disanthropy

English

WOTD – 25 November 2022

Etymology

PIE word
*dwís

From dis- (prefix meaning ‘against; not’) + -anthropy (suffix meaning ‘humanity’), modelled after misanthropy. The word was coined by the Canadian literary critic Greg Garrard in a 2012 article published in SubStance: see the quotation.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /dɪsˈænθɹəpi/
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: dis‧an‧thro‧py

Noun

disanthropy (usually uncountable, plural disanthropies)

  1. (literary criticism) A misanthropic desire for a world without human life, expressed in literature. [from 2012]

Hypernyms

Derived terms

Translations

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