Last year, NYU Press published the fascinating book Not Gay: Sex Between Straight White Men by the University of California, Riverside, gender and sexuality professor Jane Ward. In it, Ward explored various subcultures in which what could be called
“straight homosexual sex” abounds — not just in the ones you’d expect,
like the military and fraternities, but also biker gangs and
conservative suburban neighborhoods — to better understand how the
participants in these encounters experienced and explained their
attractions, identities, and rendezvous. But not all straight MSM have
gotten the same level of research attention. One relatively neglected
such group, argues the University of Oregon sociology doctoral student Tony Silva in a new paper in Gender & Society is rural, white, straight men (well, neglected if you set aside Brokeback Mountain).
Silva
sought to find out more about these men, so he recruited 19 from
men-for-men casual-encounters boards on Craigslist and interviewed them,
for about an hour and a half each, about their sexual habits, lives,
and senses of identity. All were from rural areas of Missouri, Illinois,
Oregon, Washington, or Idaho, places known for their “social
conservatism and predominant white populations.” The sample skewed a bit
on the older side, with 14 of the 19 men in their 50s or older, and
most identified exclusively as exclusively or mostly straight, with a
few responses along the lines of “Straight but bi, but more straight.”
Since
this is a qualitative rather than a quantitative study, it’s important
to recognize that the particular men recruited by Silva weren’t
necessarily representative of, well, anything. These were just the guys
who agreed to participate in an academic’s research project after they
saw an ad for it on Craigslist. But the point of Silva’s project was
less to draw any sweeping conclusions about either this subset of
straight MSM, or the population as a whole, than to listen to their
stories and compare them to the narratives uncovered by Ward and various
other researchers.
Specifically, Silva was trying to understand better the interplay
between “normative rural masculinity” — the set of mores and norms that
defines what it means to be a rural man — and these men’s sexual
encounters. In doing so, he introduces a really interesting and catchy
concept, “bud-sex”:
Ward (2015) examines dudesex, a type of male–male sex that white, masculine, straight men in urban or military contexts frame as a way to bond and build masculinity with other, similar “bros.” Carrillo and Hoffman (2016) refer to their primarily urban participants as heteroflexible, given that they were exclusively or primarily attracted to women. While the participants in this study share overlap with those groups, they also frame their same-sex sex in subtly different ways: not as an opportunity to bond with urban “bros,” and only sometimes—but not always—as a novel sexual pursuit, given that they had sexual attractions all across the spectrum. Instead, as Silva (forthcoming) explores, the participants reinforced their straightness through unconventional interpretations of same-sex sex: as “helpin’ a buddy out,” relieving “urges,” acting on sexual desires for men without sexual attractions to them, relieving general sexual needs, and/or a way to act on sexual attractions. “Bud-sex” captures these interpretations, as well as how the participants had sex and with whom they partnered. The specific type of sex the participants had with other men—bud-sex—cemented their rural masculinity and heterosexuality, and distinguishes them from other MSM.
This
idea of homosexual sex cementing heterosexuality and traditional, rural
masculinity certainly feels counterintuitive, but it clicks a little
once you read some of the specific findings from Silva’s interviews. The
most important thing to keep in mind here is that rural masculinity is
“[c]entral to the men’s self-understanding.” Quoting another researcher,
Silva notes that it guides their “thoughts, tastes, and practices. It
provides them with their fundamental sense of self; it structures how
they understand the world around them; and it influences how they codify
sameness and difference.” As with just about all straight MSM, there’s a
tension at work: How can these men do what they’re doing without it
threatening parts of their identity that feel vital to who they are?
In some of the subcultures Ward studied, straight MSM were able to reinterpret homosexual identity as actually strengthening their
heterosexual identities. So it was with Silva’s subjects as well — they
found ways to cast their homosexual liaisons as reaffirming their rural
masculinity. One way they did so was by seeking out partners who were
similar to them. “This is a key element of bud-sex,” writes Silva.
“Partnering with other men similarly privileged on several intersecting
axes—gender, race, and sexual identity—allowed the participants to
normalize and authenticate their sexual experiences as normatively
masculine.” In other words: If you, a straight guy from the country,
once in a while have sex with other straight guys from the country, it
doesn’t threaten your straight, rural identity as much as it would if
instead you, for example, traveled to the nearest major metro area and
tried to pick up dudes at a gay bar. You’re not the sort of man who would go to a gay bar — you’re not gay!
It’s
difficult here not to slip into the old middle-school joke of “It’s not
gay if …” — “It’s not gay” if your eyes are closed, or the lights are
off, or you’re best friends — but that’s actually what the men in
Silva’s study did, in a sense:
As Cain [one of the interview subjects] said, “I’m really not drawn to what I would consider really effeminate faggot type[s],” but he does “like the masculine looking guy who maybe is more bi.” Similarly, Matt (60) explained, “If they’re too flamboyant they just turn me off,” and Jack noted, “Femininity in a man is a turn off.” Ryan (60) explained, “I’m not comfortable around femme” and “masculinity is what attracts me,” while David shared that “Femme guys don’t do anything for me at all, in fact actually I don’t care for ’em.” Jon shared, “I don’t really like flamin’ queers.” Mike (50) similarly said, “I don’t want the effeminate ones, I want the manly guys … If I wanted someone that acts girlish, I got a wife at home.” Jeff (38) prefers masculinity because “I guess I perceive men who are feminine want to hang out … have companionship, and make it last two or three hours.”
