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Queers in the Line of Fire: Goffman's Stigma Revisited
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Queers in the Line of Fire: Goffman's Stigma Revisited

Jason Orne
Sociological quarterly, v 54(2), pp 229-253
01 May 2013

Abstract

Using data from in-depth interviews with young queer people, this article proposes revisions for four areas of Goffman's classic work, Stigma. Interviews reveal a situation between complete acceptance of queer identity and outright hostility, which I term "being in the line of fire," and three strategies participants use to manage their identity in this situation. Unlike classical identity management, this project considers how their "double consciousness" allows them to respond to stigmatizing situations while remaining insulated from the negative appraisals of others. Instead, they orient toward educating the stigmatizer, minimizing interaction by tailoring their identity, or disengaging. I use these strategies to demonstrate that identity management theory does not properly consider possible responses to hostile reactions, the diversity of stigmatized groups, Goffman's so-called sympathetic others, or different frames of reference on stigmatized attributes. Orienting to the point of view of the marginalized, this article demonstrates how one manages an accepted identity when one is in the line of fire.

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59 citations in Scopus

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This publication has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#5 Gender Equality
#3 Good Health and Well-Being

Source: SDGs in the Output

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Web of Science research areas
Sociology
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