Do “Chinese gays” come out?
A discursive-sociocultural approach to queer visibility amongst same-gender-attracted men in Chengdu, China
This paper draws on linguistic-ethnographic fieldwork in Chengdu, China to consider the utility of broad labels
such as Chinese, Western and gay in accounting for the performance of sexual and cultural
identity. I problematise work which takes such notions to be stable and self-evidently referential, arguing instead that identity
is much more fluid, emergent and discourse-dependent than conventional understandings tend to imply. I focus on visibility of
queer sexual identity partly because it is an especially accessible example of the role of language in identity performance, being
most often achieved through verbal interaction. More broadly, however, this focus emerged through my ethnographically informed,
discursive-sociocultural approach to my life and research in mainland China during the period 2008–2019. Specifically, I use
spoken data from the interviews which formed part of this process to argue that social practice within related ethnic and/or
social groups is best understood in terms of the situated use of sociolinguistic tools and the entailed negotiation of pertinent
ideological systems. From this perspective, the ostensibly insurmountable ideological pressures that “Chinese gays” are typically
seen to face, and which tend to be attributed to a taken-for-granted and monolithic “Chinese culture”, are better interpreted with
reference to the complex relationship between language, culture and identity. Thus, I do not assume the right to make broad claims
about what Chinese gays do, or to state that they are categorically different from their presumed homogenous
Western counterparts. Instead, I discuss what certain individuals say in certain conversations, noting how
their performance of identity is often highly individualised, being shaped according to the interactants present and the
interactional aims relevant to specific moments of communication.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Sociocultural background
- 3.Literature review
- 4.Participants and methodology
- 5.Theoretical framework: A discursive-sociocultural approach to identity
- 6.Findings
- 6.1Reticence, “Chinese culture” and D/discourse in talk
- 6.2Queer Sinophone identity work and the “when will you get married?” genre
- 6.3Family navigations of queer visibility
- 7.Conclusion
- Notes
-
References
References (95)
References
Acosta, Katie L. 2011. The language of (in)visibility:
Using in-between spaces as a vehicle for empowerment in the family. Journal of
Homosexuality 58(6–7): 883–900.
Althusser, Louis. 1971. Ideology
and ideological state apparatuses (Notes towards an
investigation). In Lenin and Philosophy and Other
Essays, 121–173. London: New Left Books.
Anderson, Benedict. 1983. Imagined
Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of
Nationalism. London: Verso.
Antaki, Charles & Widdicombe, Sue (eds). 1998. Identities
in
Talk. London: Sage.
Ash, Alec. 2016. Wish
Lanterns: Young Lives in New
China. London: Picador.
Bakhtin, Mikhail Mikhaĭlovich. 1986[1979]. Speech Genres and
Other Late Essays. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
Bamberg, Michael, De Fina, Anna & Schiffrin, Deborah. 2011. Discourse
and identity construction. In Handbook of Identity Theory and
Research, Seth J. Schwartz, Koen Luyckx & Vivian L. Vignoles (eds), 177–199. New York, NY: Springer.
Bao, Hongwei. 2018. Queer
Comrades: Gay Identity and Tongzhi Activism in Postsocialist
China. Copenhagen: NIAS Press.
Barton, Bernadette. 2010. “Abomination” –
Life as a Bible Belt gay. Journal of
Homosexuality 57(4): 465–484.
Berry, Chris, Martin, Fran & Yue, Audrey (eds). 2003. Mobile
Cultures: New Media in Queer Asia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Bie, Bijie & Tang, Lu. 2016. Chinese
gay men’s coming out narratives: Connecting social relationship to co-cultural theory. Journal
of International and Intercultural
Communication 9(4): 351–367.
Blommaert, Jan. 2005. Discourse:
A Critical Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Boellstorff, Tom. 2011. But
do not identify as gay: A proleptic genealogy of the MSM category. Cultural
Anthropology 26(2): 287–312.
Brainer, Amy. 2017. New
identities or new intimacies? Rethinking ‘coming out’ in Taiwan through cross-generational
ethnography. Sexualities 21(5–6): 914–931.
Bucholtz, Mary & Hall, Kira. 2004. Theorizing
identity in language and sexuality research. Language in
Society 331: 469–515.
Bucholtz, Mary & Hall, Kira. 2005. Identity
and interaction: A sociocultural linguistic approach. Discourse
Studies 7(4–5): 585–614.
Butler, Judith. 1990. Gender
Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of
Identity. London: Routledge.
