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Dead Boys Can't Dance : Sexual Orientation, Masculinity, and Suicide

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"Dead Boys Can't Dance" is a ground-breaking exploration of the double taboos of homosexuality and suicide and their effect on males from fourteen to twenty-five.

North American society has been reluctant to recognize that there is a link between the social stigmatization of homosexuality and the high level of suicide attempts by adolescent boys who are homosexual or are identified as homosexual by their peers.

By examining first-person accounts from teenage boys and young men, Michel Dorais and Simon Louis Lajeunesse shed light on why some of them attempt to take their own lives.Dorais and Lajeunesse analyse the adverse ways being stigmatized as homosexual affects personality and behaviour, discerning four types of reaction: the 'good boy', whose perfectionism and asexuality are an attempt to minimize the difference between how he is perceived and what he is supposed to be; the 'chameleon', who attempts to keep everyone from suspecting his secret but constantly feels like an impostor; the 'designated fag', who serves as a scapegoat to his peers, especially at school, and suffers a consequent rejection and lack of self-esteem; and, the 'rebel', who actively rejects any stigma based on his sexual orientation and non-conformity. They show that those who are heterosexual but suspected of being homosexual are most at risk of suicide and they make recommendations for suicide prevention.

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£56.00 Save 20.00%
RRP £70.00
Product Details
0773526536 / 9780773526532
Hardback
10/03/2004
Canada
English
136 p.
23 cm
research & professional Learn More