Description

Book Synopsis
What does it mean to be gayfriendly? Having gay friends, supporting gay marriage, remaining unfazed when one’s son or daughter comes out? Going to gay bars or questioning one’s own sexual orientation? There is no single model of ‘gayfriendliness’, but rather different attitudes which vary according to age, sex, country and life circumstance.

Acceptance of homosexuality has undeniably grown, and homosexuality is increasingly seen as one form of sexuality among others. But embedded in this liberal vision is a perspective that is more troubling. Based on interviews with gayfriendly straight people in the liberal neighbourhoods of Park Slope in New York and the Marais in Paris, Sylvie Tissot shows that stereotypes remain and control of gays and lesbians has not disappeared. Acceptance is directed towards those who are of the same socioeconomic background, who proclaim their wish to emulate traditional norms of family life, and who do not make any other demands.
Gays must be normal but not completely so, similar and at the same time different, in order to meet the not always conscious conditions of acceptability.

Gayfriendliness has managed to dispel violence and discrimination and has accompanied the invention of less conventional lives. But, as Tissot shows, it has not yet liberated itself from the clutches of heterosexual domination which still structures our society and our ways of thinking.

Trade Review

“As anti-gay and anti-trans sentiment surges, the illusion of a rainbow coloured world of queer inclusion is rendered ever more apparent and the need for critical and complex analysis becomes ever more pressing. Sylvie Tissot has given us just such an analysis. In this compelling comparative study of two ‘gayfriendly’ oases, she unpacks the often contradictory affects of both queers and straights as they imagine sexual identities in supposedly ‘tolerant’ urban spaces and, in so doing, offers a critical commentary on the limits of tolerance and the possibilities of radical inclusion in a world still governed by normative heterosexuality. A smart and nuanced addition to the burgeoning literature on queer spaces and the promises (and limits) of straight allyship.”
Suzanna Danuta Walters, author of The Tolerance Trap: How God, Genes, and Good Intentions Sabotaged Gay Equality



Table of Contents
Acknowledgements

Introduction


Chapter 1. Becoming Gayfriendly

Reticence, recognition, indifference: three different generations

‘It simply didn’t exist’

‘It would be un-cool to be un-gayfriendly’

‘A non-issue’

The learning processes

Atypical heterosexuals

The ordeal of coming out



Chapter 2. Gay Respectability


The right to love each other American-style and sexual freedom in France

The Power of the Law

Sexual Liberalism

Gay marriage, heterosexual relief

Republican universalism and the difference between the sexes


Good neighbours, good husbands and wives, good parents

Appropriating an area in the name of diversity

Progressive synagogues and churches in Park Slope

A cause for gentrifiers

From lesbian enclave to gayfriendly district

Family integration, class integration


Gayfriendliness within the family

You shall be gayfriendly, my child

Integration and surveillance of same-sex families

You will (perhaps) be gay, my child

The guide for gayfriendly parents

From tomboy to invisible lesbian


Chapter 3. Heterosexuals as allies

Feminine Compassion

The division of moral labour

Male unease

The ‘Cruisers’ of the Parisian night scene


The ‘fag hag’ and her ‘gay best friend’

Disillusions, safe haven and substitute

The Prism of femininity

Gayfriendliness and lesbophobia


Women rebelling against marriage

(Re)-building your life when living alone

Sexual experiments


Chapter 4. The frontiers of gayfriendliness

A race and class norm

Homophobia as bad taste

Talking about space, not race

The Southern United States as a deterrent


Visibilities and invisibilities

Keeping the streets clean

My gay friends

The home of heterosexuality


Conclusion


Bibliography

Notes

Gayfriendly: Acceptance and Control of

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    A Hardback by Sylvie Tissot, Helen Morrison

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      View other formats and editions of Gayfriendly: Acceptance and Control of by Sylvie Tissot

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 09/06/2023
      ISBN13: 9781509553259, 978-1509553259
      ISBN10: 1509553258

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      What does it mean to be gayfriendly? Having gay friends, supporting gay marriage, remaining unfazed when one’s son or daughter comes out? Going to gay bars or questioning one’s own sexual orientation? There is no single model of ‘gayfriendliness’, but rather different attitudes which vary according to age, sex, country and life circumstance.

      Acceptance of homosexuality has undeniably grown, and homosexuality is increasingly seen as one form of sexuality among others. But embedded in this liberal vision is a perspective that is more troubling. Based on interviews with gayfriendly straight people in the liberal neighbourhoods of Park Slope in New York and the Marais in Paris, Sylvie Tissot shows that stereotypes remain and control of gays and lesbians has not disappeared. Acceptance is directed towards those who are of the same socioeconomic background, who proclaim their wish to emulate traditional norms of family life, and who do not make any other demands.
      Gays must be normal but not completely so, similar and at the same time different, in order to meet the not always conscious conditions of acceptability.

      Gayfriendliness has managed to dispel violence and discrimination and has accompanied the invention of less conventional lives. But, as Tissot shows, it has not yet liberated itself from the clutches of heterosexual domination which still structures our society and our ways of thinking.

      Trade Review

      “As anti-gay and anti-trans sentiment surges, the illusion of a rainbow coloured world of queer inclusion is rendered ever more apparent and the need for critical and complex analysis becomes ever more pressing. Sylvie Tissot has given us just such an analysis. In this compelling comparative study of two ‘gayfriendly’ oases, she unpacks the often contradictory affects of both queers and straights as they imagine sexual identities in supposedly ‘tolerant’ urban spaces and, in so doing, offers a critical commentary on the limits of tolerance and the possibilities of radical inclusion in a world still governed by normative heterosexuality. A smart and nuanced addition to the burgeoning literature on queer spaces and the promises (and limits) of straight allyship.”
      Suzanna Danuta Walters, author of The Tolerance Trap: How God, Genes, and Good Intentions Sabotaged Gay Equality



      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements

      Introduction


      Chapter 1. Becoming Gayfriendly

      Reticence, recognition, indifference: three different generations

      ‘It simply didn’t exist’

      ‘It would be un-cool to be un-gayfriendly’

      ‘A non-issue’

      The learning processes

      Atypical heterosexuals

      The ordeal of coming out



      Chapter 2. Gay Respectability


      The right to love each other American-style and sexual freedom in France

      The Power of the Law

      Sexual Liberalism

      Gay marriage, heterosexual relief

      Republican universalism and the difference between the sexes


      Good neighbours, good husbands and wives, good parents

      Appropriating an area in the name of diversity

      Progressive synagogues and churches in Park Slope

      A cause for gentrifiers

      From lesbian enclave to gayfriendly district

      Family integration, class integration


      Gayfriendliness within the family

      You shall be gayfriendly, my child

      Integration and surveillance of same-sex families

      You will (perhaps) be gay, my child

      The guide for gayfriendly parents

      From tomboy to invisible lesbian


      Chapter 3. Heterosexuals as allies

      Feminine Compassion

      The division of moral labour

      Male unease

      The ‘Cruisers’ of the Parisian night scene


      The ‘fag hag’ and her ‘gay best friend’

      Disillusions, safe haven and substitute

      The Prism of femininity

      Gayfriendliness and lesbophobia


      Women rebelling against marriage

      (Re)-building your life when living alone

      Sexual experiments


      Chapter 4. The frontiers of gayfriendliness

      A race and class norm

      Homophobia as bad taste

      Talking about space, not race

      The Southern United States as a deterrent


      Visibilities and invisibilities

      Keeping the streets clean

      My gay friends

      The home of heterosexuality


      Conclusion


      Bibliography

      Notes

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