Cameron, Deborah. 1992. “Respect,
please!”: Investigating race, power and language. In Researching
Language: Issues of Power and Method, Deborah Cameron, Elizabeth Frazer, Penelope Harvey, Ben Rampton & Kay Richardson (eds), 113–130. London: Routledge.
Cameron, Deborah & Kulick, Don. 2003. Language
and Sexuality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Chiang, Howard & Heinrich, Ari Larissa (eds). 2013. Queer
Sinophone
Cultures. London: Routledge.
Chiang, Howard & Wong, Alvin K. (eds). 2020. Keywords
in Queer Sinophone
Studies. Abingdon: Routledge.
Chou, Wah-shan. 2000. Tongzhi:
Politics of Same-sex Eroticism in Chinese Societies. Binghamton, NY: Haworth Press.
Chun, Allen. 2017. Forget
Chineseness: On the Geopolitics of Cultural Identification. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
Davis, Deborah S. 2014. Privatization of marriage in
post-socialist China. Modern
China 40(6): 551–577.
Decena, Carlos Ulises. 2008. Tacit
subjects. GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay
Studies 14(2–3): 339–359.
De Fina, Anna, Schiffrin, Deborah & Bamberg, Michael (eds). 2006. Discourse
and Identity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Eckert, Penelope & McConnell-Ginet, Sally. 2013. Language
and Gender. 2nd
ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Engebretsen, Elisabeth Lund. 2014. Queer Women in Urban China: An
Ethnography. London: Routledge.
Engebretsen, Elisabeth Lund & Schroeder, William. F. (eds). 2015. Queer/Tongzhi
China: New Perspectives on Research, Activism and Media
Cultures. Copenhagen: NIAS Press.
Feng, Yuji, Wu, Zunyou & Detels, Roger. 2010. Evolution
of MSM community and experienced stigma among MSM in Chengdu, China. Journal of Acquired Immune
Deficiency
Syndrome 53(1): 98–103.
Foucault, Michel. 1978. The
History of Sexuality (Vols. 1 & 2). New York, NY: Pantheon.
Freestone, Phil. forthcoming
a. The sociolinguistic navigation of queer normativities in contemporary Chengdu,
China. Gender & Language.
Freestone, Phil. forthcoming
b. The Sociolinguistics of Same-Gender-Attracted Male Identities Across Sinophone Cultural
Contexts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gee, James Paul. 2014[1999]. An Introduction to Discourse
Analysis: Theory and Method. 4th
ed. London: Routledge.
Goodkind, Daniel & West, Loraine A. 2002. China’s floating
population: Definitions, data and recent findings. Urban
Studies 39(12): 2237–2250.
Hall, Kira & Davis, Jenny L. 2021. Ethnography and the
shifting semiotics of gender and sexuality. In The Routledge Handbook
of Language, Gender, and Sexuality, Jo Angouri & Judith Baxter (eds), 93–107. London: Routledge.
Hall, Stuart. 2000. Who
needs ‘identity’? In Identity: A
Reader, Paul du Gay, Jessica Evans & Peter Redman (eds), 197–225. London: Sage.
Hinsch, B. 1990. Passions
of the Cut Sleeve: The Male Homosexual Tradition in China. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Ho, Loretta Wing Wah. 2010. Gay and Lesbian Subculture in Urban
China. Abingdon: Routledge.
Ho, Petula Sik Ying, Jackson, Stevi, Cao, Siyang & Kwok, Chi. 2018. Sex
with Chinese characteristics: Sexuality research in/on 21st-century China. Journal of Sex
Research 55(4–5): 486–521.
Huang, Shuzhen. 2021. Alternatives
to coming out discourses. The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of
Communication. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 〈[URL]〉 (January 2, 2022)
Huang, Shuzhen & Brouwer, Daniel C. 2018. Coming out, coming home,
coming with: Models of queer sexuality in contemporary China. Journal of International and
Intercultural
Communication 11(2): 97–116.
Hyland, Ken & Paltridge, Brian (eds). 2011. Bloomsbury
Companion to Discourse
Analysis. London: Continuum.
Jeffreys, Elaine & Wang, Pan. 2018. Pathways
to legalizing same-sex marriage in China and Taiwan: Globalization and “Chinese
values”. In Global Perspectives on Same-Sex
Marriage, Bronwyn Winter, Maxime Forest & Réjane Sénac (eds), 197–219. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
Jeffreys, Elaine & Yu, Haiqing. 2015. Sex
in China. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Jones, Rodney. H. 1999. Mediated action and sexual risk:
Searching for ‘culture’ in discourses of homosexuality and AIDS prevention in China. Culture,
Health and
Sexuality 1(2): 161–180.
