Homocaust

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See also: homocaust

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Blend of homosexual +‎ Holocaust. Possibly coined in 1986 in the pseudoacademic, Holocaust-denial-focused Journal of Historical Review;[1] possibly attested already by the 1970s.

Proper noun[edit]

Homocaust

  1. (rare) The persecution of homosexuals which occurred in Nazi Germany, when seen as constituting systematic destruction of them.
    • 1991 (English translation), Massimo Consoli (original author), Homocaust: From the Reform of Soviet Codes in 1934 to the Slaughter in Nazi Fields: Persecution of Homosexuals in Russia Under Stalin and in Germany Under Hitler (originally in Italian: 1984, Massimo Consoli, Homocaust: il nazismo e la persecuzione degli omosessuali)
    • 2013, Queer Futures: Reconsidering Ethics, Activism, and the Political, →ISBN:
      Much of lesbian/gay history claims that the Nazis pursued a campaign against homosexual men, similar to the mass murder of Jews, which lead[sic] to a Homocaust, the systematic extermination of homosexual men. In an article published in 2002, Jim Steakley, an American activist and historian, looks back self-critically at how he and others contributed to the myth of a Homocaust in the early 1970s (Steakly 2002: 55, also Jellonek and Lautmann 2002: 12).

Translations[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "For the sake of convenience, I suggest that henceforward we all refer to the alleged Nazi extermination of homosexuals as "the Homocaust." (Journal of Historical Review, volume 6, issue 4, 1986.)

German[edit]

Proper noun[edit]

Homocaust m (proper noun, strong, genitive Homocausts)

  1. (rare) Homocaust