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Everyone is impacted by gender policing, whether they are aware of it or not. That being said, how does gender policing impact the way you present yourself in the world on a daily basis (how you dress, how you walk, how you speak, whether or not you choose to wear makeup, style your hair, etc.)? Have you ever found yourself policing the boundaries of gender for someone you know, personally? If so, what purpose did it serve at the time and for whom did it serve a purpose?
Be sure to use APA formatting in your initial response (including in-text citations and references), add word count, and adhere to the proper word length. (300 WORDS MINIMUM)
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The World Turned
Essays on Gay History, Politics, and Culture
John D'Emilio
i
-, '
I i
DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS Durham and London 2002
© 2002 Duke University Press
All rights reserved
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Contents
Preface ix
PART I : Interpretations
r. Homophobia and the Course of Postwar American Radical-
ism: The Career of Bayard Rustin 3
2. Placing Gay in the Sixties 23
3. Still Radical After All These Years: Remembering Out of the
C/,osets 45
4. A Meaning for All Those Words: Sex, Politics, History, and
Larry Kramer 64
5. Cycles of Change, Questions of Strategy: The Gay and Les-
bian Movement After 50 Years 78
6. Organizational Tales: Interpreting the NGLTF Story 99
PART I I : Interventions
7. Why Is This Year Different From Any Other? 123
8. The Clinton Election: Historical Perspectives at a Moment
ofChange 136
9. Stonewall: Myth and Meaning 146
ro. Born Gay? 154
1 l. What Does Gay Liberation Have to Do with the War in
Bosnia? 165
12. Laying Claim to Family 174
p ART II I : Reflections
13. Visions of Leadership: Remembering Ken Dawson 193
14. My Changing Sex Life 199
ls. Then and Now: The Shifting Context of Gay Historical
Writing 210
l 6. A Biographer and His Subject: Wrestling with Bayard
Rustin 231
Notes 249
Preface
Something happened in the 1990s. Sc
versible in its consequences.
There is hardly a nonfiction gay b<
nod to the Stonewall Rebellion, th~
queens fought back in Greenwich \
liberation was born. The world seeme4
the closet was left behind forever, the I
shame associated with it repudiated.
But, truth be told, Stonewall, gay li
touched very few. I say this even th
thoroughly remade by the thrilling i
marching through the streets of New
San Francisco, I was convinced that t
were making everything different thar
accomplished by those early waves of
reached so deeply into our psyches th
watching and nothing would ever be 1
Looking back from the vantage pc
now see Stonewall mostly as potentia
in the distance. The devastating intru
aggressive fundamentalist religious r
ganite conservatism in American polit
wall held twists and turns and curves a
suspected.
By contrast, the changes that the
notwithstanding - look to me to ha'
beyond what the Stonewall generati<
1990s, the world finally did turn and r
IO
Born Gay?
During the 1990s, the notion that homosexuality is biological, that lesbians
and gay men are "born this way;' has spread through American culture with
amazing rapidity. It is espoused on the street, by Joe Gay and Jane Lesbian.
Liberal heterosexual allies, from Al Gore to the anonymous editorial writers
of the New Yorker, have taken it up. The view seems to have the support of the
scientific establishment. The biological assumption is so widespread that the
religious right has become obsessed with countering it, not only rhetori-
cally but through counseling ministries designed to prove that gays can
go straight.
As a historian, I am deeply skeptical of arguments rooted in biology and
claims about fixed sexual orientation. The overwhelming weight of historical
research into sexuality- and to this I could add the anthropological research
as well - points to a picture of human sexual behavior far too complex and
varied to be reducible to genes or endocrines or hormones. Even so, I'm not
particularly interested in trying to counter the findings of scientists. In part,
the reason is because I don't have the background to critique the scientific
studies of the past few years. But mostly it is because my interest lies else-
where. I'm fascinated by the rush, on the part of almost everyone except the
most extremely homophobic elements of our society, to embrace the "born
gay' view of sexual identity. In other words, I care less about whether or not
Versions of this essay were given as informal presentations at a board meeting of the
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, in 1993, and before the National Policy Round-
table of the NGLTF Policy Institute, in 1998. My thanks to both audiences of activists for
the lively discussions that ensued and that helped to sharpen my own thinking. Thanks
also go to Pippa Holloway who compiled for me a bibliography of the scientific litera-
ture and discussions of it in the mass media.
it is true than in understanding
different people.
I explore this phenomenon fo
will, I hope, place the current I
Then I move on to outline a set
seems so compelling and, finall
reasons.