Jones, Rodney H. 2007. Imagined comrades and imaginary
protections: Identity, community and sexual risk among men who have sex with men in
China. Journal of
Homosexuality 53(3): 83–115.
Jones, Rodney H. 2016. Spoken
Discourse. London: Bloomsbury.
Kam, Lucetta Yip Lo. 2013. Shanghai Lalas: Female Tongzhi
Communities and Politics in Urban China. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.
Kondakov, Alexander Sasha & Shtorn, Evgeny. 2021. Sex,
alcohol, and soul: Violent reactions to coming out after the “gay propaganda” law in
Russia. The Russian
Review 80(1): 37–55.
Kong, Travis S. K. 2011. Chinese Male Homosexualities: Memba,
Tongzhi and Golden
Boy. Oxford: Routledge.
Kong, Travis S. K. 2012. Reinventing the self under
socialism: Migrant male sex workers (“money boys”) in China. Critical Asian
Studies 44(2): 283–308.
Kong, Travis S. K. 2016. The sexual in Chinese
sociology: Homosexuality studies in contemporary China. The Sociological
Review 64(3): 495–514.
Kong, Travis S. K. 2017. Sex and work on the move:
Money boys in post-socialist China. Urban
Studies 54(3): 678–694.
Leap, William. 2012. Queer
linguistics, sexuality and discourse analysis. In The Routledge
Handbook of Discourse Analysis, Michael Handford & James Paul Gee (eds), 558–571. London: Routledge.
Li, Hongbin, Yi, Junjian & Zhang, Junsen. 2011. Estimating
the effect of the one-child policy on the sex ratio imbalance in China: Identification based on the
difference-in-differences. Demography 48(4): 1535–1557.
Li, Yinhe. 2002. Tongxinglian Ya Wenhua [Subculture of
Homosexuality]. Beijing: Youyi Publishing House.
Liu, Jen-Peng & Ding, Naifei. 2005. Reticent
poetics, queer politics. Inter-Asia Cultural
Studies 6(1): 30–55.
Liu, Petrus. 2015. Queer
Marxism in Two Chinas. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Martin, Fran. 2003. The
Routledge Handbook of Sexuality Studies in East Asia. Situating Sexualities: Queer Representation in Taiwanese Fiction, Film
and Public Culture. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.
Martin, Fran. 2014. Transnational
queer Sinophone cultures. In Routledge Handbook of Sexuality Studies
in East Asia, Mark McLelland & Vera Mackie (eds), 35–48. Abingdon: Routledge.
Michel, Dee. 2018. Friends
of Dorothy: Why Gay Boys and Gay Men Love the Wizard of Oz. New York, NY: Dark Ink Press.
Miège, Pierre. 2009. “In
my opinion, most tongzhi are sutiful Sons!”: Community, social norms, and constructive of identity among young homosexuals in
Hefei, Anhui Province. China
Perspectives 2009(1): 40–53.
Miège, Pierre. 2018. May
I have the next dance? Chinese gay men exploring selves and practices through the tradition of dance in public
spaces. Culture, Health &
Sexuality 20(8): 902–914.
Miège, Pierre. 2020. Migration,
urbanisation and emergence of the individual: Same-sex desiring migrant men constructing spaces and cultivating their self in
a big Chinese city. Asia Pacific
Viewpoint 61(3): 509–520.
Mills, Sara. 2004. Discourse. London: Routledge.
Motschenbacher, Heiko. 2019. Discursive
shifts associated with coming out: A corpus-based analysis of news reports about Ricky
Martin. Journal of
Sociolinguistics 23(3): 284–302.
Motschenbacher, Heiko. 2020. Coming
out – seducing – flirting: Shedding light on sexual speech acts. Journal of
Pragmatics 1701: 256–270.
Oswin, Natalie. 2006. Decentering
queer globalization: Diffusion and the ‘global gay’. Environment and Planning D: Society and
Space 24(5): 777–790.
Pak, Vincent. 2021. Coming
out ‘softly’: Metapragmatic reflections of gay men in illiberal pragmatic Singapore. Gender
&
Language 15(3): 301–323.
Plummer, Ken. 2015. Cosmopolitan
Sexualities. Malden, MA: Polity Press.
