against a charge of homophobic bigotry. When it's clear they aren't really that friendly with any gay people, it isn't much of a defense.
# ValuesDissonance
ValuesDissonance: As noted on this trope's page, this problem is very widespread. Even food is not immune: a vegan and an omnivore will look at the same plate of baby back ribs and have vastly different reactions. In the [=LGBTI=] context, for some people, tropes that depict queer people in a bad light are offensive, while for others they're simply funny or even true.
# TragicAIDSStory
TragicAIDSStory: In cases where gay men are often shown to necessarily suffer from, and ultimately die from, HIV/AIDS.
# GenderNormativeParentPlot
GenderNormativeParentPlot: A boy wants to pursue feminine interests, but is pushed to be manly.
# IncrediblyConspicuousDrag
IncrediblyConspicuousDrag: Because men in dresses are considered funny.
# IntersexTribulations
IntersexTribulations: Characters are perceived as unusual because they are born intersex. If not that, then they internalize negative feelings towards being intersex.
# NoGuyWantsAnAmazon
NoGuyWantsAnAmazon: Men find masculine women unattractive.
# OtherworldlyAndSexuallyAmbiguous
OtherworldlyAndSexuallyAmbiguous: These characters can be powerful {{escapist character}}s for trans, intersex and gender-nonconforming people, but can also carry the implication that not fitting neatly into a binary gender makes you not quite a real human being. This isn't helped by the fact that many characters like this have BlueAndOrangeMorality, implying that being outside a strict gender binary is so mysterious and different to the normal human experience that it's [[GoMadFromTheRevelation incomprehensible to ordinary people]].
# PinkIsForSissies
PinkIsForSissies: When a male character is ridiculed for wearing the feminine color.
# StayInTheKitchen
StayInTheKitchen: When a character or the narrative insists that women should stay out of action and be a domestic.
# ThereAreNoGirlsOnTheInternet
ThereAreNoGirlsOnTheInternet: An assumption that any female-identifying person met anonymously on the internet is actually "a dude", doing it for perverted reasons. In addition to harming cis women, this erases or vilifies large numbers of transgender or non-binary persons on the internet who may have been assigned male at birth but now identify as more feminine or outright female. This can be especially harmful since many trans women begin socially transitioning online before coming out as a woman in the real world.
# TomboyAngst
TomboyAngst: A female character hates being too "masculine".
# UnsettlingGenderReveal
UnsettlingGenderReveal: This kind of revelation is unsettling because the other person is attracted to the person who's doing the revealing. It can result in violence, even death.
# WantedAGenderConformingChild
WantedAGenderConformingChild: A character wishes their daughter were more feminine or their son were more masculine.
# AllWomenArePrudes
AllWomenArePrudes: Several asexual traits (In particular sex repulsion) are portrayed as universal among women, which erases the fact that there are differences between asexual and allosexual women.
# AloneAmongTheCouples
AloneAmongTheCouples: Single characters who stumble into a situation where they are surrounded by couples are almost never ''happily'' single and hence almost always in a position in which they are envying the couples to some extent. This also reinforces the idea that singlehood is something undesirable, which results in asexuals and aromatics being pressured into finding a sexual/romantic partner they sometimes don't want at all by friends and relatives.
# BetterThanSex
BetterThanSex: Properly handled, it can create a moment relatable to asexuals who have sex (or experienced it at some point in their lives), but genuinely find other activities more enjoyable. Poorly handled, it can deride the very idea of something being more enjoyable than sex and/or people sincerely preferring another activity to it.
# BlackJezebelStereotype
BlackJezebelStereotype: Black people are stereotyped as being a sexually promiscuous population, resulting in asexual people being even less likely to be believed about their orientation if they happen to also have dark skin.
# CelibateEccentricGenius
CelibateEccentricGenius: Asexual and aromatic behavior are depicted as going hand in hand with high intelligence, interest in intellectually stimulating activities and lack of interest in ''platonic'' socializing. The personalities of real-life asexuals and aromatics are much more diverse than that. The fact that asexuality and aromanticism don't always overlap mean that even partner-seeking socializing can still be engaged in.
