‘Fat boys make you feel thinner!’: fat GBQ men’s comfort and stigma in UK bear spaces

Nick McGlynn
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Abstract

Abstract Despite heightened stigmatisation of fatness in gay/bisexual/queer (GBQ) men’s spaces, geographers have yet to explore the nexus of men, sexualities, and fatness. ‘Bear’ is a term used to describe a set of global identities, communities and bodies of GBQ men who are usually large and hairy. Spaces created and used by Bears have been described as inclusive of fat GBQ men, but no geographic research has investigated such men’s experiences in themThis paper presents findings from ‘Bearspace’, a study of Bear spaces in the UK from 2018 to 2020. It shows that ‘comfort’ was how fat GBQ men framed their experiences of both Bear spaces (‘comfortable’) and mainstream LGBTQ spaces (‘uncomfortable’), and that this meant ‘standing out’ or ‘fitting in’ amongst a majority of proximate thin or fat bodies respectively. However the paper also demonstrates that fat stigma persists in Bear spaces, and thatit is part of how Bear spaces are produced as comfortable for most fat GBQ men, through their awareness that they are not the fattest man present. The paper concludes by asserting the significance of differences between spatially proximate fat bodies for the relational conceptualisation of fatness and fat stigma, and for making fat-inclusive spaces.
“胖男孩让你感觉更瘦!”胖胖的GBQ男性在英国的舒适和耻辱
尽管在同性恋/双性恋/酷儿(GBQ)男性空间中,肥胖的污名化加剧,但地理学家尚未探索男性、性取向和肥胖之间的关系。“熊”是一个用来描述GBQ男性的全球身份、群体和身体的术语,他们通常身材高大、毛发浓密。熊创造和使用的空间被描述为包括肥胖的GBQ男性,但没有地理研究调查过这些男性在其中的经历。本文介绍了“熊空间”的发现,这是一项对2018年至2020年英国熊空间的研究。研究表明,“舒适”是胖GBQ男性在Bear空间(“舒适”)和主流LGBTQ空间(“不舒服”)的体验,这意味着在大多数接近瘦或胖的身体中“脱颖而出”或“融入”。然而,这篇论文也表明,在Bear空间中,肥胖的污名仍然存在,这是Bear空间为大多数肥胖的GBQ男性创造舒适环境的部分原因,因为他们意识到自己不是在场的最胖的人。本文通过断言空间上接近脂肪体之间的差异对肥胖和肥胖污名的关系概念化的重要性,以及对制造脂肪包容空间的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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