In
other words: It’s not gay if the guy you’re having sex with doesn’t
seem gay at all. Or consider the preferences of Marcus, another one of
Silva’s interview subjects:
A guy that I would consider more like me, that gets blowjobs from guys every once in a while, doesn’t do it every day. I know that there are a lot of guys out there that are like me … they’re manly guys, and doing manly stuff, and just happen to have oral sex with men every once in a while [chuckles]. So, that’s why I kinda prefer those types of guys …
It [also] seems that … more masculine guys wouldn’t harass me, I guess, hound me all the time, send me 1000 emails, “Hey, you want to get together today … hey, what about now.” And there’s a thought in my head that a more feminine or gay guy would want me to come around more. […] Straight guys, I think I identify with them more because that’s kinda, like [how] I feel myself. And bi guys, the same way. We can talk about women, there [have] been times where we’ve watched hetero porn, before we got started or whatever, so I kinda prefer that. [And] because I’m not attracted, it’s very off-putting when somebody acts gay, and I feel like a lot of gay guys, just kinda put off that gay vibe, I’ll call it, I guess, and that’s very off-putting to me.
This,
of course, is similar to the way many straight men talk about women —
it’s nice to have them around and it’s (of course) great to have sex
with them, but they’re so clingy. Overall, it’s just more fun
to hang out around masculine guys who share your straight-guy
preferences and vocabulary, and who are less emotionally demanding.
One way to interpret this is as defensiveness, of course — these men aren’t actually straight,
but identify that way for a number of reasons, including “internalized
heterosexism, participation in other-sex marriage and childrearing
[which could be complicated if they came out as bi or gay], and
enjoyment of straight privilege and culture,” writes Silva. After Jane
Ward’s book came out last year, Rich Juzwiak laid out a critique in Gawker that I also saw in many of the responses to my Q&A with her: While Ward sidestepped the question of her subjects’ “actual” sexual
orientations — “I am not concerned with whether the men I describe in
this book are ‘really’ straight or gay,” she wrote — it should
matter. As Juzwiak put it: “Given the cultural incentives that remain
for a straight-seeming gay, given the long-road to self-acceptance that
makes many feel incapable or fearful of honestly answering questions
about identity—which would undoubtedly alter the often vague data that
provide the basis for Ward’s arguments—it seems that one should care
about the wide canyon between what men claim they are and what they
actually are.” In other words, Ward sidestepped an important political
and rights minefield by taking her subjects’ claims about their
sexuality more or less at face value.
There are certainly some good reasons for sociologists and others to not
examine individuals’ claims about their identities too critically. But
still: Juzwiak’s critique is important, and it looms large in the
background of one particular segment of Silva’s paper. Actually, it
turned out, some of Silva’s subjects really weren’t all that opposed to a
certain level of deeper engagement with their bud-sex buds, at least
when it came to their “regulars,” or the men they hooked up with
habitually:
While relationships with regulars were free of romance and deep emotional ties, they were not necessarily devoid of feeling; participants enjoyed regulars for multiple reasons: convenience, comfort, sexual compatibility, or even friendship. Pat described a typical meetup with his regular: “We talk for an hour or so, over coffee … then we’ll go get a blowjob and then, part our ways.” Similarly, Richard noted, “Sex is a very small part of our relationship. It’s more friends, we discuss politics … all sorts of shit.” Likewise, with several of his regulars Billy noted, “I go on road trips, drink beer, go down to the city [to] look at chicks, go out and eat, shoot pool, I got one friend I hike with. It normally leads to sex, but we go out and do activities other than we meet and suck.”
While Kevin noted that his regular relationship “has no emotional connection at all,” it also has a friendship-like quality, as evidenced by occasional visits and sleepovers despite almost 100 miles of distance. Similarly, David noted, “If my wife’s gone for a weekend … I’ll go to his place and spend a night or two with him … we obviously do things other than sex, so yeah we go to dinner, go out and go shopping, stuff like that.” Jack explained that with his regular “we connected on Craigslist … [and] became good friends, in addition to havin’ sex … we just made a connection … But there was no love at all.” Thus, bud-sex is predicated on rejecting romantic attachment and deep emotional ties, but not all emotion.
Whatever else is going on here, clearly these men are getting some companionship out of these relationships. It isn’t just
about sex if you make a point of getting coffee, and especially if you
spend nights together, go shopping or out to dinner, and so on. But
there are sturdy incentives in place for them to not take that
step of identifying, or identifying fully, as gay or bi. Instead, they
frame their bud-sex, even when it’s accompanied by other forms of
intimacy, in a way that reinforces their rural, straight masculinity.
It’s
important to note that this isn’t some rational decision where the men
sit down, list the pros and cons, and say, “Well, I guess coming out
just won’t maximize my happiness and well-being.” It’s more subtle than
that, given the osmosis-like way we all absorb social norms and mores.
In all likelihood, when Silva’s subjects say they’re straight, they mean
it: That’s how they feel. But it’s hard not to get the sense that maybe
some of them would be happier, or would have made different life
decisions, if they had had access to a different, less constricted
vocabulary to describe what they want — and who they are.
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