释义 |
homo-erotic, a. and n. Psychiatry.|hɒməʊɪˈrɒtɪk| Also homoerotic. [f. homo- + erotic a. and n.] A. adj. Pertaining to or characterized by a tendency for erotic emotions to be centred on a person of the same sex; of or pertaining to a homo-erotic person. Freq. a synonym of homosexual.
1916E. Jones tr. Ferenczi's Contrib. Psycho-Analysis xii. 268 The development of a homo-erotic obsessional neurosis. 1917C. R. Payne tr. Pfister's Psychoanalytic Method ix. 178 After the damming up of the homoerotic instinctive activity, a physical symptom appeared. 1936W. S. Sadler Theory & Pract. Psychiatry xxxviii. 626 Many notable individuals in history have been homoerotic, among them Alexander the Great and Michelangelo. Ibid. 627 On getting into the case, I found that she was homoerotic—homosexual. 1959Jrnl. Analytical Psychol. IV. ii. 120 From his dreams in particular the repressed homo-erotic aspect of these clearly emerged. 1961Encounter Mar. 75 The only enduring friendships are ‘homo⁓erotic’. 1969Listener 20 Feb. 250/3 A slick, unreal, wise⁓cracking comedy about New York homo-erotic life. 1971M. Altschuler in Marshall & Suggs Human Sexual Behavior ii. 48 One may see, in various houses, boys and young men..wrapped in each other's arms... This behavior is not specifically homosexual, but it may be called homoerotic. It is noticed only during fiestas. B. n. A homo-erotic person.
1936W. S. Sadler Theory & Pract. Psychiatry xxxviii. 626 The congenital, full-fledged homoerotic is never really cured. Hence homo-eˈroticism, -ˈerotism, the concentration of erotic impulses on a person of the same sex.
1916E. Jones tr. Ferenczi's Contrib. Psycho-Analysis xii. 253 Even superficial observation of these two kinds of homo-erotism shews that they belong..to quite different syndromes. 1936W. S. Sadler Theory & Pract. Psychiatry xxxviii. 628 The well-known tendency toward a certain degree of homoeroticism in the Army and Navy. 1950E. Jones tr. Ferenczi's Sex in Psychoanalysis xii. 299 Homo-erotism... The word..is in my opinion preferable to the ambiguous expression homosexuality, since it makes prominent the psychical aspect of the impulse in contradistinction to the biological term ‘sexuality’. |