@article{ref1, title="Men as Victims: "Victim" Identities, Gay Identities, and Masculinities", journal="Journal of interpersonal violence", year="2012", author="Dunn, Peter", volume="27", number="17", pages="3442-3467", abstract="The impact and meanings of homophobic violence on gay men's identities are explored with a particular focus on their identities as men and as gay men. Homosexuality can pose a challenge to conventional masculinities, and for some gay men, being victimized on account of sexual orientation reawakens conflicts about their masculinity that they thought they had resolved. Being victimized can reinvoke shame that is rooted in failure or unwillingness to uphold masculine norms. For some gay men, victimization therefore has connotations of nonmasculinity that make being a victim an undesirable status, yet that status must be claimed to obtain a response from criminal justice or victim services. Men who experience homophobic abuse are helped by accepting a victim identity, but only if they can quickly move on from it by reconstructing a masculine gay (nonvictim) identity. This process can be facilitated by agencies such as the police and victim services, provided they help men exercise agency in "fighting back," that is, resisting further victimization and recovering.

Language: en

", language="en", issn="0886-2605", doi="10.1177/0886260512445378", url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0886260512445378" }