Some ¢ History
In the literature produced by g:
late 1960s and early 1970s, there
and homosexuality do not exist
ucts of culture. They are classifi.
an oppressive society. They are 2
activist writers imagined sexual
of oppression and social contra'
a word meant to suggest that
direction, but could flow any w
These notions were endless!)
Lesbianism, like male hon
only in a sexist society ch
by male supremacy ....
women, and sexual expre5
ries of homosexuality and
Many other similar excerpts co1
This viewpoint drew on bo
mainstream science. Radical in
Marcuse, and Paul Goodman p
Alfred Kinsey, whose studies c
tion in the patterns of human
Mead, whose best-selling book
making of gender roles and sexi
vibrant writings of second-wa'
that smacked of biological dete
ality is biological, that lesbians
through American culture with
t, by Joe Gay and Jane Lesbian.
the anonymous editorial writers
seems to have the support of the
ption is so widespread that the
countering it, not only rhetori-
.esigned to prove that gays can
guments rooted in biology and
erwhelming weight of historical
dd the anthropological research
al behavior far too complex and
s or hormones. Even so, I'm not
e findings of scientists. In part,
ound to critique the scientific
is because my interest lies else-
of almost everyone except the
society, to embrace the "born
I care less about whether or not
entations at a board meeting of the
before the National Policy Round-
to both audiences of activists for
o sharpen my own thinking. Thanks
bibliography of the scientific litera-
l
l
BORN GAY? 155
it is true than in understanding why it is so damned attractive to so many
different people.
I explore this phenomenon first by sketching out some recent history that
will, I hope, place the current born-gay perspective in a broader context.
Then I move on to outline a set of interlocking reasons why the perspective
seems so compelling and, finally, suggest pitfalls or flaws in each of those
reasons.
Some Recent History
In the literature produced by gay liberationists and lesbian feminists in the
late 1960s and early 1970s, there is virtually a consensus that heterosexuality
and homosexuality do not exist in nature, so to speak, but instead are prod-
ucts of culture. They are classifications of human beings that emanate from
an oppressive society. They are artificial and deeply unnatural. Instead, these
activist writers imagined sexuality as an unshaped potential. In the absence
of oppression and social control, human sexuality would be polymorphous,
a word meant to suggest that sexual desire was not fixed in its form or
direction, but could flow any which way.
These notions were endlessly repeated. Here is one statement of it:
Lesbianism, like male homosexuality, is a category of behavior possible
only in a sexist society characterized by rigid sex roles and dominated
by male supremacy .... In a society in which men do not oppress
women, and sexual expression is allowed to follow feelings, the catego-
ries of homosexuality and heterosexuality would disappear.
Many other similar excerpts could be found. 1
This viewpoint drew on both cultural theory from the 1960s as well as
mainstream science. Radical intellectuals like Norman 0. Brown, Herbert
Marcuse, and Paul Goodman provided inspiration. But so did scientists like
Alfred Kinsey, whose studies of sexual behavior emphasized endless varia-
tion in the patterns of human behavior, and anthropologists like Margaret
Mead, whose best-selling books highlighted culture as a shaping force in the
making of gender roles and sexual norms. Gay liberationists also drew on the
vibrant writings of second-wave feminists who were challenging anything
that smacked of biological determinism in the areas of gender and sexuality.
156 THE WORLD TURNED
Out of this intellectual matrix came a formulation widely used in the
1970s but with almost no currency just a generation later: "sexual prefer-
ence." As radical activists translated their theories into concepts that could be
used to influence law and policy, they came up with the phrase. Today it is
startling to the ear in the way it suggests "choice."
By the mid-197os major change was underway, and we today are inheri-
tors of it. As the radicalism of the first wave of gay liberation waned, shifts
occurred not only in the tactics and goals and vision of the movement, but in
its sexual theorizing as well. As the movement became institutionalized and
more organizationally stable, as activists shifted from a rhetoric of revolution
to pressing for steady incremental change in policy and institutions, the
word "orientation" increasingly entered the movement vocabulary. For a
while, there was a seesawing back and forth between preference and orienta-
tion; some used the terms interchangeably. The greatest resistance to orien-
tation came from radical lesbian feminists who argued that lesbianism was an
option that any woman might pursue in her resistance to male supremacy
and patriarchy. But orientation, with its sense of placement, alignment, and
clear directionality, gradually overwhelmed preference, with its suggestion
of mere taste or fashion.