# DeconfirmedBachelor
DeconfirmedBachelor: Never wanting to get married is quite common among asexuals and aromantics, especially if the two orientations overlap. The belief that members of those populations "just haven't met the right person yet" is also quite widespread. It's hence extremely easy for that trope slip into asexual or aromantic erasure, especially if the narrative is closer to "this character had never fallen in love before, until they met that person" than to "this character dated plenty of people, but this is the first time they meet someone they want to settle down with."
# EveryoneMustBePaired
EveryoneMustBePaired: Asexuals and aromantics are much more likely to be happily single or in relationships that qualify for HeterosexualLifePartners or PlatonicLifePartners. This makes narratives that insist upon having every single member of the cast in a romantic and/or sexual relationship by the end of the story a mix of erasure and something on par with having every single final pair be heterosexual in a setting that has been shown to allow for same-sex pairs on some level.
# LousyLoversAreLosers
LousyLoversAreLosers: Being unable to sexually satisfy a partner is portrayed as a major character flaw that can only be redeemed via being improved upon and implies the absence of other character traits that are desirable in a romantic partner. This one can actually hurt both sides of a relationship involving at least one asexual person, as asexuality affects both one's capacity to perform satisfactorily and one's ability to enjoy sex. Asexuals identifying as such to cover up that they are lousy lovers and/or because they have yet to have sex with a satisfying partner are also common misconceptions.
# MadonnaWhoreComplex
MadonnaWhoreComplex: Women who want sex are Whores. Therefore, women who don't desire sex are treated as perfect, holy, pure, and an EmbodimentOfVirtue with no real agency or personality... in fact, so perfect and pure that they're the only women men should want to marry and have sex with. The idea that asexual women are ideal breeding partners also carries the implication that asexual women secretly ''do'' want sex, deep down... which has the logical conclusion that asexual women are also Whores. In reality, whether a woman desires or doesn't desire sex has absolutely nothing to do with her moral character, and asexual women are sincere about their lack of desire, not 'guarding their virtue' or 'waiting for the right man'.
# AManIsAlwaysEager
AManIsAlwaysEager: Masculinity is based on how much a man wants sex. The implication is that if a man isn't constantly seeking out sex (often to an extent that most allosexual men don't reach), that's because there's something wrong with him. In addition to being hateful to asexual men, it is derived from a sexist idea that sex is something men are compelled to try to ''take'' from women, with the manliest men being the ones who are most successful at it, and less successful men being worthy of hatred and mockery.
# NatureAdoresAVirgin
NatureAdoresAVirgin: Applying various aspects of this trope to asexuals is a very common way to misunderstand the orientation: fact that asexuality doesn't always mean virginity or even sex-repulsion aside, it gives those who ''are'' virgins, which include many sex-repulsed aces, the type of attention that they often ''don't'' want to get. At a broader social level, this trope also erases some the struggles asexuals face in real life, due to creating an assumption that they have an easier time in environments that frown at sex outside of wedlock than they actually do[[note]]In many such environments, the social imperative to "save oneself" for marriage comes with an obligation to eventually get married and have sex within said marriage. Asexuals who ''do'' want to get married might have to deal with laws that, in practice, require the people involved in a marriage to have sex for it to be valid.[[/note]].
# PlayingHardToGet
PlayingHardToGet: The presence of "pretend you're not interested" among known seduction methods results in many claims of asexuality not being taken seriously because they are mistaken for an extreme form of the method.
# SexIsInteresting
SexIsInteresting: A work adds in loads of sexual characters under the impression that sexuality is the only thing that makes a story worth telling. The implication is that people who don't want sex are too boring to matter. Related to this is creators arguing that characters need to have, and fulfil, sexual desires to be a RoundedCharacter, or that you can't have a full life without having sex.
