12-04-2012, 09:22 AM | #1 | |
That's so PC of you
|
A Year of Living Gay
http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2012/1...rsy/?hpt=us_t4
Quote:
I mean, for one, the article (and i would wager that probably a good chunk of his book also) doesn't go in deep on how the LGBT community reacted to his lie. And how were his interactions... I wouldn't bother that much (at first) with the whole "flirting" thing, like it was mentioned in the article, out of the fact that he presented himself as someone's boyfriend. So, it's not absurd that he simply portrayed himself as someone who just doesn't cheat. Not "flirty" or "flamboyant" as many stereotypes seem to presume it's the norm. I also understand his point of view, how it was all an inward thing. Not an outward one. He wanted to expose himself to that universe in that way and see things from a perspective that otherwise he could never have... Also it really seems that he never truly had a problem with gay people, just had deep roots in a group that does that. It is good thought, at least to some silver lining, that the overall experience made him more tolerant and open minded. Kinda of a mixed bag of ideas really... like, "doing right by wrong ways" kinda of deal. I just really hope this doesn't become a "thing" that others feel like they should really really copy. |
|
12-04-2012, 10:47 AM | #2 | |
Funka has spoken!
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 3,087
|
Quote:
Also, I know how what I'm about to say may sound, but I think it's rather telling how the blow-back to his deception from the gay community is quite similar to sense of betrayal some people in the straight community react with when a friend or family member comes out as being gay after growing up with them and thinking you know them only to be wrong. |
|
12-04-2012, 10:56 AM | #3 |
Kawaii-ju
|
I'm glad that he was willing to re-examine his beliefs and to take initiative in educating himself about the reality of the situation.
I'm not so sure that this was the best way to go about it. While I understand he had the best intentions with the "year of living gay" exercise, he still misrepresented himself to a large group of people who could be justifiably upset that they were lied to.
__________________
Godzilla vs. Gamera (1994) |
12-04-2012, 10:59 AM | #4 | |
Funka has spoken!
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 3,087
|
Quote:
|
|
12-04-2012, 11:21 AM | #5 |
That's so PC of you
|
I find it hard to put together decent analogues to this situation... but i wouldn't feel comfortable knowing that people are running around pretending they are something they are not just to get insight.
It's really the kind of thing that could go wrong really easy and real fast. I'm actually surprised that this guy seems to have come out of this whole thing with mostly positive results in his life (or at least he is showing only his best numbers...) The concept of putting yourself in a situation where you see the other side of things is interesting, but quite complex as well... Think of his mother... the one that confessed that she would rather have cancer than having a Gay son. Now imagine being someone who tolerated this sort of mindset and then getting shifted into being the very target of it... how do you go back: "LoL no Mom, i'm really straight.... but you should be more tolerant, though." ... yeah i just don't see it happening. Also, as for other gay people who thought he was gay... i'm not so sure the reveal would be that damaging. I mean, it's not like gay people have secret conversations that only other gay people can understand or be a part of... but it would be hard to trust someone who you now know for a fact that has been lying about anything and everything to your face for a whole year... And like i said, to me, is quite likely that he chose to do this mostly cause, his moral and values already allowed him not to be a prejudicial person against gay people. So, it's not a moral shift, more like an eye opening experiment. Broadening horizons... |
12-04-2012, 11:25 AM | #6 |
Just sleeping
|
Millions of people spent the same year being rejected by their families and their god for being gay. How come only the straight guy gets a book deal? I'm not sure how sarcastic I'm being, exactly.
__________________
Be T-Rexcellent to each other, tako.
|
12-04-2012, 12:25 PM | #7 |
Keeper of the new
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: A place without judgment
Posts: 4,506
|
I find it sad the guy had to go to such extreme lengths to figure out that homosexuals are people. But on the other hand, it worked.
__________________
Hope insistent, trust implicit, love inherent, life immersed |
12-04-2012, 12:47 PM | #8 |
Local Rookie Indie Dev
|
His methods were questionable but at least he learned that the LGBT community are people too.
So everything turned out good in the end. Well based on what's mentioned in that article anyway.
__________________
|
12-04-2012, 01:34 PM | #9 | |
That's so PC of you
|
Quote:
The actual sad thing is that so far his ripples won't reach much longer... cause pretty much anyone that had a toxic view of Homosexuality like he did before will see this and think of him as being "corrupted by teh gays" instead of, you know... educated by life. |
|
12-04-2012, 02:11 PM | #10 | ||
rollerpocher tycoon
|
Wow, pretending to be gay for a year when you're not and then get a book deal out of it? This dude sounds really egotistical.
Quote:
Quote:
Maybe people are upset because you shouldn't appropriate someone else's sexuality in a sad effort to "understand" them and then get a book deal over it when the LGBT community is largely ignored in the first place? Empathy exists for things we don't understand. Even if this guy pretended to be gay for a year that does not make him gay nor does it mean he understands what it is to be gay. People will have experiences different from oneself that one will never, ever have direct access to. This is where empathy comes in! Instead of trying to replicate someone else's life in your own, one should listen to others! This is in fact a much better way to gain perspective rather than one's own distorted ideas of what it means to be something that you're not. Running around appropriating other's lives in order to "understand" just demonstrates a complete lack of willingness to actually... well, understand and listen. The desire to empathize is replaced with the desire to "own" an experience that isn't yours and then talk about it. It's extremely self-absorbed. As much as people talk about how "good" it is for him to realize the error of his ways or whatever, this is just... really unethical, in so many ways. Appropriating aspects of someone's life that don't apply to you and then creating a narrative about it is something that comes from a place of privilege. Because it comes from a place of privilege these narratives end up dominating more authentic narratives that are already ignored because they don't come from privileged individuals. Because the people who appropriate sexualities that are not theirs will never really understand what it means to be gay from a first-person perspective, the narratives that they create are distorted and may very well do the LGBT community more harm than good. It doesn't matter if he put a disclaimer on the book and isn't "really" trying to do that, because that's what he's doing anyways. A book about how evangelicals react to gays? Ask someone who's gay! Moreover, this sort of occurrence isn't exclusive to the LGBT community. It's a tool among all groups that have privilege and power over others. I can't see this is as a good thing at all. Last edited by pochercoaster; 12-04-2012 at 02:30 PM. |
||
|
|