非裔拉丁裔同性吸引男性:种族认同的重要性、同性恋社区认同和内化的同性恋负面性

Juan F. Camarena
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:非裔拉丁裔同性吸引的男性一直被研究界忽视,但公共卫生研究人员在研究种族在艾滋病毒/艾滋病中的作用时除外,这些研究通常将参与者标记为拉丁裔或非裔美国人(Muñoz Laboy和Severson,2018)。在美国对男性行为者(MSM)的人口估计中,110万是拉丁裔,63.5万是黑人,但尚不清楚有多少是两者(Lieb等人,2011年)。除了不清楚有多少非裔拉丁裔同性吸引的男性存在之外,也没有关于这些男性如何理解自己的多重身份的数据,也没有对MSM等流行术语的定义达成一致。这项定量和探索性的研究考察了非裔拉丁裔同性吸引男性的种族认同、同性恋社区认同和内在的同负性之间的相互联系。来自美国各地的32名男性完成了一份详细的人口统计问卷,即多群体种族认同测量(MEIM;Phinney,1992)、同性恋社区认同和参与量表(IGCS;Vanable、McKirnan和Stokes,2011)和内部同性恋负性量表(IHNI;Mayfield,2001)。结果表明,随着民族认同的增加,同源性降低。虽然研究结果具有探索性,但与关于同性吸引有色人种男性的常见说法相矛盾,是理解非裔拉丁裔身份复杂性的第一步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Afro-Latino Same-Sex Attracted Men: Ethnic Identity Importance, Gay Community Identification, and Internalized Homonegativity
abstract:Afro-Latino same-sex attracted men have been ignored by the research community with the exception of public health researchers examining the role of ethnicity in HIV/AIDS and often these studies label participants as either Latino or African American (Muñoz-Laboy & Severson, 2018). Of the US population estimates of men who have sex with men (MSM), 1.1 million are Latino and 635,000 are Black, yet it is unknown how many are both (Lieb et al, 2011). Aside from not having a clear understanding of how many Afro-Latino same-sex attracted men exist, there is no data about how these men understand their multiple identities, nor agreed upon definitions of popular terms such as MSM. This quantitative and exploratory research study examined the interconnection of ethnic identity, gay community identification, and internalized homonegativity among Afro-Latino same-sex attracted men. Thirty-two men from across the United States completed a detailed demographic questionnaire, the Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure (MEIM; Phinney, 1992), the Identification with and Involvement with the Gay Community Scale (IGCS; Vanable, McKirnan, & Stokes, 2011), and Internalized Homonegativity Inventory (IHNI; Mayfield, 2001). Results indicated that as ethnic identity increased, homonegativity decreased. While exploratory in nature, the study results contradict common narratives about same-sex attracted men of color and are a beginning step in understanding the complexity of identity for Afro-Latinos.
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