Publication | Closed Access
The Moderating Influence of Homophobia and Gender‐Role Traditionality on Perceptions of Male Rape Victims<sup>1</sup>
26
Citations
47
References
2009
Year
Social PsychologyHomosexualityQueer TheoryVictimisationSocial SciencesPsychologySexual CulturesGender IdentityGender StudiesGender‐role TraditionalitySexual CrimeSexual ViolenceModerating InfluenceMale Rape VictimsSexual BehaviorFeminist TheorySexual AssaultRape MinimizationSexual AbuseSociologySexual Orientation
This study investigated the influence of homophobia and gender‐role traditionality (GRT) on perceptions of male rape victims. Victims were assigned more blame in acquaintance rape than in stranger rape, and homosexual victims were blamed more than were heterosexual victims. Homophobia predicted patterns in rape minimization only when the victim was homosexual. Homophobia also predicted patterns of victim blame attribution in both homosexual and heterosexual victims, with a greater impact when the victim was homosexual. GRT predicted patterns of rape minimization in acquaintance rape, but not in stranger rape; and GRT did not predict differences in victim blame attribution.
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