Tran Duy, Sullivan Corrinne T, Nicholas Lucy
School of Social Sciences, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia.
J Homosex. 2023 Jun 7;70(7):1310-1324. doi: 10.1080/00918369.2021.2020543. Epub 2022 Jan 10.
Violence and microaggressions against the LGBTQ+ community from those outside of the community is commonly known and understood within academic literature. However, there is limited comprehensive knowledge about violence and microaggressions that occur within LGBTQ+ communities. This scoping review helps to fill this gap in knowledge, analyzing and synthesizing 18 research articles published in English language scholarly journals all of which have been published between 2010 and 2020. Online databases ProQuest, SAGE Journals, Google Scholar, Taylor and Francis Journals, Scopus, Informit, Project MUSE, PubMed, and EBSCOhost were utilized to search for existing literature on ingroup LGBTQ+ microaggression. The found literature focused on power dynamics within the LGBTQ+ community and how that power has enabled subgroups within the community to enact microaggression on one another. We found that ingroup microaggressions experienced by members of the LGBTQ+ community are a result of dominant norms that give certain groups power over another.
学术界普遍知晓并理解社群外部针对 LGBTQ+ 群体的暴力和微侵犯行为。然而,对于 LGBTQ+ 社群内部发生的暴力和微侵犯行为,人们掌握的综合知识有限。本范围综述有助于填补这一知识空白,它分析并综合了 18 篇发表于 2010 年至 2020 年间英文专业学术期刊上的研究文章。我们利用在线数据库 ProQuest、SAGE 期刊、谷歌学术、泰勒与弗朗西斯期刊、Scopus、Informit、Project MUSE、PubMed 和 EBSCOhost 来搜索关于 LGBTQ+ 群体内部微侵犯行为的现有文献。所发现的文献聚焦于 LGBTQ+ 社群内部的权力动态,以及这种权力如何使社群内的子群体能够相互实施微侵犯行为。我们发现,LGBTQ+ 社群成员所经历的群体内部微侵犯行为,是某些群体对其他群体拥有权力的主导规范所导致的结果。