Brown Graham, Maycock Bruce
School of Public Health, Curtin University of Technology, Perth, WA, Australia.
Cult Health Sex. 2005 Jan;7(1):59-72. doi: 10.1080/13691050412331271425.
This study investigated the experiences and behaviours of 25 gay, bisexual and queer identifying men in the context of their perceptions of sexuality, risk and HIV; how sex and relationships are negotiated; and the influence of the environments and community on living and loving in a small gay community. Purposive sampling techniques were used to recruit participants in Perth, Western Australia. Symbolic interactionist theory provided the analytic framework. The study found that the men brought with them a range of meanings related to venues, contexts, identity and community. The men weighed up a number of simultaneous risks and benefits in their relationship with others, of which HIV was one of many variables. Assumptions about the culture and size of the Perth gay community permeated many of the assumptions men made about both venues and spaces, but also the characteristics of the men in those spaces.
本研究调查了25名认同同性恋、双性恋和酷儿身份的男性在性取向、风险和艾滋病毒认知方面的经历与行为;探讨了他们如何协商性行为与恋爱关系;以及环境和社区对一个小型同性恋社区中生活与恋爱的影响。研究采用立意抽样技术,在西澳大利亚州的珀斯招募参与者。象征互动理论提供了分析框架。研究发现,这些男性对场所、环境、身份和社区有着一系列相关认知。他们在与他人的关系中权衡了许多同时存在的风险和益处,其中艾滋病毒只是众多变量之一。对珀斯同性恋社区文化和规模的假设,渗透在这些男性对场所和空间的诸多认知中,也体现在他们对这些空间中男性特征的认知里。