Publication | Closed Access
Alternatives to Silence in Face-to-Face Encounters with Everyday Heterosexism: Activism on the Interpersonal Front
37
Citations
48
References
2010
Year
Queer PoliticsEveryday HeterosexismFace-to-face EncountersSocial PsychologyHomosexualityQueer TheoryQueer StudyPsychologySocial SciencesActivismSexual CommunicationMedia ActivismGender IdentityGender StudiesInterpersonal FrontCommunication ActivismEveryday DiscriminationSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesOpenly Gay ActorIntersectionalityIdentity PoliticsApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheorySexual BehaviorFeminist TheorySocial MovementsInterpersonal CommunicationSociologyInterpersonal RelationshipsSexual IdentityArtsSexual Orientation
Two studies explore assertive responding to everyday heterosexism. In Study 1, gay and bisexual men described their responses to heterosexism through diaries and focus groups. Negotiating interpersonal and social implications of their choices, participants favored a range of assertive responses with minimal expression of hostility. In Study 2, various confrontations (styled after diary descriptions) were delivered by an openly gay actor in a task group that included one heterosexual male participant (self-selecting as bystander or perpetrator). The actor's confrontation style (nonassertive, nonhostile assertive, hostile assertive) had no differential impact on participants' subsequent expressions of heterosexism; however, the nonhostile assertive actor did receive the best interpersonal ratings from participants. Results highlight the impactful interchange between targets and perpetrators in the context of everyday discrimination.
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