The New Gay Teenager (Adolescent Lives) by Ritch C. Savin-Williams
by Tom Jackson | July 26, 2008 | In GLBT Culture, Non-Fiction | No Comments
The New Gay Teenager (Adolescent Lives)
by Ritch C. Savin-Williams
Boidyke. Stem. Down low. Trannyboy. In this lively and broadly researched book, Cornell University psychologist Savin-Williams reveals that the words gay teenagers use to describe their sexual preferences have changed radically over the past 30 years, and so have their attitudes towards same-sex relationships. In fact, many of them are reluctant to define their sexuality at all. “In some respects,” Savin-Williams explains, “these teenagers might relate better to their pre-labeled, pre-identified grandparents than they do with their gay-liberated parents or their gay-resigned older cousins.” “For them ‘gay’ carries too much baggage,” and apparently they get along just fine without it. Much of the volume is devoted to Savin-Williams’s detailed [More]
