2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaging.2013.03.004
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Age and embodied masculinities: Midlife gay and heterosexual men talk about their bodies

Abstract: This article integrates critical gerontology and masculinities theories to examine how midlife gay and heterosexual men experience their bodies in relation to cultural discourses of aging. Analyses of in-depth interviews with 15 gay and 15 heterosexual men ages 40–60 reveal that while both groups of men describe their bodies as deteriorating or declining in terms of functionality and are often distressed by these changes, midlife gay men also articulate a concern with a perceived decline in bodily appearance. … Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(52 citation statements)
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References 40 publications
(64 reference statements)
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“…In addition, younger men may feel the loss of sexual function more acutely than older men, 44 especially as sexuality plays a central role in both gay and straight masculine identity. 45 Older gay men reporting higher masculine self-esteem is also consistent with emerging research on resiliency in…”
Section: Gay Men Agingsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…In addition, younger men may feel the loss of sexual function more acutely than older men, 44 especially as sexuality plays a central role in both gay and straight masculine identity. 45 Older gay men reporting higher masculine self-esteem is also consistent with emerging research on resiliency in…”
Section: Gay Men Agingsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Midlife challenges affect women in both straight and lesbian marriages, yet existing studies primarily focus on straight marriages and grant little insight into how women in lesbian marriages navigate sex amid significant midlife events. Moreover, midlife men's and women's feelings about sex and intimacy likely depend on not only their own gender but also the gender of their spouse (Elliott & Umberson, ; Lodge & Umberson, , ; Umberson, Thomeer, & Lodge, ). These gaps in research limit our knowledge about the experiences of sex and sexuality among married women during midlife.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People with long-standing and newly diagnosed HIV continue to grapple with many of the same issues identified during the 1990s, but more have been identified; sexual pleasure in the context of serostatus, ageing, body image and managing risk, for example (see Bartos & McDonald, 2000;Beuthin, Bruce, & Sheilds, 2014;Davis, 2007;Flowers & Davis, 2012;Flowers, Davis, Larkin, Church, & Marriott, 2011;Langdridge & Flowers, 2013;Lodge & Umberson, 2013;Rosengarten, 2009;Westhaver, 2005). Solomon, O'Brien, Wilkins, and Gervais (2014, p. 243) have elucidated the ways that uncertainty permeates the experience of those ageing with HIV.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%