Queer Positionality and Researching University Lad Culture
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Approaching Research on Lad Culture
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Researcher Position
2.2. Recruitment and Design
2.3. Interview Design
2.4. Ethical Considerations for Interviews
The next question is about sexual violence, I want to remind you that you are able to skip these questions.
3. Results
3.1. Distance from Lad Culture
I kind of saw it the first time and wasn’t really sure if I qualified, so I passed it by. But the second time I saw it, I thought actually maybe I do, I would call myself a lad in certain circumstances.(John, Heterosexual Male, The University)
Some people would say, he’s the furthest thing from it, like my friends from home probably, the rugby playing beefheads would say no because I like the theatre or something. But at uni I think they would, probably more.(Lawrence, Heterosexual Male, The University)
‘Shit lad’ was usually meant as a half-insult, as I was generally not a particularly successful lad (in that I wasn’t the wittiest, or the heaviest drinker, or partier, etc. etc.).(Matthew, Heterosexual Male, Other University)
It’s got quite negative connotations with it, and most of it does come with negative connotations and I try and not be part of that side of it. But yeah, I wouldn’t say I typically go round and go to clubs and like grope women and stuff like that…. I think a lot of lads, or like “Lads” kind of do stuff like that, whereas me and my friends kind of don’t.(Georgina, Homosexual Female, The University)
I think for a lot of my friends, less so than me, it does come down to sexual prowess.(Richard, Bisexual Male, The University)
3.2. Queerness
I think with females maybe it helps more because from my research anyway I’ve found out that females tend to be more masculine if they’re gay. Or it’s a stereotype anyway. And that then helps go into the typical masculine male lad culture.(Georgina, Homosexual Female, The University)
Say you are a feminist around most of my friends, they immediately assume you’re a 6’5” lesbian with incredibly short hair who gets offended by everything—and those people don’t exist.(Richard, Bisexual Male, The University)
You might say that something’s gay, but you wouldn’t just if someone was gay—if someone was acting in a, if someone was gay you wouldn’t wind them up about that. Like if someone did something kind of embarrassing you might call them…. [trailed off].(Lawrence, Heterosexual Male, The University)
3.3. Discussion of Sexual Violence
Question: ‘Lad culture’ is often referred to in debates about sexual harassment at university, how does that make you feel?
Probe: Is this something that you’ve witnessed in your laddish group?
I was a fresher and, the only time I’ve like properly seen it in my environment, one of the girls that was in our group, she was an older girl, she spiked one of our girls’ drinks, but they give it to me unknowingly and I ended up in hospital.(Georgina, Homosexual Female, The University)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | While ‘butch’ cannot be simplified into single signifiers, and there are many different presentations of butch, I believe that my participants may have recognised my presentation as such. For reference, I have my hair styled in a ‘short-back-and-sides’ typical of men’s haircuts, wear clothing from the ‘men’s section’ of clothing stores and wear multiple visible facial piercings. I typically wear leather boots threaded with Stonewall’s ‘Rainbow Laces’. |
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Stenson, A.E. Queer Positionality and Researching University Lad Culture. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 562. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11120562
Stenson AE. Queer Positionality and Researching University Lad Culture. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(12):562. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11120562
Chicago/Turabian StyleStenson, Annis Elizabeth. 2022. "Queer Positionality and Researching University Lad Culture" Social Sciences 11, no. 12: 562. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11120562
APA StyleStenson, A. E. (2022). Queer Positionality and Researching University Lad Culture. Social Sciences, 11(12), 562. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11120562