Edward J. Tejirian, "Male to Male "
English | ISBN: 156023976X | 2000 | 404 pages | EPUB | 3 MB
English | ISBN: 156023976X | 2000 | 404 pages | EPUB | 3 MB
Explore the feelings of men toward other men without the pigeonholing found in terms like “gay” and “straight”!
Male to Male: Sexual Feeling Across the Boundaries of Identity starts with the evidence that most studies on male sexuality have ignored–the same-sex feelings of men whose identities are heterosexual. Of the more than fifty men in this book, almost half were aware of some degree of same-sex feeling. But beyond percentages, the primary focus of Male to Male is the exploration–through their own words–of how these men experienced same-sex feelings, what these feelings meant to them, the fears surrounding them, and the consequences of the collision between their heterosexual identities and their same-sex feelings.
In addition to comparative data on women's same-sex feelings, as well as on what men say in regard to their feelings about women, Male to Male includes material from two in-depth case studies. The first is on Clark, an African-American man who moved into sex with men in prison. His story shows that the need to see gay men as feminine is really a cultural defense against the powerful pull toward the male-to-male bond, and points to the movement to fulfill that bond when this defense is dropped. The second is on Zack, a gay police officer. His story explores the different dimensions and meanings of the male-to-male bond as these unfolded in his own life, while telling about the heterosexually identified men who “came out” to him about their own same-sex feelings.
Male to Male will help you explore:
same-sex feelings in heterosexual men and women
same-sex feelings in the military
prison culture and the “heterosexual role”
the fear of domination
the aesthetics of fear and power
the dynamics of rape
compassionate relationships between heterosexual-identified men . . . and much more!
Male to Male provides evidence showing that the identity that really counts–constituting the deepest source from which men's sexual feelings for each other spring–is not specifically a gay or heterosexual identity. That source is, rather, a male identity, and–beyond that–a human identity.