Mapping the Monosexual Imaginary: Bi+ Identity, Community, and Politics
Even though they are the largest sexual minority group in the United States, the lives, joys, and struggles of bi+ people, as well as the social structure of monosexism, are regularly overlooked in social scientific research and broader conversations about sexuality and gender. Mapping the Monosexual Imaginary interrupts this pattern of erasure by providing readers with a sociological examination of sexualities in society that places bi+ people and monosexism at the center of analysis. Through exploring bi+ peoples experiences navigating identity, community, and politics, Lain Mathers argues that to understand and challenge gender and sexual inequalities, we must first recognize and interrogate the structure of monosexism. At a time when attacks on LGBTQ people are increasing, this book offers an incisive examination of how an often-overlooked group within the LGBTQ community makes sense of their place in the world and what we can learn from attending to the specific issues that bi+ people face in society.
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Mapping the Monosexual Imaginary: Bi+ Identity, Community, and Politics
Even though they are the largest sexual minority group in the United States, the lives, joys, and struggles of bi+ people, as well as the social structure of monosexism, are regularly overlooked in social scientific research and broader conversations about sexuality and gender. Mapping the Monosexual Imaginary interrupts this pattern of erasure by providing readers with a sociological examination of sexualities in society that places bi+ people and monosexism at the center of analysis. Through exploring bi+ peoples experiences navigating identity, community, and politics, Lain Mathers argues that to understand and challenge gender and sexual inequalities, we must first recognize and interrogate the structure of monosexism. At a time when attacks on LGBTQ people are increasing, this book offers an incisive examination of how an often-overlooked group within the LGBTQ community makes sense of their place in the world and what we can learn from attending to the specific issues that bi+ people face in society.
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Mapping the Monosexual Imaginary: Bi+ Identity, Community, and Politics

Mapping the Monosexual Imaginary: Bi+ Identity, Community, and Politics

by Lain A.B. Mathers
Mapping the Monosexual Imaginary: Bi+ Identity, Community, and Politics

Mapping the Monosexual Imaginary: Bi+ Identity, Community, and Politics

by Lain A.B. Mathers

eBook

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Overview

Even though they are the largest sexual minority group in the United States, the lives, joys, and struggles of bi+ people, as well as the social structure of monosexism, are regularly overlooked in social scientific research and broader conversations about sexuality and gender. Mapping the Monosexual Imaginary interrupts this pattern of erasure by providing readers with a sociological examination of sexualities in society that places bi+ people and monosexism at the center of analysis. Through exploring bi+ peoples experiences navigating identity, community, and politics, Lain Mathers argues that to understand and challenge gender and sexual inequalities, we must first recognize and interrogate the structure of monosexism. At a time when attacks on LGBTQ people are increasing, this book offers an incisive examination of how an often-overlooked group within the LGBTQ community makes sense of their place in the world and what we can learn from attending to the specific issues that bi+ people face in society.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781666908817
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 05/29/2024
Series: Breaking Boundaries: New Horizons in Gender & Sexualities
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 258
File size: 608 KB

About the Author

Lain A.B. Mathers is associate professor of sociology and affiliated faculty in gender studies at Indiana State University.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Constructing Bi+ Identity Part I: Navigating Bisexual Stigma
Chapter 2: Constructing Bi+ Identity: Negotiating Pansexual Stigma and the use of Queer
Chapter 3: Navigating LGBTQ Spaces and People
Chapter 4: Navigating Straight Spaces and People
Chapter 5: Justifying Exclusion and Searching for Community
Chapter 6: Framing Bi+ Political Issues
Conclusion
Methodological Appendix
References
About the Author
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