Abstract

This article explores the nature of the relationships that three older British gay men had with their respective families in the early part of their lives. Two distinct periods are identified by the participants as having a particular focus on their families' reaction to their sexual identity. The paper provides vignettes of the narratives of three gay men that illustrate their complex family relationships. These vignettes also illustrate that, for some people, families, familial relationships, and bonds transcend their perceived obligations to other social constructs. They recount a diversity of reactions, which include members of their family being fully complicit with their gay male relationships at a historical time when such relationships were criminal acts.

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