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Homosexualities

Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women (1978) is a book by the psychologist Alan P. Bell and the sociologist Martin S. Weinberg in which the authors argue that homosexuality is not necessarily related to pathology and divide homosexuals into five types. Together with Homosexuality: An Annotated Bibliography (1972), it is part of a series of books that culminated in the publication of Sexual Preference in 1981. The work was a publication of the Institute for Sex Research.

Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women
Cover of the first edition
AuthorsAlan P. Bell
Martin S. Weinberg
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectHomosexuality
PublisherSimon & Schuster
Publication date
1978
Media typePrint (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages505
ISBN978-0671251505

The book received much attention and mixed reviews. It received praise for its authors' attempts to discredit stereotypes about homosexuals, became influential, and has been seen as a classic work. However, it was criticized for its authors' sampling methods and their typology of homosexuals, which has been seen as arbitrary and misleading. Commentators also questioned Bell and Weinberg's presentation of the work as a definitive study of homosexuality. Some commentators suggested that some of Bell and Weinberg's findings were obvious and that their study was not needed to establish them, and critics charged that they drew conclusions not justified by their data. Some of Bell and Weinberg's findings, such as those about gay men's sexual behavior, have become dated due to social changes since the 1970s, such as those brought about by the AIDS epidemic and the progress of the gay rights movement.

Summary

 
Sex researcher Alfred Kinsey.

Discussing the background to Homosexualities, Bell and Weinberg write that the sex researcher Alfred Kinsey had intended to publish a study of homosexuality to complement the two volumes of the Kinsey Reports, but died before being able to produce such a volume. Following Kinsey's death, the Institute for Sex Research became involved in other projects and did not focus its attention on homosexuality again until the late 1960s. Stanley Yolles of the National Institute of Mental Health established the National Institute of Mental Health Task Force on Homosexuality, which held its first meeting in 1967, and decided that further research into homosexuality was needed. The NIMH Task Force invited the Institute for Sex Research to submit a proposal for a comprehensive study of the development of homosexuality. The Institute's proposal, based upon many of the NIMH Task Force's recommendations, was modified after consultation with NIMH officials. The book's direct predecessor was Patterns of Adjustment in Deviant Populations, a 1967 survey of white gay men in Chicago designed by Bell and Gebhard and funded by NIMH. This pilot study contained many questions identical to those used in Homosexualities.[1]

Bell and Weinberg, during the initial stages of their work, consulted with numerous experts on homosexuality who often held views quite different from theirs. Those listed as contributors to the study include the ethologist Frank A. Beach, the psychoanalyst Irving Bieber, Wainwright Churchill, the psychologist Albert Ellis, the anthropologist Paul Gebhard, the psychologist Evelyn Hooker, the sociologist Laud Humphreys, the psychiatrist Judd Marmor, the sexologist Wardell Pomeroy, the sociologist Edward Sagarin, the psychiatrist Robert Stoller, the psychologist Clarence Arthur Tripp, and the sociologist Colin J. Williams. Bell and Weinberg comment that, "Our correspondence and personal meetings with these individuals were of great help to us in constructing a viable interview schedule. While the final instrument, devised over many meetings of various Institute personnel, did not entirely please or represent the views of any one person associated with it, the interview schedule in its final form was the result of endless discussions and sometimes painful compromise on the part of many highly committed people."[2]

Bell and Weinberg write that their study has several purposes, including describing homosexual sexual behavior, examining stereotypes about homosexuals, and exploring "the relationship between homosexuals' sexual life-styles and their social and psychological adjustment". They note that their work is based on a nonrepresentative sample, and argue that a representative sample is unnecessary for their purposes. They also argue that several different types of homosexual should be distinguished.[3] They write that Homosexualities is part of a series of books that resulted from what Bell and Weinberg called the San Francisco Study.[4]

Publication history

Homosexualities was first published by Simon & Schuster in 1978. The book was also published by the Macmillan Company of Australia Pty Ltd in 1978.[5]

Reception

Overview

Homosexualities was influential and has been praised as an important study.[6] The philosopher Lee C. Rice credited its authors with discrediting "myths about the gay personality".[7] The psychologist William Paul and the sex researcher James D. Weinrich maintained that Homosexualities documented social diversity well and was the largest study conducted specifically on homosexuality, but that it was limited by the problems of trying to obtain a representative sample.[8] The philosopher Timothy F. Murphy considered it useful despite its limitations, provided that it, like other studies, is regarded as part of a scientific process of "measuring the adequacy of hypotheses and evidence".[9] Some of Bell and Weinberg's findings have been described as outdated.[10] Paul and Weinrich suggested that because their data was collected in 1969, they may have missed "growing cultural developments in the gay younger generation of the late 1960s and early 1970s."[8] The philosopher Michael Ruse suggested that the AIDS epidemic has probably made their findings about gay sexual behavior obsolete.[11] Murphy observed that Bell and Weinberg studied people who came of age before gay liberation, and that probably a much smaller proportion of gays would now be dissatisfied with their sexual orientation or interested in attempting to change it through therapy.[12] The philosopher John Corvino wrote that Homosexualities is the study most commonly cited to prove that gay men are sexually promiscuous, but that it was not based on a broad sample and that a more extensive 1994 study by the sociologist Edward Laumann produced different results.[13] Laumann et al. argued that while Bell and Weinberg covered a wide range of sexual behaviors, their failure to use probability samples meant that their study "could not be used to estimate population rates." They nevertheless found Homosexualities valuable in planning their own study.[14]

