Suggestions(5)
Dictionary
stigmatized
verb
Past of stigmatize
synonyms
Exact(60)
Second, emphasizing the moral privilege of the stigmatized may obscure differences in the experience of stigmatization, and in the sort of authority it confers.
Many advocates see access to abortion as a fundamental component of women's healthcare, but the decision to end a pregnancy remains a highly stigmatized one and misconceptions abound as to who seeks an abortion and why – even 42 years after the Supreme Court decision in Roe v Wade affirmed a woman's right to choose.
He put forward the harmonious domestic family as a new cultural ideal and stigmatized ancien régime society, with its emphasis on fashion and its influential "public women," such as royal mistresses and the salon hostesses who played a critical role in promoting the Enlightenment.
Other perspectives on deviance include evolutionary theory, which argues that physically stigmatized (deviant) group members may receive hostile and exclusionary reactions from others because they pose a threat to survival of the group.
Eager to safeguard state liberties and the rights of property, the founding fathers gave the federal government insufficient revenues and coercive powers, as a result of which the constitution was stigmatized as being "no more than a Treaty of Alliance".
In spite of Fielding's critical praise of Clarissa and the friendship that later developed between Richardson and Fielding's sister, Sarah, Richardson never forgave the author of what he stigmatized as "that vile Pamphlet Shamela".
Its sexual rites in particular were stigmatized as inferior practices, more conducive to perdition than to salvation.
Following the dispute over Arian Christology (the doctrine of Christ), those disputes became stigmatized as the great heresies to afflict the Eastern Empire.
Created by Apple Computer, Inc. (now Apple Inc ., the Apple II was popular in schools by 1979, but in the corporate market it was stigmatized as a game machine.
In the Hindu monastic code, there can be no such dispensation monks who return to society are highly stigmatized.
Though the English Puritanism of the 17th century stigmatized dance as one of man's most sinful occupations, even Oliver Cromwell, lord protector of England under the Puritan rule in the 1650s, could not prevent the appearance of The English Dancing Master (issued 1650; dated 1651), by the bookseller and publisher John Playford (1623 c. 1686).
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