musclebrains
New member
wyst said:My problem with his post is yes, queenie guys, often gay, but gay guys not often queenie. I am bi, and have lived in and out of the gay culture for years, and most gay men aren't queenie. The average gay kid who's in the closet often is afraid to come out of the closet for just the reason that people with very little real experience like warik perpetuate the stereotype that gay men are like that. Some are most aren't and both are fine. But imagine feeling attracted to men but also being a more traditionally masculine guy and knowing that if you come out of the closet society will instinctively see you as a queen? That's the harm of the stereotype that warik delights in perpetuating.
I agree with this, Wyst, but I also think an argument against heterosexist posturing can't rely on dissing a very real type within the gay community. Gay men themselves have cruelly marginalized effeminate men just to placate the kind of prejudice that Warik embodies in an effort to represent themselves as better candidates for assimilation.
I have seen countless gay kids in my office whose main complaint is that they don't feel "masculine enough."
It's the interesting obsession of gender and gay and lesbian studies to make an inquiry into the construction, not only of sexual orientation, but of gender itself as a collection of "performative gestures" imposed by the culture. Effeminacy did not become strongly associated with homosexuality until the American psychoanalytical community stereotyped the "sissy" as an incipient homosexual (only one of Freud's multiple explanations). So, it is fair to question how much effeminacy became constellated as a way for gay men to identify themselves to one another -- and for the culture to identify and marginalize homosexuals.
The Mattachine Society, one of the early gay movements, actually proceeded on this basis and required members to "masculinize" themselves. (Some would call this a "normalization" of gender.) Women's organizations similarly required members to "feminize" themselves. Any gay person, unless he is extremely identified with the markers of the other gender, can tell you how easy it is to reform one's appearance and manner. I would say that this play with gender is one of the things many people enjoy about being gay.
But the question for me, as a psychologist, is always whether to "teach" an effeminate boy or masculine woman to engage in this play, which they often consider a compromise.