The historian Martin Duberman observed that in 1976 he heard a rumor that the study "would give renewed respectability to the long dominant but recently challenged psychoanalytic view (associated primarily with the work of Charles Socarides and Irving Bieber), that the parental configuration of absent/hostile/remote father and binding/suffocating/domineering mother was what produced gay sons." He related that when he met Bell that year and asked him whether this was true, Bell "squirmed uncomfortably" and gave "a long-winded, evasive reply." According to Duberman, "I finally got him [Bell] to say that he had tentatively concluded that "estrangement from the father (irrespective of the mother's "binding" love or lack of it) was likely to produce a homosexual son; and that estrangement from the mother could be directly correlated with a heterosexual outcome for the son." He wrote that Bell was "not amused" by his criticism of this conclusion. He added that Homosexualities surprised him because it "avoided the question of etiology" and "was a work of considerable substance."[15] In 2002, Duberman was quoted as saying that the work resulted from "the most ambitious study of male homosexuality ever attempted", and that together with Sexual Preference (1981), it "refuted a large number of previous studies that gay men were social misfits".[16] Bell and Weinberg, writing with the sociologist Sue Kiefer Hammersmith, described Sexual Preference as the culmination of a series of books that began with Homosexuality: An Annotated Bibliography in 1972 and included Homosexualities.[17][18]

Judith A. Allen and her co-authors wrote that Homosexualities, like Sexual Preference, abandoned Kinsey's understanding of human sexuality by focusing on homosexual people rather than homosexual behavior and rejecting the idea that categorizing people as homosexual was problematic.[19] The psychologist Jim McKnight stated that while the idea that bisexuality is a form of sexual orientation intermediate between homosexuality and heterosexuality is implicit in the Kinsey scale, that view was brought into question by the publication of Homosexualities.[20] The philosopher Michael Levin criticized Bell and Weinberg for using a non-random sample. He also accused them of being credulous about their informants' reports, employing special pleading and circular reasoning, seeking to demonstrate preferred conclusions, and making misleading use of statistics. In his view, despite their intentions, their data suggests that homosexuality inevitably leads to unhappiness. He argued that their finding that most homosexuals reported that they were in good health was inconsistent with their finding that most homosexuals "spend 3 or more nights a week out." He also pointed to their findings that 27% of homosexuals experience "either some or a great deal of regret about being homosexual", that 56% of homosexuals "usually spend several hours or less with a partner", and that homosexuals tend to be sexually promiscuous, arguing that such promiscuity suggests "maladjustment and compulsivity". He argued that their finding that some homosexuals are "close-coupled" did not show that homosexuality is not pathological, and that they misled their readers by claiming that "close-coupled homosexuals are on average as happy and well-adjusted as heterosexuals."[21] The psychologists Stanton L. Jones and Mark A. Yarhouse observed that the conclusions of the authors of Homosexualities were based on convenience samples, which have no known representativeness. They nevertheless consulted Bell and Weinberg's interview protocols when developing a questionnaire for their own study of ex-gays.[22]

The gay rights activist Dennis Altman described Homosexualities as a typical example of how research into homosexuality is justified in terms of legitimizing the homosexual lifestyle. He noted that Bell and Weinberg's finding that homosexuality is not necessarily related to pathology did not call into question either the concept of pathology or the ability of psychologists to determine it. He suggested that like similar studies, Homosexualities appealed to "people who need to combat the way we have been stigmatized by one set of experts with the reassurances of another." He considered Bell and Weinberg "influenced by conventional assumptions about relationships and happiness."[23] The psychologist John Paul De Cecco dismissed the book, writing that while Bell and Weinberg presented it as definitive, it suffered from the "theoretical blindness" that has dominated research on homosexuality in the United States since the early 1970s. He contrasted it unfavorably with the work of European thinkers whom he credited with "provocative theoretical speculations": the philosophers Michel Foucault and Guy Hocquenghem, the gay rights activist Mario Mieli, the sexologist Martin Dannecker, and the sociologist Jeffrey Weeks.[24]

