Intersecting Sexual Identities, Oppressions, and Social Justice Work: Comparing LGBTQ Baby Boomers to Millennials Who Came of Age After the 1980s AIDS Epidemic
- PMID: 34565893
- PMCID: PMC8459889
- DOI: 10.1111/josi.12405
Intersecting Sexual Identities, Oppressions, and Social Justice Work: Comparing LGBTQ Baby Boomers to Millennials Who Came of Age After the 1980s AIDS Epidemic
Abstract
In this study we analyze 50 interviews with racially diverse, predominantly low-income, LGBTQ participants living in the San Francisco Bay Area. Rooted in intersectional theory that conceptualizes identities as shaped by interlocking forms of oppression and privilege, we compared interviews with "Baby Boomers" to those with "Millennial" participants, who came into adulthood in a time of greater legal and social inclusion for LGBTQ people. Our analysis focused on three questions: How do participants understand their sexual identities? How are the identities of sexual minority participants co-constructed with intersecting forms of oppression? What motivates LGBTQ people in our sample to engage in social justice work? We found that white LGBTQ people tended to see their sexualities as primary to their identity, compared to LGBTQ Black and/or Indigenous People of Color (BIPOC) who tended to see their identities in intersectional terms. Younger LGBTQ people were more likely to delink sex and gender identity; consequently, they were more likely to frame their sexual identities with terms not rooted in a gender binary (e.g., pansexual or queer). Experiences with homophobia were prevalent across generations, and intersected with racism and economic oppressions, but younger people more often described support from institutional agents. Participants' sense of community and commitment to giving back after experiences of trauma motivated them to engage in social justice work. Our findings highlight the intersectional nature of oppressions faced by LGBTQ people and the need for organizations to move away from focusing exclusively on homophobic oppression as a monolith.
Keywords: LGBTQ identity; economic inequality; gender variation; generational differences; intersectionality; racism.
Conflict of interest statement
We have no known conflict of interest to disclose. The authors would like to thank Amanda Le, Samantha Sanchez, Don Oriel, Alexandra Morgan, and Scott Forlin for their research assistantships. We would also like to thank members of Kristin Beal’s Q-Lab, Esther Rothblum, Hale M. Thompson, Carrie Lane, and the editors and reviewers for their helpful comments which greatly improved this manuscript. From the Center for Critical Public Health, we thank Emile Sanders and Malisa Young.
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