Citations:dirtybadwrong
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English citations of dirtybadwrong
Adjective: "(fandom slang) twisted, perverse, or unnatural, often in an appealing way"[edit]
2007 2009 2013 2017 2020 | |||||||
ME « | 15th c. | 16th c. | 17th c. | 18th c. | 19th c. | 20th c. | 21st c. |
- 2007, Robert Wilonsky (quoting the blog Smart Bitches Who Love Trashy Novels), "Gettin' All Romance Novel Up in this Bitch", Dallas Observer, 13 July 2007:
- “Y’know, that sounds dirtybadwrong. Like, an incredibly perverse sex act that involves bodily excretions that have no business being excreted during sex.”
- 2009, Sarra Manning, Unsticky, page 227:
- Talking about payment in kind was very tacky when they'd been thundering towards the kind of dirtybadwrong porno-sex that she'd remember on her deathbed.
- 2013, Katherine Larsen & Lynn S. Zubernis, Fangasm: Supernatural Fangirls, pages 46-47:
- To put it in more impressive-sounding terms, we [female members of fandom] proclaim our rebellion against constricting social norms by celebrating a subversive sexuality […] And then something magical happens—others in fandom let us know that that whatever that is, it's okay. In fact, more than a few fellow fans have harbored a secret liking of whatever-it-is themselves. They jump online to say "OMG yes, me too!" or “OMG so dirtybadwrong, gimme more!”
- 2017, "Hydratrashmeme", quoted in Kristina Busse, Framing Fan Fiction: Literary and Social Practices in Fan Fiction Communities, page 215:
- If you want to get judgey about the fact that some people get off on dirtybadwrong things happening to their favorite characters, this isn't the venue for that debate.
- 2020, Angie Fazekas, "Alpha/Beta/Omega: Racialized Narratives and Fandom's Investment in Whiteness", in Fandom, Now in Color: A Collection of Voices (ed. Rukmini Pande), page 100:
- Alongside the fact that most fans appreciate the “crazy hot sex” and “'dirtybadwrong” nature of the explicit sexuality in the omegaverse, there is a repeated reference to the ability of the trope to question, consider, and subvert gender and sexual hierarchies and oppressions.