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Georgia State University

GSU Profs researching “Sexual Identity in the American Deep South”

Checkout Sociology Professors Dawn Baunach and Elisabeth Burgess‘s article about their research on U.S. Southerners’ sexual identity experiences:

Jay Shoemaker leading group of marchers in the annual Gay Pride celebrations and parade, Atlanta, Georgia, June 27, 1993.
Jay Shoemaker leading group of marchers in the annual Gay Pride celebrations and parade, Atlanta, Georgia, June 27, 1993. AJCP278-021a, Atlanta Journal-Constitution Photographic Archives. Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library.

Baunach, D., & Burgess, E. O. (2013). Sexual Identity in the American Deep South: The Concordance and Discordance of Sexual Activity, Relationships, and Identities. Journal Of Homosexuality, 60(9), 1315-1335.

“This research explores the association between sexual identity and sexual behavior and how that association varies across gender and race in the American Deep South. Multinomial logistic regression analysis is used to determine the likelihood of each sexual identity given past sexual behavior, sexual relationships, and other social characteristics. The more traditional cultural climate of the South appears to suppress identification as a sexual minority. Sexual identification in the Deep South is primarily a product of sexual activity and sexual relationships, although attitudes toward and contact with the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community play a minor role. Although most participants’ sexual behaviors and identities were in concordance, sexual discordance was highest for White women and lowest for White men. Discordance was also associated with traditional men’s roles attitudes, negative homosexuality attitudes, and contact with the LGBT community. It is hoped that these results encourage scholarship that deconstructs the sexual behavior and identity of all groups, not just oppressed groups.” [article abstract]