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Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Gay & Lesbian studies > Gay studies (Gay men)
In recent years, San Francisco has been synonymous with gay and
lesbian pride, and the various achievements of the gay and lesbian
community are personified in the city by the bay. The tumultuous
and ongoing struggles for this community's civil rights from the
1950s to the present are well documented, but queer culture itself
goes back much further than that, in fact all the way back to the
California gold rush.
Research has traditionally shown high schools to be hostile
environments for LGBT youth. Boys have used homophobia to prove
their masculinity and distance themselves from homosexuality.
Despite these findings over the last three decades, The Declining
Significance of Homophobia tells a different story. Drawing on
fieldwork and interviews of young men in three British high
schools, Dr. Mark McCormack shows how heterosexual male students
are inclusive of their gay peers and proud of their pro-gay
attitudes. He finds that being gay does not negatively affect a
boy's popularity, but being homophobic does. Yet this accessible
book goes beyond documenting this important shift in attitudes
towards homosexuality: McCormack examines how decreased homophobia
results in the expansion of gendered behaviors available to young
men. In the schools he examines, boys are able to develop
meaningful and loving friendships across many social groups. They
replace toughness and aggression with emotional intimacy and
displays of affection for their male friends.Free from the constant
threat of social marginalization, boys are able to speak about once
feminized activities without censure. The Declining Significance of
Homophobia is essential reading for all those interested in
masculinities, education, and the decline of homophobia.
This book examines gendered language use in six gay male
subcultures: drag queens, radical faeries, bears, circuit boys,
barebackers, and leathermen. Within each subculture, unique
patterns of language use challenge normative assumptions about
gender and sexual identity. Rusty Barrett's analyses of these
subcultures emphasize the ways in which gay male constructions of
gender are intimately linked to other forms of social difference.
In From Drag Queens to Leathermen, Barrett presents an extension of
his earlier work among African American drag queens in the 1990s,
emphasizing the intersections of race and class in the construction
of gender. An analysis of sacred music among radical faeries
considers the ways in which expressions of gender are embedded in a
broader neo-pagan religious identity. The formation of bear as an
identity category (for heavyset and hairy men) in the late 1980s
involves the appropriation of linguistic stereotypes of rural
Southern masculinity. Among regular attendees of circuit parties,
language serves to differentiate gay and straight forms of
masculinity. In the early 2000s, barebackers (gay men who eschew
condoms) used language to position themselves as rational risk
takers with an innate desire for semen. For participants in the
International Mr. Leather contest, a disciplined, militaristic
masculinity links expressions of patriotism with BDSM sexual
practice. In all of these groups, the construction of gendered
identity involves combining linguistic forms that would usually not
co-occur. These unexpected combinations serve as the foundation for
the emergence of unique subcultural expressions of gay male
identity, explicated at length in this book.
Homosexuality has taken center stage in our nation, churches, and homes. Everyone knows or cares deeply for someone who experiences same-sex attraction, sexual confusion, or practices homosexuality. While the entire world talks about homosexuality, the subject remains taboo in many churches. The fear of being labeled as hateful, a bigot, or ignorant has kept many Christians out of the conversation. The church remains silent, leaving many people who love God confused about what the Bible really says about sexuality.
Did God make people gay? Does God love homosexuals? Will people have to deal with same-sex attraction their entire lives? Landon Schott brings truth and clarity to sexual confusion, using over 400 scripture references to reveal the heart of the Father and mind of Christ.
Gay Awareness exposes false teaching and deception that have created a false identity through the lens of sexuality instead of the eyes of God's Word. Gay Awareness will stretch you and challenge you, but with relentless love bring you comfort and healing.
In Gay Awareness: Discovering the Heart of the Father and the Mind of Christ, top-selling author and nationally known speaker Landon Schott addresses:
- What the Bible actually says about marriage, sexuality, and homosexuality.
- Mistakes the Church makes when addressing homosexuality and the gay community.
- Contradictions between the gay lifestyle and the Christ-centered lifestyle.
- Clear insight into how to genuinely show Christian love to those who practice homosexuality.
- How people can experience deliverance and freedom.
Featuring an extensive interview with highly respected authority Dr. Michael L. Brown, a multiple book best-selling author and expert on spiritual renewal and cultural reformation, Gay Awareness is the book you've been looking for to find clarity, teach you what Scripture says about homosexuality and how to respond to people with love, grace, and truth.