# SexlessMarriage
SexlessMarriage: If a married couple isn't having sex in fiction, it frequently means one of the following: they don't love each other anymore, it's a MarriageOfConvenience in the first place, the couple is unable/unwilling to sleep in the same bed or at the same time for whatever reason or at least one half is in a situation that prevents them from having sex even if they wanted to. As a result, a marriage in which the couple is having sex is portrayed as inherently going better than one in which the couple isn't, leading to a real-life assumption that marriages in which at least one partner is asexual are never as happy as those involving two allosexual people who regularly have sex.
# SourPrudes
SourPrudes: People who don't engage in much sex are portrayed as looking down on people who have significantly more sex than they do. This results in a "asexuals don't want anybody to have sex" stereotype, when in reality even asexuals who don't engage in sex at all can be favor of other people having the amount of sexual activity they wish, as long as said sexual activity doesn't involve them.
# TokenRomance
TokenRomance: Insistence on tacking a romantic subplot onto every story, regardless of how well it can be executed or how it fits the setting or genre, sends a message to aromantic people that if they don't have a love interest, their story is not one worth telling.
# VirginityMakesYouStupid
VirginityMakesYouStupid: Between the assumption that all asexuals are virgins and the fact that a number of them actually are, the association between virginity and stupidity/naïvety results in asexuals getting treated as if they have those traits by others.
# VirginShaming
VirginShaming: Social stigma against virgins becomes even more of a problem when an orientation that often results in little to no interest in sex exists.
# YouNeedToGetLaidYouNeedToGetLaid: Sex as a stress reducer can range from ineffective to counter-productive for asexuals. It's also frequently suggested as a "solution" to the asexuality itself.



# AdaptationalSexuality
# ArmouredClosetGay
# TheBeard
# BaitAndSwitchLesbians
# BuryYourGays
# ClosetGay
# CureYourGays
# GayAesop
# {{Gayborhood}}
# GayCruising
# {{Gayngst}}
# GayngstInducedSuicide
# GayRomanticPhase
# GetBackInTheCloset
# HaveIMentionedIAmGay
# HaveYouTriedNotBeingAMonster
# HomoeroticSubtext
# IfItsYouItsOkay
# MasculineFeminineGayCouple
# OutOfTheClosetIntoTheFire
# QueerPeopleAreFunny
# RapeAndSwitch
# TransparentCloset
# ButchLesbian
# DiscountLesbians
# HideYourLesbians
# LesbianVampire
# PsychoLesbian
# AllGaysArePedophiles
# AllGaysArePromiscuous
# AlwaysCamp
# AmbiguouslyGay
# ButNotTooGay
# CampGay
# ClubKid
# DepravedHomosexual
# FlamingDevil
# GayBestFriend
# GymBunny
# StraightGay
# AmbiguouslyBi
# ButNotTooBi
# DepravedBisexual
# NoBisexuals
# CreepyCrossdresser
# {{Crossdresser}}
# DragQueen
# NonHumanNonBinary
# SissyVillain
# SupernaturallyValidatedTransPerson
# TransEqualsGay
# TransEqualsHypersexual
# TransRelationshipTroubles
# TransTribulations
# NoLoveForTheWicked

to:

# AdaptationalSexuality
AdaptationalSexuality: A character in a work is changed to fit heterosexual norms when the work is adapted to a different medium. Though this can be a capitulation to MoralGuardians, it nevertheless lends credence to heterosexism (the work is "improved" by making it less queer).
# ArmouredClosetGay
ArmouredClosetGay: A closeted gay who's prompted by InternalizedCategorism to express homophobia against others and aggressively assert his heterosexual bona fides. Their self-loathing can make the homophobia of such characters particularly vicious.
# TheBeard
TheBeard: When practised by lesbians and gay men, this kind of deception can divert suspicions and thus avoid homophobic bigotry.
