dc.description.abstract |
This study explored gay men’s viewpoints about their tendency to self-objectify based
on societal expectations of what a masculine ideal ought to be. Q methodology was
deployed to enable gay men to share their own perceptions of what a masculine ideal
is, and at the same time engage in and share their self-perceptions of being gay. A
concourse of 394 statements was produced from recorded interview sessions.
Hegemonic masculinity and self-objectification frameworks were utilised to construct
a matrix to be used to extract two Q samples (that is, final sets of statements), each
consisting of 32 statements. Each Q sample was accompanied by a unique set of
sorting instructions. The first Q sort instruction required gay men to sort statements
according to how they perceived a masculine ideal. The second instruction required
the same gay men to sort the statements according to the perceptions of themselves
as gay. Two viewpoints were identified and interpreted: (1) the masculine ideal is
considerate, masculine ideal is non-existent; and (2) self-appreciation, physical
appearance contentment. Together, the results revealed that a masculine ideal is not
perceived in relation to societal hegemonic masculine characteristics and beliefs; and
the gay men perceived themselves as self-appreciative with no hints of selfobjectification tendencies. In contrast with the extant empirical evidence, the study
found that gay men in traditional rural communities do not possess any form of selfobjectification tendencies. |
en_US |