Reviews

Homosexualities received positive reviews from the novelist Richard Hall in The New Republic,[25] John H. Curtis in the American Journal of Family Therapy,[26] and Clarissa K. Wittenberg in Psychiatric News,[27] mixed reviews from Duberman in The New York Times,[28] Stephen F. Morin in Sex Roles,[29] and Russell Boxley and Joseph M. Carrier in the Journal of Homosexuality,[30][31] and a negative review from Michael Lynch in The Body Politic.[32] The book was also reviewed by Norman C. Murphy in The Advocate.[33]

Hall praised the book for helping to counter the image of homosexuals as "dysfunctionals", and believed that it would be useful for jurists, employers, educators, and legislators. However, he considered its authors' conclusion that there is no necessary connection between homosexuality and unhappiness "a truism of the kind that any good novelist could flesh out in a year or less", describing the fact that it took them ten years of research to support it as "a sad commentary on the cumbersome procedures of the social scientists." He argued that the fact that the study took so long to be published diminished its relevance, despite its authors' assertions to the contrary. He also criticized the work for its dryness and failure to provide case histories or any "feeling for the dynamics, the interactions of the lives described." He noted that despite the fact that some of the questions employed in the study were open-ended, there were "only brief and unenlightening answers." He questioned whether it was useful to classify homosexuals into different types.[25] Curtis credited Bell and Weinberg with carefully investigating homosexuality and demonstrating that it had "no single lifestyle pattern". He wrote that Homosexualities would "become a standard reference work in the area of homosexuality in the future."[26] Wittenberg wrote that the book was certain to become an instant classic and that it fully deserved this status.[27]

Duberman characterized the book as "the most ambitious study" of male homosexuality yet attempted, but was critical of its authors' "sample techniques and simplistic typologies". He described their work as part of "sexology's mainstream", believing that while most gays would welcome their conclusion that gays differ little from "mainstream Americans", gay radicals would be angered. He suggested that they offered a "sanitized" version of gay experience.[28]

Morin described the book as a "long-awaited publication", but did not consider its authors' findings surprising. He wrote that they appeared to have found "difficulty in dealing with the diversity of experiences that they found among their gay respondents". While appreciating their attempts to discredit stereotypes about homosexuals, he found their division of homosexuals into different "types" to be in effect the creation of a new set of stereotypes. He called their typology of homosexuals "arbitrary and misleading." He argued that while the book was a "fine historical document", its data only reflected the situation in San Francisco in 1969 and 1970. He denied that its authors had a representative sample, and suggested that a representative sample of homosexuals was impossible given that they were "basically an invisible population". He also accused the book's authors of drawing "conclusions well beyond their data." While he considered Homosexualities a helpful work, and useful on a political level, he did not consider it "a sophisticated research study". He wrote that the book was "disappointing and consistent with the downward trend in the quality of reports emanating from the Institute for Sex Research", and criticized its authors for ignoring "issues of growth and the ways in which diversity may lead to insights which might be helpful to all men and women exploring the creative violation of sex roles."[29]

Boxley considered the book a "significant analytic work in the area of sex research." In his view, its most impressive contribution was its "development of a homosexual typology", which helped to provide "a needed classification of diversity within the homosexuality community". However, he believed that the work otherwise had little that was new, and that its typology focused too much on sex and too little on other aspects of social experience. He also wrote that while Bell and Weinberg presented Homosexualities as a definitive study of homosexuality in the United States, the work as a whole had "little sense of unity". He did not consider its use of a heterosexual group for comparative purposes helpful. He criticized Bell and Weinberg for failing to explore how social stigma affected the adjustment of its homosexual subjects, and for providing insufficient attention to how the "homosexual community" caused "support as well as stress to the homosexual." He argued that their "rigid" approach created an impression of a "fragmented and oversimplified analysis" and came "at the expense of providing a complete picture of homosexual behavior." In his view, the reliability of their data was sometimes open to question, and their "psychological adjustment measures" were "somewhat crude". He also criticized the work for legitimizing stereotypes such as "the hypersexuality of black male and female homosexuals".[30]

Carrier criticized Bell and Weinberg for continuing "the mainstream focus of research on that segment of the population most closely identified with the middle-class American culture." He questioned their "knowledge of the black subculture", and suggested that the black sample of their study might not be adequate "to represent the behavior of black homosexual females and males who are most closely identified" with the black subculture. He criticized them for paying insufficient attention to the black homosexual scene. Nevertheless, he believed that the study presented "valuable data on human sexual behavior" and would "be of use to all serious researchers in the area of human sexuality."[31]