The concept of orientation came from the mental health professions. In
the theorizing of the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, writers tended to look at
orientation as something that got set relatively early in life, a result of experi-
ences in infancy and early childhood. Many writers and practitioners, espe-
cially among American psychoanalysts, believed that, with work, sexual ori-
entation could be reversed. Of course, they meant that it could, and should,
be reversed in one direction only: homosexual orientation could be changed
to heterosexual. But starting in the 1960s, gay activists appropriated the
concept of orientation, inverted the meaning of homosexuality so that it
became good rather than unfortunate, and argued - as a few liberal mental
health professionals were already doing-that it was irreversible. Thus,
while sexual orientation was not determined by biology, it was so deep that
it might as well have been. And, since gay was good, there was no point in
even trying to change it.
In the 1980s and 1990s conceptualizations continued to change, though
this time in ways consistent with the direction charted by the proponents of
orientation. Orientation remained in favor, especially in the writing oflegisla-
tion and institutional policy, but it increasingly coexisted with "identity."
Postmodern theory notwithstanc
something even more solid than
orientation offered something r
preference. But identity spoke to:
thing that went to the very core c
easy incorporation of"sexual ide
the release of a stream of scientif
connotations of identity as reac
Studies about the hypothalamru
gene all pointed to biology as son
Some Reasons TVhy
The proclamations of some sci
explanations have appeal for g<
others. I want to try to distingui
the power of the born-gay frarn
ferent reasons reinforce one ano1
nation that seems thoroughly i
evidently true.
REASON l: MOST OF US BEL
The idea that we were born gay
ings, to the way we understand
different for as far back as we c
lives when we do not recall fee
same sex. The issue for us is no1
we realized this was so, when
inclinations that we always had.
Despite my skepticism towai
illustration of this. I cannot re
special way. I had a fascination
have experiences that could be l
And, once puberty hit, there see
I've told the short and the long
friends, and heard theirs in tum
ible. Who can argue with experi
rmulation widely used in the
neration later: "sexual prefer-
. es into concepts that could be
p with the phrase. Today it is
ay, and we today are inheri-
f gay liberation waned, shifts
· sion of the movement, but in
t became institutionalized and
from a rhetoric of revolution
policy and institutions, the
een preference and orienta-
e greatest resistance to orien-
argued that lesbianism was an
resistance to male supremacy
. of placement, alignment, and
reference, with its suggestion
mental health professions. In
s, writers tended to look at
early in life, a result of experi-
riters and practitioners, espe-
d that, with work, sexual ori-
ant that it could, and should,
orientation could be changed
y activists appropriated the
of homosexuality so that it
ed - as a few liberal mental
at it was irreversible. Thus,
y biology, it was so deep that
good, there was no point in
ontinued to change, though
charted by the proponents of
cially in the writing of legisla -
ly coexisted with "identity."
BORN GAY? 157
Postmodern theory notwithstanding, in common parlance identity suggests
something even more solid than orientation. The directionality implied by
orientation offered something more substantial than the taste implied by
preference. But identity spoke to something deep inside the individual, some-
thing that went to the very core of who one was. And, simultaneous with the
easy incorporation of "sexual identity" into the gay and lesbian lexicon came
the release of a stream of scientific literature that seemed to substantiate the
connotations of identity as reaching deep into the core of an individual.
Studies about the hypothalamus, about identical twins, and the alleged gay
gene all pointed to biology as somehow causal in the creation of homosexuals.
Some Reasons TVhy
The proclamations of some scientists are just one reason why biological
explanations have appeal for gay people and their allies. There are many
others. I want to try to distinguish five of them. Bear in mind, however, that
the power of the born-gay framework comes from the ways that these dif-
ferent reasons reinforce one another, adding a persuasive punch to the expla-
nation that seems thoroughly irrefutable and makes it appear almost self-
evidently true.
REASON I: MOST OF US BELIEVE IT
The idea that we were born gay or lesbian corresponds to our deepest feel-
ings, to the way we understand our own experience. Many of us have felt
different for as far back as we can remember. There is hardly a time in our
lives when we do not recall feeling special attractions for members of the
same sex. The issue for us is not when we became gay or lesbian, but when
we realized this was so, when we were finally able to put a name to the
inclinations that we always had.
Despite my skepticism toward biological explanations, I am a very good
illustration of this. I cannot remember not wanting to be with boys in a
special way. I had a fascination for the male body from my earliest years. I
have experiences that could be understood as sex play going way, way back.
And, once puberty hit, there seemed to be no stopping me. Over the years, as
I've told the short and the long versions of my coming out story to my gay
friends, and heard theirs in tum, the truth of my identity seems incontrovert-
ible. Who can argue with experience?
