Citations:heteroflexibility

Noun: "the state of being heteroflexible"

 * 2002, Robert Goss, Queering Christ: Beyond Jesus Acted Up, Pilgrim Press (2002), ISBN 9780829814989, page 232:
 * Essig divides society into the categories of heteroflexibility and heterorigidity and homoflexibility and homorigidity.
 * 2007, Candace Moore, "Getting Wet: The Heteroflexibility of Showtime's The L Word", in Third Wave Feminism and Television: Jane Puts It in a Box (ed. Merri Lisa Johnson), I. B. Tauris & Co. (2007), ISBN 9781845112455, page 142:
 * The L Word banks on heteroflexibility as well as queer equivocation, through its cultivation of the touristic gaze, a gaze which immersed, identifies with, and distanced, desires.
 * 2010, Alison Rooke and Mónica G. Moreno Figueroa, "Beyond 'Key Parties' and 'Wife Swapping': The Visual Culture of Online Swinging", in Porn.com: Making Sense of Online Pornography (ed. Feona Attwood), Peter Lang (2010), ISBN 9781433102066, page 234:
 * Female same-sex sexuality is represented in ways which are circumscribed by the conventions of pornonormativity and heteroflexibility.
 * 2013, Heidi Hoefinger, Sex, Love and Money in Cambodia: Professional Girlfriends and Transactional Relationships, Routledge (2013), ISBN 9781317931249, unnumbered page:
 * It was unclear if the blatant display of her body was meant as a sexual advance or some other expression of heteroflexibility or homosociality.