Dude, You're a Fag

Masculinity and Sexuality in High School

227 pages

English language

Published Aug. 22, 2012 by University of California Press.

ISBN:
978-0-520-27148-7
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OCLC Number:
758870786

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5 stars (1 review)

"Laced with evocative stories based on ethnographic observations and interviews with high school kids, Dude, You're a Fag tells gripping stories of life in high school, while helping to extend the cutting edge of scholarly theory on gender and sexualities. C.J. Pascoe has contributed a highly readable and extremely insightful book that will be required reading for students and scholars of youth and the construction of sex and gender in schools."—Michael A. Messner, author of Taking the Field: Women, Men and Sports

"This is a strikingly original study of schoolboys renegotiating class, gender, and ethnicity, along with the labeling as 'fag'. Here homophobia is at work in a path breaking study, which is also a highly readable must-read."—Ken Plummer, University of Essex, and editor of Sexualities

"We know that schools are a central site for the construction of gender identity, but until C. J. Pascoe's careful and compassionate ethnography, we …

9 editions

reviewed Dude, You're a Fag by C. J. Pascoe

Illuminating Ethnography

5 stars

Reading this ethnography I formed the hypothesis that misogyny is actually a secondary reaction formation to a fear of failure to fit or appease normative erotics of the body within homosocial spaces (i.e., what may actually constitute masculinity), rather than being a primary or foundational phenomena for masculinity. This would seem to be consistent with empirical evidence as well though I would have to look for the specific studies I'm thinking about again (namely ones that talk about the relationship between "emasculation" and misogyny).

Besides my having gained a firmer grasp of this insight through the book, the books merit is its use of intersectional and discourse analysis to demonstrate that the consolidation of masculine identity is not reducible to a reliance on homophobia in male-to-male relations, but is primarily about how bodies are highlighted and valued within a particular set of sexual norms. The homophobia is a downstream effect …

Subjects

  • Sexuality Studies
  • Masculinity Studies
  • Gender Studies
  • Psychology
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Social Psychology
  • Ethnography

Places

  • California