Lynch argued that Homosexualities was in part an attempt by its authors to overcome statistical weaknesses in the work of Kinsey and his colleagues, and that as a result they had put more effort into "data processing" than into "understanding the premises and conclusions of the study." He suggested that they were "sometimes silently at odds" with Kinsey and his colleagues, and that they had limited their accomplishments by beginning with an attempt to test negative stereotypes about gay people. He criticized them for using language that contained implied value judgments, and suggested that their division of homosexuals into five different "types" was a value-laden classification. He disagreed with what he considered their attempt to "demote the sense of unified or shared experience among gays", and criticized their failure to "attempt to delineate the experience we all share." He maintained that because their respondents were mainly middle class, they were unable to further explore Kinsey's findings about "the division of sexual and sex-related behavior based on class." He considered them naive to believe that Homosexualities would make legislators and community leaders change their negative attitudes to gay people.[32]

See also

References

  1. ^ Bell & Weinberg 1978, pp. 9–14, 22.
  2. ^ Bell & Weinberg 1978, pp. 14–15, 491.
  3. ^ Bell & Weinberg 1978, pp. 21–23.
  4. ^ Bell & Weinberg 1978, p. 25.
  5. ^ Bell & Weinberg 1978, p. 4.
  6. ^ Rice 1980, p. 280; Paul & Weinrich 1982, pp. 26–27; Murphy 1997, pp. 60, 100; Jones & Yarhouse 2007, pp. 19, 388.
  7. ^ Rice 1980, p. 280.
  8. ^ a b Paul & Weinrich 1982, pp. 26–27.
  9. ^ Murphy 1997, p. 60.
  10. ^ Paul & Weinrich 1982, pp. 26–27; Ruse 1988, pp. 9–10; Corvino 1997, p. 147; Murphy 1997, p. 100.
  11. ^ Ruse 1988, pp. 9–10.
  12. ^ Murphy 1997, p. 100.
  13. ^ Corvino 1997, p. 147.
  14. ^ Laumann et al. 1994, p. 36.
  15. ^ Duberman 1996, p. 45.
  16. ^ McCoubrey 2002.
  17. ^ Bell & Weinberg 1972, p. iv.
  18. ^ Bell, Weinberg & Hammersmith 1981, pp. iv, 238.
  19. ^ Allen et al. 2017, pp. 115–118.
  20. ^ McKnight 1997, p. 33.
  21. ^ Levin 1997, pp. 120–123, 126.
  22. ^ Jones & Yarhouse 2007, pp. 19, 133–134, 388, 399.
  23. ^ Altman 1982, pp. 52–53, 189.
  24. ^ DeCecco 1982, p. 282.
  25. ^ a b Hall 1978, pp. 31–33.
  26. ^ a b Curtis 1979, pp. 101–102.
  27. ^ a b Bayer 1987, p. 187.
  28. ^ a b Duberman 1996, pp. 45–46.
  29. ^ a b Morin 1979, pp. 670–672.
  30. ^ a b Boxley 1979, pp. 293–295.
  31. ^ a b Carrier 1979, pp. 296–298.
  32. ^ a b Lynch 1978, p. 37.
  33. ^ Murphy 1978, p. 22.

Bibliography

Books
Journals
  • Boxley, Russell (1979). "Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women". Journal of Homosexuality. 4 (3).
  • Carrier, Joseph M. (1979). "Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women". Journal of Homosexuality. 4 (3).
  • Curtis, John H. (1979). "Homosexualities—A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women". American Journal of Family Therapy. 7 (2). doi:10.1080/01926187908250321.
  • DeCecco, John P. (1982). "Review of Theories of Homosexuality by Martin Dannecker". The Journal of Sex Research. 18 (3).
  • Hall, Richard (1978). "Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women". The New Republic. Vol. 179, no. 14.  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Lynch, Michael (1978). "The uses of diversity". The Body Politic (47).  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Morin, Stephen F. (1979). "Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women". Sex Roles. 5 (5).  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Murphy, Norman C. (1978). "Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women". The Advocate (254).  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
Online articles
  • McCoubrey, Carmel (May 2002). "Alan P. Bell, 70, Researcher Of Influences on Homosexuality". The New York Times. Retrieved September 11, 2016.

