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Chauvinism |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.14 sec. |
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chauvinism (shō`vənĭzəm), word derived from the name of Nicolas Chauvin, a soldier of the First French Empire. Used first for a passionate admiration of Napoleon, it now expresses exaggerated and aggressive nationalism. As a social phenomenon, chauvinism is essentially modern, becoming marked in the era of acute national rivalries and imperialism beginning in the 19th cent. It has been encouraged by mass communication, originally by the cheap newspaper. Chauvinism exalts consciousness of nationality, spreads hatred of minorities and other nations, and is associated with militarism, imperialism, and racism. In the 1960s, the term "male chauvinist" appeared in the women's liberation movement; it is applied to males who refuse to regard females as equals. Chauvinism See also Bigotry, Patriotism. Chauvin, Nicolas soldier who passionately admired Napoleon; whence, ultranationalism. [Fr. Hist.: NCE, 518] treats wife Nora as an inferior being. [Nor. Lit.: A Doll’s House] legendary second-century empress of Japan, victorious invader of Korea and hence the conjectural eponym of jingoism. [Jap. Hist.: EB (1963) XIII, 69] nickname of 19th-century English pro-war party. [Br. Hist.: EB (1963) XIII, 69] denigrating designation for a man who treats women as inferiors. [Am. Pop. Culture: Misc.] |
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But it is also a book for anyone who wants to figure out why homophobia, antifeminism, and a passionate opposition to abortion and premarital sex have become the emotional core of right-wing politics in the United States. Such arraignments are plentiful, but the notion that Hamlet's antifeminism springs from his "unmentioned" grandmother's dalliance is fantastic. In 1957, after she privately acknowledged her own homosexuality, she wrote two letters of support to the lesbian newsletter "The Ladder" in which she linked homophobia with antifeminism. |
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