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STEREOTYPES |
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LGBT STEREOTYPES Getting Beyond Gay Generalizations
Not all gay men are effeminate and flamboyant (queens)
Just because someone is a gay man, doesn't mean he… Is obsessed with fashion and is super stylish Is limp-wristed, swishy and talks with a lisp Listens to Broadway show tunes Is involved in theatre and the performing arts Is a hairdresser or fashion designer Frequents seedy gay bars and dances shirtless to disco music
Not all lesbians are butch and tomboyish (dykes)
Just because someone is a lesbian, doesn't mean she… Wears short hair, tattoos, and army boots Drives a pick-up truck and wears a tool belt
Is really into sports
Wears leather and rides a
motorbike BEHAVIOR & APPEARANCE
Roles and
Orientations
Typically, you
can't spot a gay man or lesbian women by the way they act and dress.
Gender roles do not determine sexual orientation. Many LGBT people are
impossible to distinguish from straight and more gender normative
individuals. There are some lesbians who dress in a very masculine way,
some gay men who act in traditionally feminine ways, and many LGBT
people who feel the freedom to explore a range of gender expression.
There are also many gender normative LGBT people who “pass” unnoticed
every day.
Popular media tends to perpetuate the common stereotypes associated with gays and lesbians. Portrayals of gays and lesbians in movies and on television tend towards stereotypical behavior. Gay and lesbian characters all too often are caricatures, reflecting stereotypical looks, mannerisms, and lifestyles.
It is a misconception that you can always tell homosexuals by the way they look or act. Typically, we think that men who act in a feminine manner must be gay and that masculine women with short haircuts must be lesbians.
Too often people think they can generalize about the activities and lifestyle of gays and lesbians. Some people have long held assumptions about the kinds of music LGBT people listen to, the kinds of clothes LGBT people wear, and the kinds of entertainment LGBT people enjoy. Some might even generalize about the traits that they think characterize a typical gay or lesbian relationship.
Most
gay and lesbian people look just like your typical neighbors instead of
like the characters on "Queer as Folk" or "Queer Eye for the Straight
Guy."
Sexual orientation: whether you prefer the same sex or the other sex as a sexual partner.
Gender role: exhibiting masculine or feminine behavior.
There is a cultural tendency to view homosexuality as “behavior” rather than a personal identity.
While there
are some gay and lesbian persons who fit these stereotypes, they are no
more representative of all homosexual people than are the Marlboro Man
and June Cleaver types representative of all straight people. LGBT
people generally look and act like everyone else. Most people never
suspect the sexual orientation of an LGBT individual.
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ALGBTICAL n Association for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Issues in Counseling of Alabama