# BaitAndSwitchLesbians
BaitAndSwitchLesbians: Two characters are subject to heavy and deliberate HomoeroticSubtext, but are never explicitly confirmed as sexual partners, and one or both of them is in a heterosexual relationship by the end of the show. Despite the title, there are an increasing number of male examples. Tends to trivialize the same-sex romance, as if [[GirlOnGirlIsHot it's only there to entertain]] the [[GuyOnGuyIsHot demographic titillated]] by the idea of people of the same sex behaving homoerotically together. Since in female examples the mere appearance of an available male often leads to the switch, it can imply that the women are only interested in each other until a man comes along. Commonly associated with PseudoRomanticFriendship, in which case it may also imply that they're engaging in lesbian-ish behaviour only because they don't know any better.
# BuryYourGays
BuryYourGays: If being gay is (one of) the worst thing(s) you can be and fiction is only satisfying if virtue is rewarded and vice is punished, then the gay characters deserve to die because they're gay.
# ClosetGay
ClosetGay: A character has to hide their orientation and appear straight.
# CureYourGays
CureYourGays: The idea that homosexuality is a form of disease or insanity that can and must be "cured" (In RealLife, it has been discredited by professional organizations, including the American Psychiatric Association). Since it can be used to justify "treatments" that are difficult to distinguish from torture, depictions of this can be particularly [[{{Squick}} squick-making]].
# GayAesop
GayAesop: Learning that anti-gay discrimination is bad is the lesson in this type of morality tale. As with all tropes, this can be handled badly or well.
# {{Gayborhood}}
{{Gayborhood}}: As with ethnic neighbourhoods, the residents live in a concentrated area and have local businesses that appeal to their common interests. If the residents of a Gayborhood are depicted engaging in stereotypically predatory behaviours, such a place (with its large numbers of gays) comes across as threatening to a heterosexual audience.
# GayCruising
GayCruising: Men seeking out anonymous casual sex with other men, oftentimes in public. This trope can be used to highlight homophobia as consenting men having sex with one another are usually targeted by law enforcement unfairly.
# {{Gayngst}}
{{Gayngst}}: Linking homosexuality and unhappiness/depression/suicide can imply that being gay causes all those bad consequences (rather than the reactions of other people being the cause). Correlation does not equal causation.
# GayngstInducedSuicide
GayngstInducedSuicide: The suggestion that being gay is a good, common reason to kill oneself. Particularly heinous because of its very real effect on LGBT youth.
# GayRomanticPhase
GayRomanticPhase: Treating being gay as some sort of phase one goes through, perhaps to appease moral guardians. It downplays someone's existing sexuality as a "phase" that one goes through, rather than being part of who they are.
# GetBackInTheCloset
GetBackInTheCloset: When the MoralGuardians get into the editing room, this one helps promote the idea that condemnation of homosexuality is mainstream. It may also be an effort to produce a self-fulfilling prophecy.
# HaveIMentionedIAmGay
HaveIMentionedIAmGay: The creators want to be inclusive, but are too afraid of the MoralGuardians to show gay behavior, so they rely heavily on stated assertions of homosexuality. So long as there is a difference between the romantic behaviors of straights and gays, the work carries the implication that being gay is wrong or bad.
# HaveYouTriedNotBeingAMonster
HaveYouTriedNotBeingAMonster: The familial rejection in this one is supposed to be well-meaning (assuming the family loves the queer person), but it carries the implication that the queer person can and should change.
# HomoeroticSubtext
HomoeroticSubtext: When homosexual expressions are forbidden, some authors resort to this to put them in anyway.
# IfItsYouItsOkay
IfItsYouItsOkay: This can be a way to excuse a homosexual or bisexual relationship as a one-off, ''as if the character needs an excuse.''
# MasculineFeminineGayCouple
MasculineFeminineGayCouple: This can be TruthInTelevision, but when all same-sex couples are assumed to be like this it appeals to outdated gender stereotypes of every romantic relationship needing to have a "man" and a "woman".
# OutOfTheClosetIntoTheFire
OutOfTheClosetIntoTheFire: Coming out will kill, maim, or otherwise harm you. Supports the idea that if you're gay, you should keep it to yourself.