homosexualities, study, diversity, among, women, 1978, book, psychologist, alan, bell, sociologist, martin, weinberg, which, authors, argue, that, homosexuality, necessarily, related, pathology, divide, homosexuals, into, five, types, together, with, homosexua. Homosexualities A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women 1978 is a book by the psychologist Alan P Bell and the sociologist Martin S Weinberg in which the authors argue that homosexuality is not necessarily related to pathology and divide homosexuals into five types Together with Homosexuality An Annotated Bibliography 1972 it is part of a series of books that culminated in the publication of Sexual Preference in 1981 The work was a publication of the Institute for Sex Research Homosexualities A Study of Diversity Among Men and WomenCover of the first editionAuthorsAlan P BellMartin S WeinbergCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectHomosexualityPublisherSimon amp SchusterPublication date1978Media typePrint Hardcover and Paperback Pages505ISBN978 0671251505The book received much attention and mixed reviews It received praise for its authors attempts to discredit stereotypes about homosexuals became influential and has been seen as a classic work However it was criticized for its authors sampling methods and their typology of homosexuals which has been seen as arbitrary and misleading Commentators also questioned Bell and Weinberg s presentation of the work as a definitive study of homosexuality Some commentators suggested that some of Bell and Weinberg s findings were obvious and that their study was not needed to establish them and critics charged that they drew conclusions not justified by their data Some of Bell and Weinberg s findings such as those about gay men s sexual behavior have become dated due to social changes since the 1970s such as those brought about by the AIDS epidemic and the progress of the gay rights movement Contents 1 Summary 2 Publication history 3 Reception 3 1 Overview 3 2 Reviews 4 See also 5 References 5 1 BibliographySummary EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2018 Sex researcher Alfred Kinsey Discussing the background to Homosexualities Bell and Weinberg write that the sex researcher Alfred Kinsey had intended to publish a study of homosexuality to complement the two volumes of the Kinsey Reports but died before being able to produce such a volume Following Kinsey s death the Institute for Sex Research became involved in other projects and did not focus its attention on homosexuality again until the late 1960s Stanley Yolles of the National Institute of Mental Health established the National Institute of Mental Health Task Force on Homosexuality which held its first meeting in 1967 and decided that further research into homosexuality was needed The NIMH Task Force invited the Institute for Sex Research to submit a proposal for a comprehensive study of the development of homosexuality The Institute s proposal based upon many of the NIMH Task Force s recommendations was modified after consultation with NIMH officials The book s direct predecessor was Patterns of Adjustment in Deviant Populations a 1967 survey of white gay men in Chicago designed by Bell and Gebhard and funded by NIMH This pilot study contained many questions identical to those used in Homosexualities 1 Bell and Weinberg during the initial stages of their work consulted with numerous experts on homosexuality who often held views quite different from theirs Those listed as contributors to the study include the ethologist Frank A Beach the psychoanalyst Irving Bieber Wainwright Churchill the psychologist Albert Ellis the anthropologist Paul Gebhard the psychologist Evelyn Hooker the sociologist Laud Humphreys the psychiatrist Judd Marmor the sexologist Wardell Pomeroy the sociologist Edward Sagarin the psychiatrist Robert Stoller the psychologist Clarence Arthur Tripp and the sociologist Colin J Williams Bell and Weinberg comment that Our correspondence and personal meetings with these individuals were of great help to us in constructing a viable interview schedule While the final instrument devised over many meetings of various Institute personnel did not entirely please or represent the views of any one person associated with it the interview schedule in its final form was the result of endless discussions and sometimes painful compromise on the part of many highly committed people 2 Bell and Weinberg write that their study has several purposes including describing homosexual sexual behavior examining stereotypes about homosexuals and exploring the relationship between homosexuals sexual life styles and their social and psychological adjustment They note that their work is based on a nonrepresentative sample and argue that a representative sample is unnecessary for their purposes They also argue that several different types of homosexual should be distinguished 3 They write that Homosexualities is part of a series of books that resulted from what Bell and Weinberg called the San Francisco Study 4 Publication history EditHomosexualities was first published by Simon amp Schuster in 1978 The book was also published by the Macmillan Company of Australia Pty Ltd in 1978 5 Reception EditOverview Edit Homosexualities was influential and has been praised as an important study 6 The philosopher Lee C Rice credited its authors with discrediting myths about the gay personality 7 The psychologist William Paul and the sex researcher James D Weinrich maintained that Homosexualities documented social diversity well and was the largest study conducted specifically on homosexuality but that it was limited by the problems of trying to obtain a representative sample 8 The philosopher Timothy F Murphy considered it useful despite its limitations provided that it like other studies is regarded as part of a scientific process of measuring the adequacy of hypotheses and evidence 9 Some of Bell and Weinberg s findings have been described as outdated 10 Paul and Weinrich suggested that because their data was collected in 1969 they may have