Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Celesbian> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 29 of
29
with 100 triples per page.
- Celesbian abstract "The term celesbian (a portmanteau of celebrity and lesbian), originally referred to a female celebrity known or reputed to be a lesbian and popular within the LGBT community. Celesbianism as a Western media phenomenon came into vogue in 2008, when several female celebrities presented themselves as lesbians. The term was first used by New Yorkers Pam Franco and Susan Levine, a disk jockey. It was used in a full-page ad in a lesbian nightlife magazine, GO MAGAZINE. The ad was for the Mz Hip and Fit NY contest, the idea of Denise Cohen of Denco Designs & Events. The contest was a search for the hottest lesbian in the United States. The term celesbian was used for the celebrity lesbian judges.In contemporary mass media, the term has come to mean a female celebrity who claims to be a lesbian, either explicitly or implicitly — often to get publicity. She may or may not really be homosexual. A term similar to the second sense of celesbian is fauxmosexual, combining faux (false) and homosexual, in which case the celebrity may be either male or female. Some LGBT activists have objected to the fauxmosexuality phenomenon, saying it trivializes real homosexuals, both in presenting homosexuality as an \"outrageous\" novelty, and in glossing over the serious issues faced by young people struggling to come to terms with their homosexuality. It is also seen as isolating and stereotypical by \"ruining what we are trying to accomplish in showing the world that we are normal human beings like everybody else\" by others.Conversely, the celesbian who is open about her sexuality may present herself as a more socially safe representation of lesbianism. She who is authentically homosexual can be a great role model for those potentially looking to come out. Contemporary musical artists Nicki Minaj and Azealia Banks have both publicly expressed their sexually love of women. By involving their lesbian sexuality to popular culture, they are doing work to normalize it.".
- Celesbian wikiPageID "20828309".
- Celesbian wikiPageLength "3842".
- Celesbian wikiPageOutDegree "11".
- Celesbian wikiPageRevisionID "704831881".
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink Azealia_Banks.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink Category:LGBT_terms.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink Celebrity.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink Coming_out.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink Homosexuality.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink LGBT.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink LGBT_community.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink Lesbian.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink Mass_media.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink Nicki_Minaj.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLink Portmanteau.
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLinkText "Celesbian".
- Celesbian wikiPageWikiLinkText "celesbian".
- Celesbian wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:LGBT-stub.
- Celesbian wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Celesbian wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Celesbian subject Category:LGBT_terms.
- Celesbian comment "The term celesbian (a portmanteau of celebrity and lesbian), originally referred to a female celebrity known or reputed to be a lesbian and popular within the LGBT community. Celesbianism as a Western media phenomenon came into vogue in 2008, when several female celebrities presented themselves as lesbians. The term was first used by New Yorkers Pam Franco and Susan Levine, a disk jockey. It was used in a full-page ad in a lesbian nightlife magazine, GO MAGAZINE.".
- Celesbian label "Celesbian".
- Celesbian sameAs Q5057833.
- Celesbian sameAs m.053x4f3.
- Celesbian sameAs Q5057833.
- Celesbian wasDerivedFrom Celesbian?oldid=704831881.
- Celesbian isPrimaryTopicOf Celesbian.