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Journal Article

Citation

Peretz T. Gender Soc. 2017; 31(4): 526-548.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0891243217717181

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Despite the demonstrated utility of intersectionality, research on men allied with women's rights movements has largely focused on white, heterosexual, middle-class, young men. This study illustrates the importance of attending to men's intersecting identities by evaluating the applicability of existing knowledge about men's engagement pathways to the predominantly African American members of a Muslim men's anti-domestic violence group and a gay/queer men's gender justice group.

FINDINGS from a year-long qualitative study highlight how these men's experiences differ from those in the literature. While the Muslim men's experiences add dimension to the existing knowledge--especially regarding age and parenthood, online interactions, and formal learning opportunities--the gay/queer men's experiences are not accurately represented within it. Their pathways begin earlier, do not rely on women's input, do not create a shift in gendered worldview, and lack a pathway narrative because they connect to gender justice through their own intersecting identities and experiences. This suggests that a marginalized identity is not in itself sufficient to alter engagement pathways; the particular type of marginalization matters.


Language: en

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