Abstract

Gay men occupy a strange position in masculinity research and men's studies; neither truly inside nor entirely outside its domains. Right from the early days in books on men there were lists of references on homosexuality at the back. These books were often strangely coy, not mentioning homosexuality as another aspect of masculinity. Rather, they situated homosexuality as a nagging doubt in the minds of men as they grappled with their quite heterosexual masculinity, or as aberrant moments in a confused search by some heterosexual men to find their true selves.'

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