missed growing cultural developments in the gay younger generation of the late 1960s and early 1970s 8 The philosopher Michael Ruse suggested that the AIDS epidemic has probably made their findings about gay sexual behavior obsolete 11 Murphy observed that Bell and Weinberg studied people who came of age before gay liberation and that probably a much smaller proportion of gays would now be dissatisfied with their sexual orientation or interested in attempting to change it through therapy 12 The philosopher John Corvino wrote that Homosexualities is the study most commonly cited to prove that gay men are sexually promiscuous but that it was not based on a broad sample and that a more extensive 1994 study by the sociologist Edward Laumann produced different results 13 Laumann et al argued that while Bell and Weinberg covered a wide range of sexual behaviors their failure to use probability samples meant that their study could not be used to estimate population rates They nevertheless found Homosexualities valuable in planning their own study 14 The historian Martin Duberman observed that in 1976 he heard a rumor that the study would give renewed respectability to the long dominant but recently challenged psychoanalytic view associated primarily with the work of Charles Socarides and Irving Bieber that the parental configuration of absent hostile remote father and binding suffocating domineering mother was what produced gay sons He related that when he met Bell that year and asked him whether this was true Bell squirmed uncomfortably and gave a long winded evasive reply According to Duberman I finally got him Bell to say that he had tentatively concluded that estrangement from the father irrespective of the mother s binding love or lack of it was likely to produce a homosexual son and that estrangement from the mother could be directly correlated with a heterosexual outcome for the son He wrote that Bell was not amused by his criticism of this conclusion He added that Homosexualities surprised him because it avoided the question of etiology and was a work of considerable substance 15 In 2002 Duberman was quoted as saying that the work resulted from the most ambitious study of male homosexuality ever attempted and that together with Sexual Preference 1981 it refuted a large number of previous studies that gay men were social misfits 16 Bell and Weinberg writing with the sociologist Sue Kiefer Hammersmith described Sexual Preference as the culmination of a series of books that began with Homosexuality An Annotated Bibliography in 1972 and included Homosexualities 17 18 Judith A Allen and her co authors wrote that Homosexualities like Sexual Preference abandoned Kinsey s understanding of human sexuality by focusing on homosexual people rather than homosexual behavior and rejecting the idea that categorizing people as homosexual was problematic 19 The psychologist Jim McKnight stated that while the idea that bisexuality is a form of sexual orientation intermediate between homosexuality and heterosexuality is implicit in the Kinsey scale that view was brought into question by the publication of Homosexualities 20 The philosopher Michael Levin criticized Bell and Weinberg for using a non random sample He also accused them of being credulous about their informants reports employing special pleading and circular reasoning seeking to demonstrate preferred conclusions and making misleading use of statistics In his view despite their intentions their data suggests that homosexuality inevitably leads to unhappiness He argued that their finding that most homosexuals reported that they were in good health was inconsistent with their finding that most homosexuals spend 3 or more nights a week out He also pointed to their findings that 27 of homosexuals experience either some or a great deal of regret about being homosexual that 56 of homosexuals usually spend several hours or less with a partner and that homosexuals tend to be sexually promiscuous arguing that such promiscuity suggests maladjustment and compulsivity He argued that their finding that some homosexuals are close coupled did not show that homosexuality is not pathological and that they misled their readers by claiming that close coupled homosexuals are on average as happy and well adjusted as heterosexuals 21 The psychologists Stanton L Jones and Mark A Yarhouse observed that the conclusions of the authors of Homosexualities were based on convenience samples which have no known representativeness They nevertheless consulted Bell and Weinberg s interview protocols when developing a questionnaire for their own study of ex gays 22 The gay rights activist Dennis Altman described Homosexualities as a typical example of how research into homosexuality is justified in terms of legitimizing the homosexual lifestyle He noted that Bell and Weinberg s finding that homosexuality is not necessarily related to pathology did not call into question either the concept of pathology or the ability of psychologists to determine it He suggested that like similar studies Homosexualities appealed to people who need to combat the way we have been stigmatized by one set of experts with the reassurances of another He considered Bell and Weinberg influenced by conventional assumptions about relationships and happiness 23 The psychologist John Paul De Cecco dismissed the book writing that while Bell and Weinberg presented it as definitive it suffered from the theoretical blindness that has dominated research on homosexuality in the United States since the early 1970s He contrasted it unfavorably with the work of European thinkers whom he credited with provocative theoretical speculations the philosophers Michel Foucault and Guy Hocquenghem the gay rights activist Mario Mieli the sexologist Martin Dannecker and the sociologist Jeffrey Weeks 24 Reviews Edit Homosexualities received positive reviews from the novelist Richard Hall in The New Republic 25 John H Curtis in the American Journal of Family Therapy 26 and Clarissa K Wittenberg in Psychiatric News 27 mixed reviews from Duberman in The New York