Qian, Junxi. 2017. Beyond
heteronormativity? Gay cruising, closeted experiences and self-disciplining subject in People’s Park,
Guangzhou. Urban
Geography 38(5): 771–794.
Rofel, Lisa. 2007. Desiring
China: Experiments in Neoliberalism, Sexuality, and Public Culture. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Sauntson, Helen & Morrish, Liz. 2010. Performing
lesbian sexual identity through discourse. In Queering
Paradigms, Burkhard Scherer (ed), 27–48. Lausanne: Peter Lang.
Scollon, Ron, Scollon, Suzanne Wong & Jones, Rodney H. 2012. Intercultural Communication: A
Discourse Approach. 3rd
ed. Oxford: John Wiley and Sons.
Shih, Shu-mei. 2007. Visuality
and Identity: Sinophone Articulations Across the Pacific. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Sloan, Lacey M. & Gustavsson, Nora S. 2014. Violence and Social Injustice
Against Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual People. New York, NY: Routledge.
Snorton, Riley C. 2014. Nobody is Supposed to Know: Black
Sexuality on the Down Low. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
Steward, Wayne T., Miège, Pierre & Choi, Kyung-Hee. 2013. Charting
a moral life: The influence of stigma and filial duties on marital decisions among Chinese men who have sex with
men. PloS One 8(8).
Tan, Chris K. K. 2011. Go home, gay boy! Or, why do
Singaporean gay men prefer to “go home” and not “come out”? Journal of
Homosexuality 58(6–7): 865–882.
Tang, Weiming, Mao, Jessica, Tang, Songyuan, Liu, Chuncheng, Mollan, Katie, Cao, Bolin, … & SESH
Study Group. 2017. Disclosure of sexual orientation to
health professionals in China: Results from an online cross-sectional study. Journal of the
International AIDS Society 20(1): 21416.
Tian, Ian L. 2019. Graduated in/visibility:
Reflections on ku’er activism in (post) socialist China. QED: A Journal in GLBTQ
Worldmaking 6(3): 56–75.
Wang, Frank T. Y., Bih, Herng-Dar & Brennan, David. J. 2009. Have they really come
out: Gay men and their parents in Taiwan. Culture, Health &
Sexuality 11(3): 285–296.
Wei, Wei. 2007. ‘Wandering
men’ no longer wander around: The production and transformation of local homosexual identities in contemporary Chengdu,
China. Inter-Asia Cultural
Studies 8(4): 572–588.
Wei, Wei. 2017. Good
gay buddies for lifetime: Homosexually themed discourse and the construction of heteromasculinity among
Chinese urban youth. Journal of
Homosexuality 64(12): 1667–1683.
Wertsch, James V. 1998. Mind as
Action. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Whyte, Martin King. 1997. The fate of filial
obligations in urban China. The China
Journal 381: 1–31.
Wong, Andrew. 2006. On
the actuation of semantic change: The case of tongzhi
. Language
Sciences 301: 423–449.
Wong, Andrew. 2009. Coming
out stories and the ‘gay imaginary’. Sociolinguistic
Studies 3(1): 1–36.
Wong, Andrew. 2016. How
does oppression work? Insights from Hong Kong lesbians’ labelling
practices. In Language, Sexuality, and Power: Studies in
Intersectional Sociolinguistics, Erez Levon & Ronald Beline Mendes (eds), 19–38. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Wong, Chi-yan & Tang, Catherine So-kum. 2004. Coming out
experiences and psychological distress of Chinese homosexual men in Hong Kong. Archives of
Sexual Behavior 331: 149–157.
Wong, Day. 2007. Rethinking
the coming home alternative: Hybridization and coming out politics in Hong Kong’s anti-homophobia
parades. Inter-Asia Cultural
Studies 8(4): 600–616.
Yau, Ching (ed). 2010. As
Normal as Possible: Negotiating Sexuality and Gender in Mainland China and Hong Kong. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.
Zheng, Tiantian. 2015. Tongzhi
Living: Men Attracted to Men in Postsocialist China. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
Zhou, Yanqiu Rachel. 2006. Homosexuality,
seropositivity, and family obligations: Perspectives of HIV-infected men who have sex with men in
China. Culture, Health &
Sexuality 8(6): 487–500.
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Cai, Jimin, Haoyu Li, Fei Guo & Zhiyan Chen
2024.
Disclosure to Whom Matters: Association Between Disclosure of Sexual Orientation and Mental Health Among Chinese LGB People.
International Journal of Sexual Health ► pp. 1 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 7 august 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.