. i
158 THE WORLD TURNED
REASON 2: SCIENCE CURRENTLY SEEMS TO SUPPORT US
Science has lurked in the background of the why-are-we-gay routine for a
long time. Remember that, as far back as the 1970s, activists appropriated
psychological theories about fixed sexual orientation to refute claims that we
could change. But psychological arguments have always been of mixed value
since, however fixed sexual orientation might be, the mental health industry
was still positing that there was a "before" way back in childhood.
In the 1990s, the ground shifted. In a short span of time, a number of
independent inquiries into the biology of homosexuality appeared. In l 99 l,
Simon LeVay released a research study in which he claimed a measurable
difference in size between the hypothalamus of gay men and heterosexual
men. Richard Pillard and J. Michael Bailey published results from their
ongoing investigation of sexual orientation and identical twins, showing a
large proportion of them to be gay. In 1993, Dean Hamer's study of genetic
markers of homosexuality was published in the scientific press. And, since
then, various studies have continued to be released, while scientists and
journalists alike have rushed to produce popularized versions of these stud-
ies for a lay audience. 2
Science wields a great deal of authority in American society. We attribute
to scientists all sorts of power to solve a wide range of problems. Think, for
instance, of how invested we are in the belief that science will devise the
magic bullet for AIDS -either the vaccine to prevent it or the treatment to
cure it. We attribute so much to science that these various scientific papers
on homosexuality have received very wide play in the media. The week that
LeVay's report on the hypothalamus was published in Science, Ted Koppel
devoted a Night/inc program to it. The New York Times, the Washington Post,
and the Los Angeles Times all devoted front-page news stories to it. Halfway
around the globe, Dean Hamer's study of the gay gene was written up on the
front page of the Canberra Times. 3
If scientists say it is so, it must be. How comforting that science supports
the truth of our experience!
REASON 3: OUR OPPONENTS CLAIM THE OPPOSITE
While all sorts of Americans with all sorts of rationales have opposed the
struggle for gay equality, the most rabid, organized, and aggressive opposi-
tion has been concentrated within conservative Christianity, particularly
among the ranks of evangelical Protestants. They are having nothing of this
born-gay routine. If we were be
their hatred of us, since God doei
desires represent a perverse iffi11
experience, distorting our lives l
biology has infiltrated our cultu
have created counseling ministri1
and thus prove the bankruptcy <
with them. Since any understam
choice risks comforting our enen
REASON 4: "BORN GAY" HAS
Phrased most simply, many of c
The people we are trying to cor
respect can take the argument fo
have a self-conception of fairnes
could be more unfair than to p
ways?
Put yourself in the shoes of ac
translate the raw energy of gay Iii
institutional changes. Building c
to go to their city council to lol
What do they ask for? Legislativ1
one? Or the addition of a phra
newly visible minority of peopl1
with representatives of liberal m:
reconsider their teachings on s1
perversity? Or do you persuade
segment of humanity, are part
American Psychiatric Associatio
mental disorders. Do you try 1
platform? Or do you argue that
homosexual orientation, functia
I am not accusing activists c
complicated. These were men a
each with its own set of disco
understanding social experiencf
were trying to communicate efff
MS TO SUPPORT US
the why-are-we-gay routine for a
the I 97os, activists appropriated
rientation to refute claims that we
have always been of mixed value
ht be, the mental health industry
way back in childhood.
short span of time, a number of
omosexuality appeared. In 1991,
which he claimed a measurable
us of gay men and heterosexual
· ey published results from their
n and identical twins, showing a
3, Dean Hamer's study of genetic
in the scientific press. And, since
be released, while scientists and
. pularized versions of these stud-
in American society. We attribute
"de range of problems. Think, for
elief that science will devise the
to prevent it or the treatment to
at these various scientific papers
play in the media. The week that
published in Science) Ted Koppel
York Times) the Washington Post)
-page news stories to it. Halfway
e gay gene was written up on the
comforting that science supports
E OPPOSITE
of rationales have opposed the
rganized, and aggressive opposi-
ative Christianity, particularly
They are having nothing of this
BORN GAY? I59
born-gay routine. If we were born gay, it would be much harder to justify
their hatred of us, since God does not make mistakes. To them, our loves and
desires represent a perverse immoral choice. Their polemics bastardize our
experience, distorting our lives beyond recognition. As the argument from
biology has infiltrated our culture, their antagonism to it has grown. They
have created counseling ministries designed to convert us to heterosexuality
and thus prove the bankruptcy of scientific claims. We know we can't agree
with them. Since any understanding of our sexual identities that smacks of
choice risks comforting our enemy, we must be born this way.