Times 28 Stephen F Morin in Sex Roles 29 and Russell Boxley and Joseph M Carrier in the Journal of Homosexuality 30 31 and a negative review from Michael Lynch in The Body Politic 32 The book was also reviewed by Norman C Murphy in The Advocate 33 Hall praised the book for helping to counter the image of homosexuals as dysfunctionals and believed that it would be useful for jurists employers educators and legislators However he considered its authors conclusion that there is no necessary connection between homosexuality and unhappiness a truism of the kind that any good novelist could flesh out in a year or less describing the fact that it took them ten years of research to support it as a sad commentary on the cumbersome procedures of the social scientists He argued that the fact that the study took so long to be published diminished its relevance despite its authors assertions to the contrary He also criticized the work for its dryness and failure to provide case histories or any feeling for the dynamics the interactions of the lives described He noted that despite the fact that some of the questions employed in the study were open ended there were only brief and unenlightening answers He questioned whether it was useful to classify homosexuals into different types 25 Curtis credited Bell and Weinberg with carefully investigating homosexuality and demonstrating that it had no single lifestyle pattern He wrote that Homosexualities would become a standard reference work in the area of homosexuality in the future 26 Wittenberg wrote that the book was certain to become an instant classic and that it fully deserved this status 27 Duberman characterized the book as the most ambitious study of male homosexuality yet attempted but was critical of its authors sample techniques and simplistic typologies He described their work as part of sexology s mainstream believing that while most gays would welcome their conclusion that gays differ little from mainstream Americans gay radicals would be angered He suggested that they offered a sanitized version of gay experience 28 Morin described the book as a long awaited publication but did not consider its authors findings surprising He wrote that they appeared to have found difficulty in dealing with the diversity of experiences that they found among their gay respondents While appreciating their attempts to discredit stereotypes about homosexuals he found their division of homosexuals into different types to be in effect the creation of a new set of stereotypes He called their typology of homosexuals arbitrary and misleading He argued that while the book was a fine historical document its data only reflected the situation in San Francisco in 1969 and 1970 He denied that its authors had a representative sample and suggested that a representative sample of homosexuals was impossible given that they were basically an invisible population He also accused the book s authors of drawing conclusions well beyond their data While he considered Homosexualities a helpful work and useful on a political level he did not consider it a sophisticated research study He wrote that the book was disappointing and consistent with the downward trend in the quality of reports emanating from the Institute for Sex Research and criticized its authors for ignoring issues of growth and the ways in which diversity may lead to insights which might be helpful to all men and women exploring the creative violation of sex roles 29 Boxley considered the book a significant analytic work in the area of sex research In his view its most impressive contribution was its development of a homosexual typology which helped to provide a needed classification of diversity within the homosexuality community However he believed that the work otherwise had little that was new and that its typology focused too much on sex and too little on other aspects of social experience He also wrote that while Bell and Weinberg presented Homosexualities as a definitive study of homosexuality in the United States the work as a whole had little sense of unity He did not consider its use of a heterosexual group for comparative purposes helpful He criticized Bell and Weinberg for failing to explore how social stigma affected the adjustment of its homosexual subjects and for providing insufficient attention to how the homosexual community caused support as well as stress to the homosexual He argued that their rigid approach created an impression of a fragmented and oversimplified analysis and came at the expense of providing a complete picture of homosexual behavior In his view the reliability of their data was sometimes open to question and their psychological adjustment measures were somewhat crude He also criticized the work for legitimizing stereotypes such as the hypersexuality of black male and female homosexuals 30 Carrier criticized Bell and Weinberg for continuing the mainstream focus of research on that segment of the population most closely identified with the middle class American culture He questioned their knowledge of the black subculture and suggested that the black sample of their study might not be adequate to represent the behavior of black homosexual females and males who are most closely identified with the black subculture He criticized them for paying insufficient attention to the black homosexual scene Nevertheless he believed that the study presented valuable data on human sexual behavior and would be of use to all serious researchers in the area of human sexuality 31 Lynch argued that Homosexualities was in part an attempt by its authors to overcome statistical weaknesses in the work of Kinsey and his colleagues and that as a result they had put more effort into data processing than into understanding the premises and conclusions of the study He suggested that they were sometimes silently at odds with Kinsey and his colleagues and that they had limited their accomplishments by beginning with an attempt to test negative stereotypes about gay people He criticized them for using language that contained implied value judgments and