# QueerPeopleAreFunny
QueerPeopleAreFunny: Humour about gay relationships ''because the participants are gay'' (as opposed to jokes about couples that could apply to heterosexual couples, i.e. they are tempermentally mismatched, have different tastes, or the like) suggests such relationships are inherently funny or deserve ridicule.
# RapeAndSwitch
RapeAndSwitch: This is based on heteronormative idea that heterosexuality is the "default" state and thus being subject to sexual abuse causes the victim to become homosexual. It also gives the implication that being gay is inherently unhealthy and interferes with a "normal" sex life.
# TransparentCloset
TransparentCloset: Can be used to suggest a person is "really gay" and "in denial" about it. Alternatively, it may refer to someone who is trying to pass as straight and fails to do so.
# ButchLesbian
ButchLesbian: One example of taking on the gender conventions of the opposite sex. The expectation that one of these must be paired with a LipstickLesbian (a lesbian who dresses and behaves in a conventionally feminine way) is an uncomfortable way to enforce a male/female that is only {{Truth in Television}} for some lesbians.
# DiscountLesbians
DiscountLesbians: Humanoid lesbian characters get an extra layer of Othering by making them also alien, immortal, cybernetic or otherwise not quite human. While this can be a useful trick in a homophobic society, it also suggests being lesbian means being very unlike the [[{{Muggles}} normal folk in the audience]], and not in a good way.
# HideYourLesbians
HideYourLesbians: In addition to the usual concealment of homosexuality, this one can also imply that lesbian women don't want sex (which is defined as heterosexual sex).
# LesbianVampire
LesbianVampire: The lack of humanity of DiscountLesbians plus the idea that lesbians are predatory (and must be, since they aren't "natural" and must "recruit" others) plus the association with death and decay. Only in more modern interpretations does it come across as empowering young women by letting them [[TookALevelInBadass take a level in badass]].
# PsychoLesbian
PsychoLesbian: Plays on the purported link between homosexuality and insanity, flavoured with the sexist implication of "hysteria", as well as implying that if they're willing to do something as bad as lesbian sex, there's nothing they won't do. Sounds like a toxic trifecta, doesn't it?
# AllGaysArePedophiles
AllGaysArePedophiles: Based partly on the purported hypersexuality of gays and partly on the idea that being gay isn't inherent in anyone, this trope says that gays "recruit" children and "turn" them gay. Never mind that the vast majority of real-life pedophiles (95% or more, depending on the study) are heterosexual.
# AllGaysArePromiscuous
AllGaysArePromiscuous: Essentially AllMenArePerverts plus ImAManICantHelpIt. How bad this one is depends a lot on how the authors define a "normal" or ideal sex life.
# AlwaysCamp
AlwaysCamp: The idea that certain professions attract drama queens and people with campy sensibilities verge into the stereotype area (when "camp" is equated with "gay"), which leads to assumptions and rumors about people in those jobs.
# AmbiguouslyGay
AmbiguouslyGay: So maybe that character is gay, but for heaven's sake don't say so. [[ThinkOfTheChildren Children may be watching]].
# ButNotTooGay
ButNotTooGay: In an effort to appeal to broad audiences without offending too many people, authors impose limits on homosexual expression that are more strict than those on heterosexual expression. This lends support to the idea that being gay is less acceptable than being straight.
# CampGay
CampGay: First, this equates "effeminate" with "gay". Second, it implies that men who behave this way are deserving of ridicule. Third, in practice, it can be taken to paint all gays with this broad lavender brush, when it is only TruthInTelevision for some gays.
# ClubKid
ClubKid: Young hedonistic gays who spend their nights in dance clubs using copious amounts of drugs (legal and not) and hooking up with as many sex partners as possible. Not a flattering picture of gay youth.
# DepravedHomosexual
DepravedHomosexual: If they're having gay sex, and gay sex is among the worst sins on the calendar, they'll stick at nothing.