REASON 4: "BORN GAY" HAS GREAT POLITICAL UTILITY
Phrased most simply, many of our allies, or would-be allies, love this idea.
The people we are trying to convince to support our quest for justice and
respect can take the argument from nature and run with it. Plus, Americans
have a self-conception of fairness; it runs deep in our public rhetoric. What
could be more unfair than to penalize someone for being true to nature's
ways?
Put yourself in the shoes of activists in the mid-r97os who were trying to
translate the raw energy of gay liberation and lesbian feminism into concrete
institutional changes. Building on the model of civil rights laws, they decide
to go to their city council to lobby for protections against discrimination.
What do they ask for? Legislative protection for a capacity inherent in every-
one? Or the addition of a phrase, "sexual orientation:' that will protect a
newly visible minority of people? Or, suppose you are opening a dialogue
with representatives of liberal mainline religious bodies. Do you ask them to
reconsider their teachings on sexual morality and endorse polymorphous
perversity? Or do you persuade them that gay men and lesbians, a definable
segment of humanity, are part of God's grand design? Or, you want the
American Psychiatric Association to eliminate homosexuality from its list of
mental disorders. Do you try to win their support for a sexual freedom
platform? Or do you argue that this discrete group, men and women with a
homosexual orientation, function well in society?
I am not accusing activists of being crassly expedient. It is much more
complicated. These were men and women entering institutions, or worlds,
each with its own set of discourses that construct its members's way of
understanding social experience. Activists had to enter into dialogue; they
were trying to communicate effectively. In doing so they were absorbed into
I
I
160 THE WORLD TURNED
the forms of understanding that already existed and tried to make themselves
heard in these contexts. A good example was the work of gay and lesbian
litigators. Because the courts, in ruling on civil rights issues, had set up
immutability as one of the criteria that defines a group against whom dis-
crimination is not justifiable, lawyers have tried to argue that sexual orienta-
tion, or identity, is a fixed unchanging characteristic. In other words, we are
born gay.
REASON 5: THE EXTREME ALTERNATIVE IS TERRIFYING
The either I or framework that is so central to Western modes of thought-
yes /no, stop/go, black/white, good/bad-makes it very hard to imagine
ambiguity, fluidity, indeterminacy, or just plain old shades of gray. In this
context, our conceptual options seem to be either that we are born gay and
hence irrevocably are gay, or that we have free choice in this matter.
Even with the changes provoked by gay liberation and feminism in the
past generation, being queer is a hard road to travel. Oppression is real. We
get targeted with quite a lot of abuse. The emotional wounds go deep, and
sometimes the physical ones do too. The idea that this struggle might have
been unnecessary, that we could have spared ourselves all of this by choosing
another sexual orientation, is acutely disturbing. "Born gay" closes this line
of inquiry firmly. It spares us from the horrifying idea that our sufferings
could end if only we exerted enough will or had made a different choice.
Some Problems with the Reasons TVhy
Alone, no single one of these reasons is persuasive enough to inspire convic-
tion. Their power comes in the way that they work together, creating a
package that makes the born-gay arguments of some scientists seem unde-
niable. But each one of these reasons why has weaknesses. These don't get
nearly as much play as the reasons why, but they are out there lurking, ready
to spring into action and undermine the solid structure of our convictions.
PROBLEM I: NOT ALL OF US BELIEVE IT!
For many of us, perhaps even most of us, gay or lesbian seems to be who we
are and who we always have been. But there is no unanimity on this point,
and the apparent consensus can be upset at any moment by a contrary voice.
For instance, a generation ago, many women very self-consciously chose to be
lesbian as they encountered the
make women the center of their 1
for the born-gay argument. Or, 1
coming out. Always in the back
pretty femme who was securely
with Ellen DeGeneres. In gay '
oughly heterosexual lives. They
noticing an attraction to a mal
triggered a new sexual awarenes!
don't think so.
Besides all the exceptions that
is also the discomforting fact th
hate to say it- suspect. As frienc
when middle-aged gay couples
will spend an evening- or three
is a long-standing bonding ritua
becomes the destiny toward whi
out our heterosexual impulses ai
tic. Since we are reciting our
present, and since they are bei
individuals, of course we will s
building ties of community am
uous. But these are retrospectiv
eliminate the fluidity, the serend
ing our sexual selves. Do I mean
ice cream for dessert? Of course 1
not provide a reliable body of ev
PROBLEM 2: SCIENCE IS AT
The scientific fashion of the 199,
origins of homosexuality. Mostc
to bow to its authority. This is
media blitzes that headline the 1
that science, especially with reg<
its mind.
