Goldberg Shoshana K, Rothblum Esther D, Russell Stephen T, Meyer Ilan H
Dept. of Maternal and Child Health, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina.
Dept. of Women's Studies, San Diego State University.
Psychol Sex Orientat Gend Divers. 2020 Mar;7(1):101-112. doi: 10.1037/sgd0000359. Epub 2019 Nov 21.
Although queer identity has been used among sexual minorities for decades, little is known about the population of queer-identified people in the U.S. We compared people who identify as queer (unweighted n = 88; weighted % = 5.8%) with those who identify as lesbian/gay (n = 833; 46.9%), bisexual (n = 493; 40.6%) or other sexual minority identities (n = 93; 6.7%), in order to describe queer-identified people as a distinct sexual minority group. The study is the first to estimate demographic characteristics and sexuality of queer-identified people using a U.S. nationally representative sample. We found that queer people are overwhelmingly cisgender women and genderqueer/ nonbinary (GQNB), younger, and more highly educated than other groups. After stratifying by gender identity (cisgender women; cisgender men; GQNB), survey-weighted descriptive differences in attraction, sexual partnering, and relationship patterns show that queer individuals are more likely to report attraction to, and sexual relationships with, transgender and GQNB people, though differences by respondent gender identity were noted: The majority of queer women are attracted to and partnered with both women and men, and were more likely than other groups to be attracted to and partnered with cisgender and transgender people. In contrast, queer men are split in their attractions-about half were attracted exclusively to men, and half to men and women-but the majority partnered with men only. Of all groups, queer men are the most likely to partner with transgender men, but none had partnered with transgender women. GQNB people are more likely than cisgender people to identify as queer (25.9%) and are attracted to both cisgender and transgender women and men, yet predominantly partnered with cisgender people. The results provide support for queer as a distinct sexual identity.
尽管几十年来酷儿身份一直被性少数群体所使用,但对于美国酷儿身份认同者的人口情况却知之甚少。我们将自认为酷儿的人群(未加权样本量n = 88;加权百分比 = 5.8%)与自认为女同性恋/男同性恋的人群(n = 833;46.9%)、双性恋人群(n = 493;40.6%)或其他性少数身份人群(n = 93;6.7%)进行了比较,以便将酷儿身份认同者描述为一个独特的性少数群体。这项研究首次使用美国全国代表性样本估计酷儿身份认同者的人口统计学特征和性取向。我们发现,酷儿群体绝大多数是顺性别女性和性别酷儿/非二元性别者(GQNB),比其他群体更年轻,受教育程度也更高。在按性别认同(顺性别女性;顺性别男性;GQNB)分层后,调查加权后的吸引力、性伴侣关系和恋爱模式的描述性差异表明,酷儿个体更有可能报告对跨性别者和GQNB人群有吸引力并与其建立性关系,不过也注意到了受访者性别认同方面的差异:大多数酷儿女性被女性和男性所吸引并与他们建立伴侣关系,并且比其他群体更有可能被顺性别者和跨性别者所吸引并与其建立伴侣关系。相比之下,酷儿男性的吸引力则有所不同——约一半仅被男性吸引,另一半被男性和女性吸引——但大多数仅与男性建立伴侣关系。在所有群体中,酷儿男性最有可能与跨性别男性建立伴侣关系,但没有人曾与跨性别女性建立伴侣关系。GQNB人群比顺性别者更有可能自认为酷儿(25.9%),并且被顺性别和跨性别女性及男性所吸引,但主要与顺性别者建立伴侣关系。研究结果为酷儿作为一种独特的性身份提供了支持。