# FlamingDevil
FlamingDevil: A triple-serving of the lack of humanity of DiscountLesbians plus the caricature nature of CampGay plus the [[SissyVillain stereotypes associating male femininity with evil]] and male femininity with homosexuality (thus leading to associating homosexuality with evil as well).
# GayBestFriend
GayBestFriend: Since the sex lives of gay friends are either offscreen or non-existent, this reinforces the notion that they shouldn't have sex at all.
# GymBunny
GymBunny: This trope implies that gay men work out or participate in sports because they're vain (and want to perfect their looks) and horny (and are looking for sex partners), and any other reason is an afterthought at best.
# StraightGay
StraightGay: Just as CampGay can be read as too over-the-top, this trope can be seen as too restrained due to insecurity or a desire to fit in with the mainstream. For some viewers, it also implies that gays are not masculine.
# AmbiguouslyBi
AmbiguouslyBi: So maybe that character is bi, but for heaven's sake don't say so. [[ThinkOfTheChildren Children may be watching]].
# ButNotTooBi
ButNotTooBi: In an effort to appeal to broad audiences without offending too many people, authors impose limits on bisexual expression that are more strict than those on heterosexual expression. This lends support to the idea that being bi is less acceptable than being straight. For bisexuals, this usually works out so that their attraction to one sex (usually their own) is made much less significant to their attraction to the other.
# DepravedBisexual
DepravedBisexual: If they're having gay sex, and gay sex is among the worst sins on the calendar, they'll stick at nothing. The presumed promiscuity of bisexuals turns up the volume on this one.
# NoBisexuals
NoBisexuals: This trope holds that there are only two choices: straight and gay. It tells bisexuals (and the rest of the culture) that they don't actually exist, and if they don't exist, who needs to worry about mentioning them? Besides, if they don't exist, they can't be offended.
# CreepyCrossdresser
CreepyCrossdresser: Associating crossdressing with immediate sexuality, evil or abnormality in fiction can feed the notion that crossdressing is done only by strange or predatory people. Aside from that, it reinforces sexist gender ideals and that differing from those norms is creepy and bad.
# {{Crossdresser}}
{{Crossdresser}}: Sometimes people who crossdress are held up to ridicule because their bodies don't match their clothing, particularly if their dressing is associated with sexual satisfaction. Transgender people (particularly those who transition after experiencing puberty) can also get tarred with this brush when other people refuse to accept their gender identity. More successful gender presentations, once revealed, may prompt [[UnsettlingGenderReveal accusations of deception or worse]].
# DragQueen
DragQueen: Often, cis people will rather respect a drag queen's gender than the gender of an actual trans woman, when really most drag queens just play a character for comedy and only a few are actually trans. This also causes trans women to be seen as a joke instead of a real person. It should be noted that terminology and understanding of gender has changed over time; in the 70s and 80s, many trans women instead identified as 'drag queens' due to not having another word for themselves. (A famous example would be Marsha P. Johnson, the woman who threw the first brick in the Stonewall riot.)
# NonHumanNonBinary
NonHumanNonBinary: The trope has implications that non-binary people are inhuman or are otherwise "other". It can dehumanize non-binary people.
# SissyVillain
SissyVillain: Villains with effeminate characteristics can lead viewers to equate effeminacy (in men) with evil. Since effeminacy is also often equated with homosexuality, this trope can tend to associate homosexuality with evil as well.
# SupernaturallyValidatedTransPerson
SupernaturallyValidatedTransPerson: Effectively exists as a counter to the idea that a trans person isn't a "real" member of their gender, although it can also come across as transphobic when it's handled poorly (for example if it conforms to transmedicalist[[note]]A "philosophy" within the trans community that older, heavily medicalised definitions of trans people are the only way someone can be trans[[/note]] or enforces a gender binary -- which excludes nonbinary folk, even if it is somewhat accepting of binary trans people).
# TransEqualsGay
TransEqualsGay: When one thinks that heterosexuality is the norm, it's easy to believe that gay people must have a gender identity opposite of their assigned gender at birth.
