Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Declining Significance of Homophobia: How Teenage Boys are Redefining Masculinity and Heterosexuality [Kietas viršelis]

3.57/5 (25 ratings by Goodreads)
(Lecturer, Brunel University)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 237x161x20 mm, weight: 416 g, 20 halftones and 20 line illustrations
  • Serija: Sexuality, Identity, and Society
  • Išleidimo metai: 19-Apr-2012
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0199778248
  • ISBN-13: 9780199778249
  • Formatas: Hardback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 237x161x20 mm, weight: 416 g, 20 halftones and 20 line illustrations
  • Serija: Sexuality, Identity, and Society
  • Išleidimo metai: 19-Apr-2012
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0199778248
  • ISBN-13: 9780199778249
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.

Recenzijos

Despite the remarkable changes in attitudes towards homosexuality in recent years, a continuing stream of homophobia has often been detected, especially among young men. This important book demonstrates vividly that this need not be the case. Based on a close study of three contrasting schools, Mark McCormack documents the ways in which full acceptance of homosexuality not only makes life better for gay young people, but also transforms heterosexual masculinity. No longer dependent on affirming their masculinity through homophobia, heterosexual young men are freed to explore a more open and flexible masculinity. This is a heartening book that charts the profound and positive transformation now taking place in young people's culture, and makes one optimistic for the future. * Jeffrey Weeks, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, London South Bank University, and author of The Languages of Sexuality (2011) Incisive, accessible and essential reading.Bent * One of the best books on male adolescents I've ever read, The Declining Significance of Homophobia documents a revolution, one in which gay youth are accepted and integrated alongside their heterosexual brethren, gay bullying is unacceptable, and heterosexual boys experience little fear about being emotional, soft, or non-violent. What has caused this revolution? McCormack argues it is the result of broader social changes regarding sexuality and gender, particularly among young people-the success of the gay rights movement, the declining significance of religion, and the reach of social media. Now the big question: Can this possibly cross the Atlantic? * Ritch C. Savin-Williams, Chair and Professor of Human Development, and Director, Sex and Gender Lab, Cornell University * Through deep, careful study, McCormack unveils new possibilities for contemporary youth. His work challenges the longstanding assumption about contemporary masculinities that homophobia is a given. Learning from young people, his book foreshadows a new era in which youth lead the way in defining gender and masculinity in ways that aren't fundamentally exclusionary. It is important scholarship and offers a hopeful vision of the future. * Stephen T. Russell, Distinguished Professor and Fitch Nesbitt Endowed Chair and Director, Frances McClelland Institute for Children, Youth, and Families, University of Arizona * The real value of this book isn't the way is rescues gay teens from victimhood, but in the revolution in masculinity it documents, about which many oldies are still in denial. * Mark Simpson, The Independent * The term 'groundbreaking' is often bestowed too lightly, but it is richly deserved in the case of this book. Mark McCormack offers a pioneering and remarkably inspiring account of the declining significance of homophobia, and how teenage boys are redefining masculinity and heterosexuality (and homosexuality). * Philip Kemp, Times Higher Education Supplement * Rather than giving way to confirmation bias and retaining a belief that homophobia exists and continues to blight the experience of many straight, gay, bisexual and/or transgender young peoplemuch as it did in his own school days as well as in countless books on the subject McCormack has dared to tell it how it is. And if, as the introduction outlines, the broad intention of this book is to provide a pathway towards developing a more intelligent discussion about sex, sexuality and relationships in schools, this is something for which he should be highly commended. Moving beyond cherished and celebrated theoretical positions, McCormack shows that we need to recognise social change as it occurs and be ready to adequately theorise its implications for adolescence. * J Youth Adolescence * This book has probably the greatest interest to people researching sex or gay situation, but it is also relevant for child and adolescent psychiatrists, teachers and others who work with youth for the socially committed human it will be an interesting input about how society is changing and how we understand ourselves ... For me the book was current and gives useful knowledge of the situation regarding gender roles and the situation of homosexuals among youth of today. I also like the author's arguments that the classification based on sexual identity is useful, and he emphasizes that one no longer needs to look at gays as victims. * Journal of the Norwegian Medical Association, April 2013 *

Introduction xxi
PART I Setting the Scene
1 Researching Gender and Sexuality in Schools
3(8)
2 The Study
11(12)
PART II Masculinities
3 Sex, Gender, and Power
23(14)
4 From Hegemonic Masculinity to Inclusive Masculinities
37(10)
5 Teenage Boys and Schooling
47(10)
6 The Rise and Fall of Homophobia
57(14)
PART III The Declining Significance of Homophobia
7 Decreasing Homohysteria
71(18)
8 Heterosexual Recuperation
89(8)
9 Popularity without Oppression
97(12)
10 Homosexually Themed Language
109(14)
11 Gay-Friendly High Schools
123(18)
References 141(18)
Index 159
Mark McCormack is a Lecturer in Sociology at Durham University in England. His research focuses on the changing nature of masculinities among British youth. In this book, he examines how decreased homophobia has positively influenced the way in which young men bond emotionally and interact in school settings.