Wednesday, May 16, 2012

The Gayest City in America

April 5, 2010 by · 8 Comments 

Congratulations Atlanta! The ATL is now the gayest city in America. The Advocate’s “finely tuned (if totally arbitrary) calculus” raved about the city’s 29 gay bars, pride events and thriving LGBT bookstore—Outwrite Books.

One would think that a story on the gayest city in America would also:

  • recognize gay marriage
  • lead the fight for marriage equality in other cities
  • name its gay political officials
  • brag about its superior social services for the gay community, including HIV/AIDS awareness, testing and treatment centers
  • embrace its lesbian, bisexual, transgender, intersex and down-low populations

But as Jeffrey McCune, an assistant professor of American studies and women’s studies at the University of Maryland pointed out to me,

Atlanta is a gay city, but I’m not sure how queer it is. By queer, I mean being radical and disrupting norms. There is a commercial gayness amongst black gay men in ATL that really makes it less exciting and less politically charged.

McCune makes an excellent observation. Atlanta may be gay but if it isn’t quite queer that would explain why all the points on my bulleted list were missing from the ranking.

Conformity to social norms would also explain why Midtown, a predominantly white and white-collar section of Atlanta was named as the “gay epicenter.” Atlanta is 61.4 percent black. Of course Atlanta has gay black people.  In fact, a 2005 NPR report disclosed that “Atlanta has the largest population of black gay couples in the United States.” Unfortunately, The Advocate’s normative ranking system doesn’t acknowledge that.  Instead, the central focus is on what it means to be white, gay, middle- to upper-class, and seemingly male. Although the “ladies are gracious” in Atlanta, the word lesbian is not mentioned at all in the summary findings for the gayest city in America.

Additionally, normative ranking systems don’t acknowledge the various ways African Americans self-identify in relationship to gayness. Because of rankings like The Advocate’s, gay  is often perceived as white and male.

I hope Atlanta can keep its crown for the gayest city in America, but I also hope that the next time rankings are released, being queen means being queer too.

Above: Rainbow fairies in Atlanta’s 2007 Pride Festival. Photo courtesy of http://www.flickr.com/photos/lamenta3/ / CC BY-SA 2.0

Comments

8 Responses to “The Gayest City in America”
  1. Great post, Ebony! I’d love to see the categories you suggest applied to the cities the Advocate features. Instead, they give prominence to: “Gay dating and hookup profiles per single male population” and “Cruising spots per capita.”

    Terrific Pride Festival picture–rainbow fairies on Peachtree are a delightfully queer sight to see!

  2. Katie says:

    It would be interesting to see what would qualify as the “queerest” city based on the article’s determinants of a gay/queer city.
    Any guesses?
    I don’t think this is the gayest/queerest in America but I know Madison WI is pretty good.

  3. Michael says:

    Why the focus on middle- to upper-class white men? I don’t know any upper-class white men. Does The Advocate think we need heroes? I don’t need a hero. I need acceptance. All of the magazines in the past that I’ve received focus on the lifestyles of the rich and gay. Travel here. Travel there. You NEED to go everywhere we tell you to go. If you don’t you are a nobody. I am tired of all the focus being placed on rich white guys all the time. It’s time these writers/editors start putting the focus back on where they came from.

  4. Carrie says:

    I think that the gayest city would be a place where gays don’t have to be afraid that they might be arrested during a raid by the police on the bars they attend. But I guess the gayest city isn’t exactly the most gay friendly.

  5. kmoss says:

    Superb. Another thoughtful and insightful critique. Thank you.

  6. Oewe, you gonna get in trouble… LOL. Dr. Utley, you are about to start some things in the ATL. However, you poked a sensitive area that goes to the heart of the challenges CA had with Black folk and marriage equality in CA. Keep up the critique Sister!

  7. MG Hardie says:

    The Advocate does not include those issue you have in your bullet points is for one reason and one reason alone…. Agenda.
    Those are merely taking points in the agenda, they don’t sell magazines.

  8. Chalmer Thompson says:

    Excellent critique, Dr. Utley. ct

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