# TransEqualsHypersexual
TransEqualsHypersexual: Transgender or gender-nonconforming characters are depicted as having an ExtremeLibido, no sexual boundaries, [[FetishesAreWeird bizarre kinks]], or otherwise over-the-top sexual proclivities.
# TransRelationshipTroubles
TransRelationshipTroubles: Being trans causes drama when it comes to romantic relationships.
# TransTribulations
TransTribulations: Transgender characters going through a multitude of hardships, implying being transgender comes with endless misery.
# NoLoveForTheWickedNoLoveForTheWicked: An aro-ace character is villainous, with their lack of interest in romance and sex being a sign of their villainy.
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The distinction between HomophobiaIndex and QueerAsTropes is unclear. Every item on the list is already in

[[header: By topic]]
[[folder:Stereotypes (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:About in-universe homophobia (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Non-negative LGBT tropes (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Not specifically LGBT-related (/99)]]
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Unclear (/99)]]
[[/folder]]

[[header: By membership in QueerAsTropes]]
[[folder:Non-members (44/99)]]
# GayGuyDiesFirst
# GayPanic
# HeteronormativeCrusader
# HomophobicHateCrime
# SexualDevianceIsEvil
# ShesAManInJapan
# {{Bowdlerise}}
# CondescendingCompassion
# GenderedInsult
# InternalizedCategorism
# NotThatTheresAnythingWrongWithThat
# SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX
# ValuesDissonance
# TragicAIDSStory
# GenderNormativeParentPlot
# IncrediblyConspicuousDrag
# IntersexTribulations
# NoGuyWantsAnAmazon
# OtherworldlyAndSexuallyAmbiguous
# PinkIsForSissies
# StayInTheKitchen
# ThereAreNoGirlsOnTheInternet
# TomboyAngst
# UnsettlingGenderReveal
# WantedAGenderConformingChild
# AllWomenArePrudes
# AloneAmongTheCouples
# BetterThanSex
# BlackJezebelStereotype
# CelibateEccentricGenius
# DeconfirmedBachelor
# EveryoneMustBePaired
# LousyLoversAreLosers
# MadonnaWhoreComplex
# AManIsAlwaysEager
# NatureAdoresAVirgin
# PlayingHardToGet
# SexIsInteresting
# SexlessMarriage
# SourPrudes
# TokenRomance
# VirginityMakesYouStupid
# VirginShaming
# YouNeedToGetLaid
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Members (55/99)]]
# AdaptationalSexuality
# ArmouredClosetGay
# TheBeard
# BaitAndSwitchLesbians
# BuryYourGays
# ClosetGay
# CureYourGays
# GayAesop
# {{Gayborhood}}
# GayCruising
# {{Gayngst}}
# GayngstInducedSuicide
# GayRomanticPhase
# GetBackInTheCloset
# HaveIMentionedIAmGay
# HaveYouTriedNotBeingAMonster
# HomoeroticSubtext
# IfItsYouItsOkay
# MasculineFeminineGayCouple
# OutOfTheClosetIntoTheFire
# QueerPeopleAreFunny
# RapeAndSwitch
# TransparentCloset
# ButchLesbian
# DiscountLesbians
# HideYourLesbians
# LesbianVampire
# PsychoLesbian
# AllGaysArePedophiles
# AllGaysArePromiscuous
# AlwaysCamp
# AmbiguouslyGay
# ButNotTooGay
# CampGay
# ClubKid
# DepravedHomosexual
# FlamingDevil
# GayBestFriend
# GymBunny
# StraightGay
# AmbiguouslyBi
# ButNotTooBi
# DepravedBisexual
# NoBisexuals
# CreepyCrossdresser
# {{Crossdresser}}
# DragQueen
# NonHumanNonBinary
# SissyVillain
# SupernaturallyValidatedTransPerson
# TransEqualsGay
# TransEqualsHypersexual
# TransRelationshipTroubles
# TransTribulations
# NoLoveForTheWicked
[[/folder]]

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