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Gay Fathers and Their Sons: Personal Stories and Insights - Haworth LGBTQ+ Studies | Exploring Family Dynamics and Relationships
Gay Fathers and Their Sons: Personal Stories and Insights - Haworth LGBTQ+ Studies | Exploring Family Dynamics and Relationships
Gay Fathers and Their Sons: Personal Stories and Insights - Haworth LGBTQ+ Studies | Exploring Family Dynamics and Relationships
Gay Fathers and Their Sons: Personal Stories and Insights - Haworth LGBTQ+ Studies | Exploring Family Dynamics and Relationships

Gay Fathers and Their Sons: Personal Stories and Insights - Haworth LGBTQ+ Studies | Exploring Family Dynamics and Relationships

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Description

Examine the impact of disclosure on sons whose fathers are gay! In this book, Andrew Gottlieb, author of Out of the Twilight: Fathers of Gay Men Speak, explores yet another side of the impact of homosexuality on families. He now looks at how sons react to learning that their fathers are gay, allowing us to see, over time, how this has changed their family relationships and their own lives. Simply and elegantly written, this psychoanalytically oriented qualitative research study is accessible to both the beginner and the more advanced researcher and practitioner. It draws from a wide range of literary, popular, and psychological sources and includes an interview guide, a reference section, and an index. When someone discloses as gay, lesbian, or bisexual, it is not just an individual event. It is a family event. Based on estimates of married gay, lesbian, and bisexual persons, a spouse's coming out affects up to 2,000,000 couples. Yet, its impact has been largely ignored. Children’s voices are the least often heard. . . . Little has been written about sons of fathers who came out during or after marriage. Data for studies that do exist most often draw from the fathers' point of view. . . . The significance of this study lies in its comprehensive, detailed picture of sons and gay fathers as they develop their separate self-images as well as the images of their son-father relationships over time. Painful, sensitive, often triumphant, the stories and [the author’s] analysis of their thoughts, perceptions, and feelings afford a multidimensional, longitudinal viewing. Step by step, we follow the complicated dance of these sons and fathers as they develop and define their connection. from the Foreword by Amity Pierce Buxton, Author of The Other Side of the Closet: The Coming-Out Crisis for Straight Spouses and Families Sons Talk About Their Gay Fathers: Life Curves is a storybookan extended narrative moved along, but not overshadowed, by psychoanalytic theory. The Introduction briefly reviews more recent writings of the fathering experience as told by gay men themselves, setting the stage for: Father to Childa look at the father as seen through the ever-shifting eyes of his son at different phases of the life cycle The Quest for the Real Fatheran examination of sons' responses to their fathers' homosexuality as captured in film, fiction, nonfiction, television, and the psychological literature Methodologythe story of the research process, including sampling, the search for subjects, trustworthiness, the interview, bias, and data collection The Storiesan anthology of narratives the author constructed from the interview material, painting an intimate portrait of each individual son Findingsa categorical analysis Discussiona summary of all the preceding material cast in a developmental framework, highlighting implications for future research and clinical practice

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
The title and the cover are deceptive. One may think this book is an anthology of sons writing about their gay fathers. It is not; it's one writer analyzing information that he compiled. The cover shows a young man. However, most of the interviews came from sons well into their adulthood.Something that could have been a really good chapter in an anthology was stretched out into a poor full-length book. It makes sense that the first anecdote would concern Oscar Wilde, a gay man and a father of sons. However, there is a whole chapter that speaks of sons and has nothing to do with sexual identity matters. The conclusions could have been quickly summarized in a few pages, rather than being two substantial chapters.The author admits that those sons willing to be interviewed were either gay-friendly or at least tolerant of their fathers. Talk shows and other media works provide countless examples of sons who abandon their fathers once the fathers come out. This book does not help you to step into those males' shoes. I applaud the non-prejudiced interviewees here. However, this book provides only the positive slice of a large pie. This makes the book fill gushy and incomplete.Perhaps, future authors can improve upon the important work that this author began.
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