In the longer history of scient
ing pattern is how core paradign
· sted and tried to make themselves
was the work of gay and lesbian
n civil rights issues, had set up
fines a group against whom dis-
tried to argue that sexual orienta-
acteristic. In other words, we are
E IS TERRIFYING
to Western modes of thought-
- makes it very hard to imagine
plain old shades of gray. In this
e either that we are born gay and
ree choice in this matter.
y liberation and feminism in the
to travel. Oppression is real. We
. emotional wounds go deep, and
dea that this struggle might have
d ourselves all of this by choosing
bing. "Born gay" closes this line
rrifying idea that our sufferings
r had made a different choice.
uasive enough to inspire convic-
they work together, creating a
ts of some scientists seem unde-
has weaknesses. These don't get
they are out there lurking, ready
lid structure of our convictions.
IT!
y or lesbian seems to be who we
re is no unanimity on this point,
any moment by a contrary voice.
n very self-consciously chose to be
BORN GAY? 161
lesbian as they encountered the ideas of radical feminism and decided to
make women the center of their lives. They would hardly serve as poster girls
for the born-gay argument. Or, think about the hoopla surrounding Ellen's
coming out. Always in the background was the figure of Anne Heche, the
pretty femme who was securely heterosexual until, wham, she fell in love
with Ellen DeGeneres. In gay circles lots of us know men who led thor-
oughly heterosexual lives. They married and raised children, …
24
Masculinity as Homophobia
MICHAEL S. KIMMEL
Michael Kimmel argues that American men are socialized into a very rigid and limiting
definition of masculinity. He states that men fear being ridiculed as too feminine by other
men and this fear perpetuates homophobic and exclusionary masculinity. He calls for poli-
tics of inclusion or the broadening definition of manho~d to end gender struggle.
The great secret af American manhaad is: VIleare afraid of other men. Hama-phabia is a central arganizing principle af aur cultural definitia'tl af man-haad. Hamaphabia is mare than the irratianal fear af gay men, mare than
the fear that we might be perceived as gay. "The ward 'faggat' has nathing to. do.
with hamasexual experience ar even with fears af hamasexuals," writes David
Leverenz (1986). "It carnes aut af the depths af manhaad: a label af ultimate
cantempt far anyane who. seems sissy,untaugh, uncaal" (p. 455). Hamaphabia is
the fear that ather men will unmask us, emasculate us, reveal to. us and the warld
that we do. nat measure up, that we are nat real men. We are afraid to. let ather
men see that fear. Fear makes us ashamed, because the recagnitian af fear in aur-
selves is praaf to. aurselves that we are nat as manly as we pretend, that we are,
like the yaung man in a paem by Yeats, "ane that ruffles in a manly pase far all
his timid heart." Our fear is the fear af humiliatian. We are ashamed to. be
afraid. . .
The fear af being seen as a sissy daminates the cultural definitians af man-
haad. It starts so. early. "Bays amang bays are ashamed to. be unmanly," wrote ane
educatar in 1871 (cited in Ratunda, 1993, p. 264). I have a standing bet with a
friend that I can walk anta any playground in America where 6-year-ald bays
are happily playing and by asking ane questian, I can provake a fight. That ques-
tian is simple: "Who's a sissy around here?" Once pased, the challenge is made.
One af two. things is likely to. happen. One bay will accuse anather af being a
sissy, to. which that bay will respand that he is nat a sissy, that the first bay is.
They may have to. fight it aut to. see wha's lying. Or a whale graup afbays will
surraund ane bay and all shaut "He is! He is!"That bay will either burst into.
tears and run hame crying, disgraced, ar he will have to. take an several bays at
ance, to. prave that he's nat a sissy. (And what will his father ar alder brothers tell
him if he chaases to. run hame crying?) It will be same time before he regains
any sense af self-respect.
From: Michael Kimmel. "Masculinity as Homophobia." Copyright @ 1994 by Michael S.
Kimmel. All rights reserved.
147
148 PARTVII SEXUALITY AND INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS
Violence is often the single most ~vident marker of manhood. Rather it is the
willingness to fight, the desire to fight. The origin of our expression that one has
a chip on one's shoulder lies in the practice of an adolescent boy in the country
or small town at the turn of the century, who would literally walk around with a
chip of wood balanced on his shoulder-a signal of his readiness to fight with
anyone who would take the initiative of knocking the chip off (see Gorer, 1964,
p. 38; Mead, 1965).