suggested that their division of homosexuals into five different types was a value laden classification He disagreed with what he considered their attempt to demote the sense of unified or shared experience among gays and criticized their failure to attempt to delineate the experience we all share He maintained that because their respondents were mainly middle class they were unable to further explore Kinsey s findings about the division of sexual and sex related behavior based on class He considered them naive to believe that Homosexualities would make legislators and community leaders change their negative attitudes to gay people 32 See also EditBiology and sexual orientation Environment and sexual orientation Gay Science Homosexuality A Philosophical Inquiry Homosexuality Social Psychological and Biological IssuesReferences Edit Bell amp Weinberg 1978 pp 9 14 22 Bell amp Weinberg 1978 pp 14 15 491 Bell amp Weinberg 1978 pp 21 23 Bell amp Weinberg 1978 p 25 Bell amp Weinberg 1978 p 4 Rice 1980 p 280 Paul amp Weinrich 1982 pp 26 27 Murphy 1997 pp 60 100 Jones amp Yarhouse 2007 pp 19 388 Rice 1980 p 280 a b Paul amp Weinrich 1982 pp 26 27 Murphy 1997 p 60 Paul amp Weinrich 1982 pp 26 27 Ruse 1988 pp 9 10 Corvino 1997 p 147 Murphy 1997 p 100 Ruse 1988 pp 9 10 Murphy 1997 p 100 Corvino 1997 p 147 Laumann et al 1994 p 36 Duberman 1996 p 45 McCoubrey 2002 Bell amp Weinberg 1972 p iv Bell Weinberg amp Hammersmith 1981 pp iv 238 Allen et al 2017 pp 115 118 McKnight 1997 p 33 Levin 1997 pp 120 123 126 Jones amp Yarhouse 2007 pp 19 133 134 388 399 Altman 1982 pp 52 53 189 DeCecco 1982 p 282 a b Hall 1978 pp 31 33 a b Curtis 1979 pp 101 102 a b Bayer 1987 p 187 a b Duberman 1996 pp 45 46 a b Morin 1979 pp 670 672 a b Boxley 1979 pp 293 295 a b Carrier 1979 pp 296 298 a b Lynch 1978 p 37 Murphy 1978 p 22 Bibliography Edit BooksAllen Judith A Allinson Hallimeda E Clark Huckstep Andrew Hill Brandon J Sanders Stephanie A Zhou Liana 2017 The Kinsey Institute The First Seventy Years Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253029768 Altman Dennis 1982 The Homosexualization of America Boston Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 4143 7 Bayer Ronald 1987 Homosexuality and American Psychiatry The Politics of Diagnosis Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02837 8 Bell Alan P Weinberg Martin S 1972 Homosexuality An Annotated Bibliography New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 014541 5 Bell Alan P Weinberg Martin S 1978 Homosexualities A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women South Melbourne The Macmillan Company of Australia ISBN 978 0 333 25180 5 Bell Alan P Weinberg Martin S Hammersmith Sue Kiefer 1981 Sexual Preference Its Development in Men and Women Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 16673 9 Corvino John 1997 Homosexuality The Nature and Harm Arguments In Soble Alan ed The Philosophy of Sex Contemporary Readings Third Edition Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8476 8481 4 Duberman Martin 1996 Midlife Queer Autobiography of a Decade 1971 1981 London The University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 16024 1 Jones Stanton L Yarhouse Mark A 2007 Ex gays A Longitudinal Study of Religiously Mediated Change in Sexual Orientation Downers Grove Illinois InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 2846 3 Laumann Edward O Gagnon John H Michael Robert T Michaels Stuart 1994 The Social Organization of Sexuality Sexual Practices in the United States Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 46957 7 Levin Michael 1997 Why Homosexuality Is Abnormal In Soble Alan ed The Philosophy of Sex Contemporary Readings Third Edition Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8476 8481 4 McKnight Jim 1997 Straight Science Homosexuality Evolution and Adaptation London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 15773 5 Murphy Timothy F 1997 Gay Science The Ethics of Sexual Orientation Research New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 10849 2 Paul William Weinrich James D 1982 Whom and What We Study Definition and Scope of Sexual Orientation In Paul William Weinrich James D Gonsiorek John C Hotvedt Mary E eds Homosexuality Social Psychological and Biological Issues London Sage Publications ISBN 978 0 8039 1825 2 Rice Lee C 1980 Homosexuality and the Social Order In Soble Alan ed The Philosophy of Sex Contemporary Readings Totowa New Jersey Littlefield Adams and Co ISBN 0 8226 0351 9 Ruse Michael 1988 Homosexuality A Philosophical Inquiry New York Basil Blackwell ISBN 0 631 15275 X JournalsBoxley Russell 1979 Homosexualities A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women Journal of Homosexuality 4 3 Carrier Joseph M 1979 Homosexualities A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women Journal of Homosexuality 4 3 Curtis John H 1979 Homosexualities A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women American Journal of Family Therapy 7 2 doi 10 1080 01926187908250321 DeCecco John P 1982 Review of Theories of Homosexuality by Martin Dannecker The Journal of Sex Research 18 3 Hall Richard 1978 Homosexualities A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women The New Republic Vol 179 no 14 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Lynch Michael 1978 The uses of diversity The Body Politic 47 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Morin Stephen F 1979 Homosexualities A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women Sex Roles 5 5 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Murphy Norman C 1978 Homosexualities A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women The Advocate 254 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Online articlesMcCoubrey Carmel May 2002 Alan P Bell 70 Researcher Of Influences on Homosexuality The New York Times Retrieved September 11 2016 Portals Books LGBT Psychology Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Homosexualities amp oldid 1116007921, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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