1997
DOI: 10.2307/466741
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Leatherdyke Boys and Their Daddies: How to Have Sex without Women or Men

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Cited by 84 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…C. Jacob Hale's discussion of the "multiple, context-specific, and purpose-specific sex/gender statuses" performed within the leatherdyke community illustrates the "cultural situatednesses" of gender performance and identification. 9 As Hale indicates, a variety of subcultural gender rules and regulations exist alongside hegemonic gender norms. In contrast to settings in which diverse identification is hidden or punished, there are also environments in which a number of gender statuses beyond the man/woman dichotomy are recognized.…”
Section: Situated Identificationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…C. Jacob Hale's discussion of the "multiple, context-specific, and purpose-specific sex/gender statuses" performed within the leatherdyke community illustrates the "cultural situatednesses" of gender performance and identification. 9 As Hale indicates, a variety of subcultural gender rules and regulations exist alongside hegemonic gender norms. In contrast to settings in which diverse identification is hidden or punished, there are also environments in which a number of gender statuses beyond the man/woman dichotomy are recognized.…”
Section: Situated Identificationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…8 Newmahr may well be right; however, the tropological themes in BDSM can be developed further than that. For instance, anal fisting belongs to BDSM, or we can situate it as a practice in the repertoire of BDSM (Hale, 1997;Weinberg, Williams, & Moser, 1984). The idea sounds radical, painful, and dangerous, or impossibly repulsive from the point of view of its nonintended audiences.…”
Section: Tropological Delineationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When masculinity is conceived of as the product of male bodies, the masculinities performed by women are invalidated as gender deviance and simulations of maleness rather than something ''produced by, for, and within women'' (Halberstam 1998, p. 15). Additionally, scholarship on the fluctuation of gender and sexual norms depending on historical context and (co-)cultural codes describes practices that address Butler (1993) and Halberstam's concerns regarding gender's indispensable role in destabilizing the naturalized link between genitalia, bodily performance, and sexuality (Hale 2003;Halperin 1990).…”
Section: Narrativizing Bodies: Becoming Sexual Subjectsmentioning
confidence: 99%