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Theology and Sexuality, Vol. 13, No. 3, 257-274 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1355835807078259

Who's Afraid of Gay Theology?

Men's Studies, Gay Scholars, and Heterosexual Silence

Björn Krondorfer

bhkrondorfer{at}smcm.edu

Despite the growing body of gay scholarship in religious studies, there is a dearth of responses by heterosexual scholars in the field of men's studies in religion. Gay theology can still count more predictably on the ire of a conservative public than on a nuanced, non-homophobic critique by their heterosexual colleagues. What contributes to disregarding gay scholarly voices? Paradoxically, their voices are marginalized to the point of invisibility and yet are also in the center of public discourse. This article sifts through some reasons of why heterosexual men shy away from a public debate of the merits of gay scholarship. Besides methodological reservations, heterosexual male anxieties cause such weariness. Autobiographical insertions by gay scholars combined with discipline-transgressions may lead to `homosexual panic' even among non-homophobic scholars. The article argues that heterosexual men's studies in religion need to overcome their silence and engage the scholarship of gay theology.

Key Words: men's studies • heterosexual anxiety • masculinity and religion • homosexuality • gay theology • homophobia


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