Saturday, September 12, 2015

How Like Perceives Like: Gay People on "Gaydar"

When lacking explicit knowledge of someone's sexual orientation, gay people commonly assess the likelihood that another is gay using their "gaydar." The phrase gaydar is a playful mix of the word gay with radar, suggesting that one can sense, intuit, and/or perceive some set of characteristics in another that signal a shared minority status. While commonly mentioned, the exact criteria a gay person uses when employing their gaydar is little discussed. 

Drawing methodologically on a series of five focus groups of self-identified lesbians and gay men, this study explores the physical, visual, energetic, and conversational cues gay people consider when they employ the trope of gaydar. Specifically, interview subjects most often described their gaydar as triggered by the following elements: physical presentation including mannerisms, dress, and voice; interactions, especially eye contact; a presence or absence of certain conversational social norms; and, intangibly, as a kind of energetic exchange.

Via: http://ht.ly/S8iyG 

By: Barton B1.
1a Department of Sociology, Social Work and Criminology , Morehead State University , Morehead , Kentucky

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