Sexual minority culturesSexual minority cultures are the heritage of culture, knowledge, and references to which members of sexual minorities fall heir by the fact of their membership in those minorities. Among the first to argue that members of sexual minorities can constitute cultural minorities as well as being just individuals were Harry Hay and the Mattachine Society, speaking with reference to gay men's culture. Certainly, not all members of a particular sexual minority participate in, or are aware of, the culture that may be associated with that minority. This may be due to a feeling of exclusion within that culture, or simply a preference to belong to the mainstream. See also: integration, separatism, discrimination.
Gay male culture\nIt can be difficult to delimit what is specific to gay male culture, and what to LGBT culture. In the last half-century, the broader culture has focused more heavily on gay men than on other members of the LGBT community. The origins of this, whether due to numbers, perceived greater (or lesser) transgressivity, and/or sexism (this can refer to sexism against gay men, or to the other groups), is open to debate. Likewise, gay men's culture is often better known to lesbians, bisexuals, and transgendered people than those groups' particular cultures may be known to gay men. Some elements that may be identified more closely with gay men than with other groups include:
Lesbian culture\nAs with gay men, lesbian culture includes elements both from the larger LGBT culture and elements that are more closely specific to the lesbian community. Often thought of in this regard are elements of counterculture that have been primarily associated with lesbians in Europe and North America. The history of lesbian culture over the last half-century has also been tightly entwined with the evolution of feminism. Older stereotypes of lesbian women stressed a dichotomy between women who adhered to stereotypical male gender stereotypes ("butch") and stereotypical female gender sterotypes ("femme"), and that typical lesbian couples consisted of butch/femme couples. Today, some lesbian women adhere to being either "butch" or "femme" but these categories are much less rigid and there is no express expectation that a lesbian couple be butch/femme. See labrys, black triangle.Bisexual culture\nTransgendered culture\nThe study of transgendered culture as such is complicated by the many and various ways in which cultures deal with gender. For example, in many cultures, people who are attracted to people of the same sex — that is, those who in Anglo-American culture would identify as gay, lesbian, or bisexual — are classed as a third gender. Some transsexual women and men however do not classify as being part of any specific transsexual culture, however there is a distinction between transsexual people who make their past known to others and those who wish to live according to their gender identity and not reveal this past, stating that they should be able to live in their true gender role in a normal way, and be in control of whom they choose to tell their past to. See: hijra, berdache, two-spirit.Other groups within the LGBT community\nOther groups of sexual minorities which have formed significant communities and possibly cultures include the Deaf Queer community. External link: http://www.deafqueer.org/Polyamory\nThe polyamorous community is another sexual minority with an associated culture.Fetish-based cultures\nAnother form of sexual minority that may form culture is that based around sexual fetishism. For example, practitioners of S&M and those who are into leather may have extensive cultural knowledge associated with their communities.Influence on culture at large\nSexual minority cultures frequently and consistently influence the broader culture at large, including straight culture. Slang frequently originations in subcultures, including sexual minority subcultures, which becomes part of the larger vernacular including words associated with descriptions specific to sexual minorities or not. Madonna is one of many artists who have borrowed from sexual minority cultures, including her appropriation of vogueing. Recently, the television series Queer Eye for the Straight Guy depicts straight men being made over by gay ones. |
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"Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever." - Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) |
, often used as a symbol for LGBT culture.]]
Sexual minorities defined by sexual orientation and gender identity — 