Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Juliet Richters
ANO 2007
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Sexualities
ISSN 1363-4607
E-ISSN 1461-7382
EDITORA Sage Publications
DOI 10.1177/1363460707078319
CITAÇÕES 4
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 f382d887eb9fb725bbf5c5bd21cb6eed
MD5 72BB9069EA30CB2359077813B31F2F6E
MD5 af7e8032df1b801b171f3da5d984bb03

Resumo

Casual and anonymous sex is available at low cost to homosexually active men in venues such as saunas, sex clubs and backrooms. In order to investigate the relationship between setting and sexual practice, transcripts from interviews with 30 gay men in Sydney were analyzed thematically, taking a situational interactionist approach which focused on practice. Men's reasons for going to sex venues, and for their choice of venue (gay/non-gay, saunas/backrooms), are explored. Physical features (such as steps, platforms, dark spaces, steam rooms, cubicles and glory holes) encourage or enable particular practices, such as fellatio or group sex. Interactional patterns include unspoken rules of venue deportment (e.g. silence) and vary with stages of cruising and how crowded the space is. Patrons consider venues in terms of the other men, and are generally unaware of the conscious intentions of the designers. Yet the venues are commercial spaces and share features with airports, supermarkets, railway stations, hotels and fast food restaurants. Venue layout deliberately disrupts patterns of social interaction which prevent sex from happening in other public places. The layout also shapes the sex that occurs.

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