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Homophobia, Second Edition The State of Sexual Bigotry Today
Martin Kantor, M.D.
ISBN: 0-313-35925-3
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-35925-5
189 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 2/17/2009
List Price: $44.95 (UK Sterling Price: £31.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • ". . . readers with strong clinical backgrounds stand to benefit most from Kantor's assessment of the root causes, and concomitant pathological expression, of homophobia in individuals. Kantor makes the compelling observation that homophobia, though less overt now than when the first edition of this book appeared, is perhaps more pervasive and damaging to its victims and society now. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students through professionals."
    —CHOICE
    9/1/2009
Description: Ten years after he first brought us the book Homophobia, which laid bare the harsh realities and harmful effects of this sexual bigotry, psychiatrist Martin Kantor delves again into prejudice and discrimination—even flat-out acts of absolute hatred—against gays in the United States. Have things changed? One might think so. Ten years ago Matthew Shephard was strung up to die on a fence because he was gay. But no such blatant hatred has made headlines here since the turn of the millennium. Ten years ago, Pat Robinson authored a book that assured lasting peace would only occur when a group including drug dealers, assassins, worshippers of Satan, and homosexuals are no longer on top. Yet, by 2007, Robinson was pledging support for pro-gay Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani. And gays only longing for a formal relationship a decade ago are now entering into civil unions, even gay marriage, in states that have legalized the ceremonies. Hate crime laws have been revised to include gays, and gays are now recognized in domestic partner clauses common across insurance polices. People appear open about homosexuality in the media; gays are featured on television shows and in movies alongside straights. The advances seem great.

But they are only surface advances, cautions Kantor. Because the consequences of hate crimes are a lot more severe than they used to be, gays and lesbians are being hunted down and beaten up less frequently than they once were. But people are still full of hate, just more wary of punishment so more circumspect about how they express it. In this new edition, Kantor tells in harsh detail how and why people still fire off slurs like faggot and dyke, and threaten harm, from blowing up their homes to bashing in their heads. Kantor takes us across sites in America - from city streets to hospitals, schools, broadcast stations, and churches to police departments—showing how homophobia is still very much alive. While the problem may be less acute it is still chronic, and while it may not take as many lives, it ruins perhaps even more, he explains. Homophobia is a phenomenon that in significant respects parallels mental illness, adds the psychiatrist. Education alone will not stem the homophobic tide. We also need to uncover and treat the psychoneurotic dimension of homohatred. Yes, we can admire the changes in homophobia over the last decade, but we must not forget or ignore the fact that the human beings who create homophobia haven't changed that much even over the centuries.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
    PART 1: DESCRIPTION
    Chapter 1: General Characteristics of Homophobes
    Chapter 2: Models of Homophobia
    Chapter 3: Rationalizations of Homophobia
    Chapter 4: Homophobia in Gays and Lesbians
    Chapter 5: Heterophobia
    Chapter 6: The Negative Effect of Homophobia on Gays and Lesbians
    PART II: CAUSE
    Chapter 7: Developmental and Psychodynamic Considerations
    Chapter 8: Homophobia as an Emotional Disorder: Paranoid Homophobia
    Chapter 9: Homophobia as an Emotional Disorder: Passive-Aggressive, or Subtle, Homophobia
    Chapter 10: Homophobia as an Emotional Disorder: Other Forms
    Chapter 11: Homophobic Cognitive Errors
    Chapter 12: Other Perspectives
    PART III: INTERVENTIONS
    Chapter 13: Helping Homophobes Become Less Homophobic
    Chapter 14: Handling Homophobes
About the Author: Martin Kantor, MD is a Harvard psychiatrist who has been in full private practice in Boston and New York City, and active in residency training programs at several hospitals, including Massachusetts General and Beth Israel in New York. He also served as Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Mount Sinai Medical School and as Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey—New Jersey Medical School. He is currently a full-time medical author, the author of more than a dozen other books, including Homophobia, Second Edition (Praeger 2009); Uncle Sam's Shame: Inside the Veteran's Administration (Praeger 2008); Lifting the Weight: Understanding Depression in Men: Its Causes and Solutions (Praeger 2007); The Psychopathy of Everyday Life: How Antisocial Personality Disorder Affects All of Us (Praeger, 2006); Understanding Paranoia: A Guide for Professional, Families, and Sufferers (Praeger 2004); Distancing: Avoidant Personality Disorder, Revised and Expanded (Praeger, 2003), Passive-Aggression: A Guide for the Therapist, the Patient, and the Victim (Praeger, 2002), Treating Emotional Disorder in Gay Men (Praeger, 1999), and Homophobia (Praeger, 1998).
LCC Class: 306.76'6-dc22
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