Oscar Wilde had one of literary history's most explosive love
affairs with Lord Alfred "Bosie" Douglas. In 1895, Bosie's father,
the Marquess of Queensberry, delivered a note to the Albemarle Club
addressed to "Oscar Wilde posing as sodomite." With Bosie's
encouragement, Wilde sued the Marquess for libel. He not only lost
but he was tried twice for "gross indecency" and sent to prison
with two years' hard labor. With this publication of the uncensored
trial transcripts, readers can for the first time in more than a
century hear Wilde at his most articulate and brilliant. The Real
Trial of Oscar Wilde documents an alarmingly swift fall from grace;
it is also a supremely moving testament to the right to live, work,
and love as one's heart dictates.
This issue offers a theoretical and methodological imagining of
what constitutes trans* before the advent of the terms that
scholars generally look to for the formation of modern conceptions
of gender, sex, and sexuality. What might we find if we look for
trans* before trans*? While some historians have rejected the
category of transgender to speak of experiences before the
mid-twentieth century, others have laid claim to those living
gender-non-conforming lives before our contemporary era. By using
the concept of trans*historicity, this volume draws together trans*
studies, historical inquiry, and queer temporality while also
emphasizing the historical specificity and variability of gendered
systems of embodiment in different time periods. Essay topics
include a queer analysis of medieval European saints, discussions
of a nineteenth-century Russian religious sect, an exploration of a
third gender in early modern Japanese art, a reclamation of Ojibwe
and Plains Cree Two-Spirit language, and biopolitical genealogies
and filmic representations of transsexuality. The issue also
features a roundtable discussion on trans*historicities and an
interview with the creators of the 2015 film Deseos. Critiquing
both progressive teleologies and the idea of sex or gender as a
timeless tradition, this issue articulates our own desires for
trans history, trans*historicities, and queerly temporal forms of
historical narration. Contributors. Kadji Amin, M. W. Bychowski,
Fernanda Carvajal, Howard Chiang, Leah DeVun, Julian Gill-Peterson,
Jack Halberstam, Asato Ikeda, Jacob Lau, Kathleen P. Long, Maya
Mikdashi, Robert Mills, Carlos Motta, Marcia Ochoa, Kai Pyle, C.
Riley Snorton, Zeb Tortorici, Jennifer Louise Wilson
Smith examines the different ways in which gay men use pop music,
both as producers and consumers, and how, in turn, pop uses gay
men. He asks what role culture plays in shaping identity and why
pop continues to thrill gay men. These 40 essays and interviews
look at how performers, from The Kinks' Ray Davies to Gene's Martin
Rossiter, have used pop as a platform to explore and articulate,
conform to or contest notions of sexuality and gender. A defence of
cultural differences and an attack on cultural elitism, Seduced and
Abandoned is as passionate and provocative as pop itself.
A passionate play about two lovers who go down a journey of their
love together. Fate and Pearl are two young women who are beautiful
lesbians. They are embarking upon life and their love with each
other. They are learning about themselves as well as each other.
They are growing deeper in their love together. They discuss a lot
of important issues that are affecting their lives. They are
embracing their lives and futures. This is a beautiful love story
between Fate and Pearl. Fate and Pearl have the greatest love ever
that withstands time. The beauty of their love is explored here.
In gay bars and nightclubs across America, and in gay-oriented
magazines and media, the buff, macho, white gay man is exalted as
the ideal-the most attractive, the most wanted, and the most
emulated type of man. For gay Asian American men, often viewed by
their peers as submissive or too 'pretty,' being sidelined in the
gay community is only the latest in a long line of
racially-motivated offenses they face in the United
States.Repeatedly marginalized by both the white-centric queer
community that values a hyper-masculine sexuality and a homophobic
Asian American community that often privileges masculine
heterosexuality, gay Asian American men largely have been silenced
and alienated in present-day culture and society. In Geisha of a
Different Kind, C. Winter Han travels from West Coast Asian drag
shows to the internationally sought-after Thai kathoey, or
"ladyboy," to construct a theory of queerness that is inclusive of
the race and gender particularities of the gay Asian male
experience in the United States. Through ethnographic observation
of queer Asian American communities and Asian American drag shows,
interviews with gay Asian American men, and a reading of current
media and popular culture depictions of Asian Americans, Han argues
that gay Asian American men, used to gender privilege within their
own communities, must grapple with the idea that, as Asians, they
have historically been feminized as a result of Western domination
and colonization, and as a result, they are minorities within the
gay community, which is itself marginalized within the overall
American society. Han also shows that many Asian American gay men
can turn their unusual position in the gay and Asian American
communities into a positive identity. In their own conception of
self, their Asian heritage and sexuality makes these men unique,
special, and, in the case of Asian American drag queens, much more
able to convey a convincing erotic femininity. Challenging
stereotypes about beauty, nativity, and desirability, Geisha of a
Different Kind makes a major intervention in the study of race and
sexuality in America.
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