Arnold Emily A, Bailey Marlon M
Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, University of California, San Francisco, California.
J Gay Lesbian Soc Serv. 2009 Jan 1;21(2-3):171-188. doi: 10.1080/10538720902772006. Epub 2009 Apr 23.
This article focuses on the construction of homes and families within the ballroom community, a prominent feature of urban GLBTQ communities of color in cities across the United States. Based on two ethnographic studies with ballroom communities in the San Francisco Bay Area, California, and Detroit, Michigan, we explore the importance of gender and sexual identity in informing community practice around HIV prevention and treatment. As a community, the ballroom scene provides African American queer youth with support for same-sex desire and identity, along with multiple forms of support for HIV prevention. Our study of the ballroom community documents current forms of "intravention" occurring within the community and the importance of the gender-sex system in organizing these practices. We also offer recommendations for community-based organizations to partner with the ballroom community, making use of existing social structures within the community and the salient concepts of home and family, to provide HIV-related services and support. We argue for HIV-prevention interventions to take a more culturally appropriate, nuanced approach to reaching African American youth at risk, utilizing community and family structures, in whatever forms these may take.
本文聚焦于舞厅社群中的家庭构建,这是美国各城市有色人种同性恋、双性恋、跨性别者及酷儿(GLBTQ)城市社群的一个显著特征。基于对加利福尼亚州旧金山湾区和密歇根州底特律的舞厅社群进行的两项人种志研究,我们探讨了性别和性取向认同在围绕艾滋病毒预防与治疗的社群实践中的重要性。作为一个社群,舞厅场景为非裔美国酷儿青年提供了对同性欲望和身份认同的支持,以及多种形式的艾滋病毒预防支持。我们对舞厅社群的研究记录了社群内部当前存在的“内部干预”形式,以及性别-性系统在组织这些实践中的重要性。我们还为社区组织提供建议,以便它们与舞厅社群合作,利用社群内现有的社会结构以及家庭和家的突出概念,提供与艾滋病毒相关的服务和支持。我们主张艾滋病毒预防干预措施应采取更符合文化背景、更细致入微的方法,利用社区和家庭结构(无论其形式如何)来接触面临风险的非裔美国青年。