Being Gay in Ireland
eBook - PDF

Being Gay in Ireland

Resisting Stigma in the Evolving Present

  1. 229 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Being Gay in Ireland

Resisting Stigma in the Evolving Present

About this book

In Being Gay in Ireland: Resisting Stigma in the Evolving Present, Gerard Rodgers argues that existing theory and research on the lives of gay men often exhibits a social weightlessness such that self-beliefs are frequently decoupled from an analysis of society. History and conventions inform and shape gay men's self-beliefs, yet psychology as a discipline rarely dialogues with historical or political scholarship. Rodgers corrects this oversight with a critical analysis of the decades of socio-political struggle in Ireland and elsewhere. Rodgers captures the lives of gay men who are situated in varied contexts and who all, despite their different situations, possess self-beliefs that are shaped by wider historical traditions and evolving social change. Rodgers argues that the nuances and particulars of self-beliefs are significantly affected by wider historical traditions and evolving social and political changes. Through his reconstruction, Rodgers provides practitioners of applied psychological and therapeutic disciplines with an in-depth picture of how historical context and social justice successes have interacted with gay men's self-beliefs, with a particular focus on how prosocial resistances against prejudice have incrementally eroded historical standards of gay stigma.

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Yes, you can access Being Gay in Ireland by Gerard Rodgers in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Psychology & History & Theory in Psychology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Contents
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. Preface
  4. Introduction
  5. Chapter One: Multilevel Tracking of Gay Men’s Changing Experiences
  6. Chapter Two: The Historical Context of Being Gay in Ireland
  7. Chapter Three: Situating Self and Others in Lifeworld Repertoires
  8. Chapter Four: Irish Gay Men’s Stories
  9. Chapter Five: Overview of Key Findings
  10. Chapter Six: Confronting Ireland’s Mea Culpa
  11. Conclusion and Recommendations for Therapeutic Practice
  12. Glossary
  13. Bibliography
  14. Index
  15. About the Author