Homosociality: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(added some notes, some examples) |
(see also) |
||
| Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
* Sheri Tepper's ''The Gates to Women's Country'' portrays a sex-segregated world in which most men live in a militarized environment outside the walls of the cities; almost all women and a few men live within the cities. The sex ratios created homosociality for day-to-day life for most people. Tepper's society purportedly eliminated '''[[homosexuality]]''' as a (presumably undesirable) hormonal and genetic variant, so this society shows homosociality without homosexuality. | * Sheri Tepper's ''The Gates to Women's Country'' portrays a sex-segregated world in which most men live in a militarized environment outside the walls of the cities; almost all women and a few men live within the cities. The sex ratios created homosociality for day-to-day life for most people. Tepper's society purportedly eliminated '''[[homosexuality]]''' as a (presumably undesirable) hormonal and genetic variant, so this society shows homosociality without homosexuality. | ||
* Suzette Haden Elgin's ''Native Tongue'' examined the creation of subcultures within homosocial cultures of women. | * Suzette Haden Elgin's ''Native Tongue'' examined the creation of subcultures within homosocial cultures of women. | ||
See also: | |||
* [[List of works featuring separatist societies]] | |||
[[Category:Theory]] | [[Category:Theory]] | ||
Revision as of 08:52, 15 May 2007
Homosociality is the practice of socializing within gender-segregated groups; socializing with members of one's own sex. Part of queer theory, the concept addresses same-sex subcultures, such as have often existed in the military, girls' schools, and convents. Homosociality is a necessary result from any gender-segregated society. Homosociality can lead to homosexuality, sometimes described as situational homosexuality, as in prisons which are generally gender-segregated, or the Navy (turned into a "floating joke" by queers, according to Homer Simpson).
Examples in SF:
- Sheri Tepper's The Gates to Women's Country portrays a sex-segregated world in which most men live in a militarized environment outside the walls of the cities; almost all women and a few men live within the cities. The sex ratios created homosociality for day-to-day life for most people. Tepper's society purportedly eliminated homosexuality as a (presumably undesirable) hormonal and genetic variant, so this society shows homosociality without homosexuality.
- Suzette Haden Elgin's Native Tongue examined the creation of subcultures within homosocial cultures of women.
See also: