Citations:homogender

Adjective: "involving people with the same gender identity"

 * 1997, Judith L. On, "Hard Work, Hard Lovin', Hard Times, Hardly Worth It: Care of Working-Class Men", in The Care of Men (eds. Christie Cozad Neuger & James Newton Poling), Abingdon Press (1997), ISBN 9780687014514, unnumbered pages:
 * All three settings—the shop, the military, and the world of team sports—have been homogender worlds of cultural masculinity, with much resistance to changing that fact.
 * 2007, Sharyn Graham Davies, Challenging Gender Norms: Five Genders Among Bugis in Indonesia, Thomson Wadsworth (2007), ISBN 9780495092803, page 26:
 * Same-sex heterogender relationships are more openly acknowledged in Bugis society than same-sex homogender relationships. I use the phrase same-sex heterogender relationship here to describe a couple where both individuals are either male or female but where each of the respective partners is of a different gender, such as a relationship between a calalai and a woman.
 * 2007, Charlene E. Makley, The Violence of Liberation: Gender and Tibetan Buddhist Revival in Post-Mao China, University of California Press (2007), ISBN 9780520250598, page 19:
 * It was in the subtle sociolinguistic cues and gestures associated with Labrang Tibetan femininity I gradually took on in encounters, such as the way I came to talk and think about my "husband"–feeling extremely uncomfortable with public displays of heterogender affection, yet learning to participate in and expect the micropractices of bodily touch signifying homogender affection.
 * 2008, Deborah Shamoon, "Situating the Shōjo in Shōjo Manga: Teenage Girls, Romance Comics, and Contemporary Japanese Culture", in Japanese Visual Culture (ed. Mark W. MacWilliams), M. E. Sharpe (2008), ISBN 9780765633088, page 142:
 * The appearance of male characters in shōjo manga in the 1970s did not reconcile girls' romantic fantasies with patriarchal society, but as in the Takarazuka Revue, domesticated the male body within the homogender world of shōjo culture.
 * 2008, Merle B. Turner, Friendship, Xlibris (2008), ISBN 9781462810338, page 20:
 * Not all friendships are homogender, as it were, nor within the same class or age group.
 * 2014, Serena Nanda, Gender Diversity: Crosscultural Variations, Second Edition, Waveland Press (2014), ISBN 9781478615460, page 17:
 * In a multiple gender system the partners would be of the same sex but different genders, and homogender, rather than homosexual, practices bore the brunt of negative cultural sanctions (as is true today, for example, in contemporary Indonesia).