As adolescents, we learn that our peers are a kind of gender police, constantly
threatening to unmask us as feminine, as sissies. One of the favorite tricks when I
was an adolescent was to ask a boy to look at his fingernails. Ifhe held his palm
toward his face and curled his fingers back to see them, he passed the test. He'd
looked at his nails "like a man." But if he held the back of his hand away from his
face, and looked at his fingern~ils with arm outstretched, he was immediately
ridiculed as a sissy.
As young men we are constantly riding those gender boundaries, checking
the fences we have constructed on the perimeter, making sure that nothing even
remotely feminine might show through. The possibilities of being unmasked are
everywhere. . . . Even the most seemingly insignificant thing can pose a threat
or activate that haunting terror. On the day the students in my course "Sociology
of Men and Masculinities" were scheduled to discuss homophobia and male-
male friendships, one student provided a touching illustration. Noting that it was
a beautiful day, the first day of spring after the brutal northeast winter, he decided
to wear shorts to class. "I had this really nice pair of new Madras shorts," he com-
mented. "But then I thought to myself, these shorts have lavender and pink in
them. Today's class topic is homophobia. Maybe today is not the best day to wear
these shorts."
Our efforts to maintain a manly front cover everything we do. What we wear.
How we talk. How we walk. What we eat. Every mannerism, every movement
contaips a coded gender language. Think, for example, of how you would answer
the~question: How do you "know" if a man is homosexual? When I ask this ques-
tion in classes or workshops, respondents invariably provide a pretty standard list
of stereotypically effeminate behaviors. He walks a certain way, talks a certain
way, acts a certain way. He's very emotional; he shows his feelings. One woman
commented that she "knows" a man is gay if he really cares about her; another
said she knows he's gay if he shows no interest in her, if he leaves her alone.
Now alter the question and imagine what heterosexual men do to make
sure no one could possibly get the "wrong idea" about them. Responses typi-
cally refer to the original stereotypes, this time as a set of negative rules about
behavior. Never dress that way. Never talk or walk that way. Never show your
feelings or get emotional. Always be prepared to demonstrate sexual interest in
women that you meet, so it is impossible for any woman to get the wrong idea
about you. In this sense, homophobia, the fea~ of being perceived as gay, as not
a real man, keeps men exaggerating all the traditional rules of masculinity, in-
cluding sexual predation with women. Homophobia and sexism go hand in
hand. . . .
.c.
ARTICLE24 MASCULINITYAS HOMOPHOBIA
POWER AND POWERLESSNESS IN THE LIVES OF MEN
. . '. Manhood is equated with power-over women, over other men. Every-
where we look, we see the institutional expression of that power-in state and
national legislatures, on the boards of directors of every major U.S. corporation
or law firm, and in every school and hospital administration. Women have long
understood this, and feminist women have spent the past three decades challeng-
ing both the public and the private expressions of men's power and acknowledg-
ing their fear of men. Feminism as a set of theories both explains women's fear of
men and empowers women to confront it both publicly and privately. Feminist
women have theorized that masculinity is about the drIve for domination, the
drive for power, for conquest.
This feminist definition of masculinity as the drive for power is theorized
from women's point of view. It is how women experience masculinity. But it as-
sumes a symmetry between the public and the private that does not conform to
men's experiences. Feminists observe that women, as a group, do not hold power
in our society. They also observe that individually, they, as women, do Qot feel
powerful. They feel afraid, vulnerable. Their observation of the social reality and
their individual experiences are therefore symmetrical. Feminism also observes
that men, as a group, are in power. Thus, with the same symmetry, feminism has
tended to assume that individually men must feel powerful.
This is why the feminist critique of masculinity often falls on deaf ears with
men. When confronted with the analysis that men have all the power, many men
react incredulously. "What do you mean, men have all the power?" they ask. "What
are you talking about? My wife bosses me around. My kids boss me around. My
boss bosses me around. I have no power at all! I'm completely powerless!"
Men's feelings are not the feelings of the powerful, but of those who see them-
selves as powerless. These are the feelings that come inevitably from the disconti-
nuity between the social and the psychological, between the aggregate analysis
that reveals how men are in power as a group and the psychological fact that they
do not feel powerful as individuals. They are the feelings of men who were raised
to believe themselves entitled to feel that power, but do not feel it. No wonder
many men are frustrated and angry. . . .
Often the purveyors of the mythopoetic men's movement, that broad um-
brella that encompasses all the groups helping men to retrieve this mythic deep
manhood, use the image of the chauffeur to describe modern man's position. The
chauffeur appears to have the power-he's wearing the uniform, he's in the dri-
ver's seat, and he knows where he's going. So, to the observer, the chauffeur looks
as though he is in command. But to the chauffeur himself, they note, he is merely
taking orders. He is not at all in charge.
Despite the reality that everyone knows chauffeurs do not have the power,
this image remains appealing to the men who hear it at these weekend workshops.
But there is a missing piece to the image, a piece concealed by the framing of the
image in terms of the individual man's experience. That missing piece is that the
person who is giving the orders is also a man. Now we have a relationship between
149
150 PART VII SEXUALITY AND INTIMATE. RELATIONSHIPS
men-between men giving orders and other men taking those orders. The man
who identifies with the chauffeur is entitled to be the man giving the orders, but
he is not. ("They," it turns out, are other men.)
The dimension of power is now reinserted into men's experience not only as
the product of individual experience but also as the product of relations with
other men. In this sense, men's experience of powerlessness is real-the men ac-
tually feel it and certainly act on it-but it is not true, that is, it does not accu-
rately describe their condition. In contrast to women's lives, men's lives are
structured around relationships of power and men's differential access to power, as
well as the differential access to that power of men as a group. Our imperfect
analysis of our own situation leads us to believe that we men need more power,
rather than leading us to support feminists' efforts to rearrange power relation-
ships along more equitable lines. . . .
Why, then, do American men feel so powerless? Part of the answer is because
we've constructed the rules of manhood so that orily the tiniest fraCtion of men
come to believe that they are the biggest of wheels, the sturdiest of oaks, the most
virulent repudiators of femininity, the most daring and aggressive. We've man-
aged to disempower the overwhelming majority of American men by other
means-such as discriminating on the basis of race, class, ethnicity, age, or sexual
preference.
Masculinist retreats to retrieve deep, wounded masculinity are but one of the
ways in which American men currently struggle with their fears and their shame.
Unfortunately, at the very moment that they work to break down the isolation
that governs men's lives, as they enable men to express those fears and that shame,
they ignore the social power that men continue to exert over women and the
privileges from which they (as the middle-aged, middle-class white men who
largely make up these retreats) continue to benefit-regardless of their experi-
ences.as wounded victims of oppressive male socialization.
Others still rehearse the politics of exclusion, as if by clearing away the play-
ing field of secure gender identity of any that we deem less than manly-women,
gay men, nonnative-born men, men of color-middle-class, straight, white men
can reground their sense of themselves without those haunting fears and that
deep shame that they are unmanly and will be exposed by other men. This is the
manhood of racism, of sexism, of homophobia. It is the manhood that is so chron-
ically insecure that it trembles at the idea of lifting the ban on gays in the mili-
tary, that is so threatened by women in the workplace that women become the
targets of sexual harassment, that is so deeply frightened of equality that it must
ensure that the playing field of male competition remains stacked against all new-
comers to the game.
Exclusion and escape have been the dominant methods American men have
used to keep their fears of humiliation at bay. The fear of emasculation by other
men, of being humiliated, of being seen as a sissy,is the leitmotif in my reading of
the history of American manhood. Masculinity has become a relentless test by
which we prove to other men, to women, and ultimately to ourselves, that we
have successfully mastered the part. The restlessness that men feel today is nothing
new in American history; we have been anxious and restless for almost two cen-
ARTICLE24 MASCULINITYAS HOMOPHOBIA
turies. Neither exclusion nor escape has ever brought us the relief we've sought,
and there is no reason to. think that either will solve our problems now. Peace of
mind, relief trom gender struggle, will come only from a politics of inclusion, not
exclusion, trom standing up for equality and justice, and not by running away.
NOTES
Gorer, G. (1964). The American people:A study
in national character.New York: Norton.
Leverenz, D. (1986, Fall). Manhood, .
humiliation and public life: Some
stories. Southwest Review, 71.
Mead, M. (1965). And keep your powder dry.
New York: William Morrow.
Rotundo, E.A. (1993). American manhood:
Transformationsin masculinity from the
revolution to the modern era. New York:
Basic Books.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. Kimmel discussesmen's fear of being called a "sissy."Can you think of other
examples where men criticize each other's manhood? What are some other
terms used to denote femininity as a negative attribute in men?
2. How is manhood defined in other cultures? Is the u.s. ideal of manhood
more or less rigid than other examples you identify?
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subjects covered in this essay. Some suggested search terms include:
homophobia
manhood and masculinity
men's movement
patriarchy
politics of exclusion
politics of inclusion
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