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Paperback Tearoom Trade: Impersonal Sex in Public Places Book

ISBN: 0202302830

ISBN13: 9780202302836

Tearoom Trade: Impersonal Sex in Public Places

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

From the time of its first publication, 'Tearoom Trade' engendered controversy. It was also accorded an unusual amount of praise for a first book on a marginal, intentionally self-effacing population by a previously unknown sociologist. The book was quickly recognized as an important, imaginative, and useful contribution to our understanding of "deviant" sexual activity. Describing impersonal, anonymous sexual encounters in public restrooms-"tearooms"...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

If you work in human research in any capacity...buy me

I bought this book after completing some human research protections training at a major medical school. The book is heavy on descriptions that I think aren't quite necessary - if you're squeamish, well, you'll feel squeamy. The premise of the research, and the resulting aftermath, however, is fascinating. And it reminds us as researchers to not forget that it is peoples lives we are dealing with - not just randomized subjects assigned impenetrable codes. Very interesting debate about the methodologies used in Humphrey's research, as well as a retrospective look by him at what happened after the original publication of the study. And for Saint Louisans... you'll read and think about that big beautiful park in the center of our city in a whole new way.

Great Book

This book is a very interesting read. Especially for sociological studies or ethical malpractices. The book is about a graduate student who studies public sex in tea rooms. 'Tea Rooms' are public restrooms that men use to receive sexual favors from other men. Basically the author wrote down the license plate numbers of all the males who frequented these tea rooms and waited a year to look up the men and track them down. Once he found them he would interview them about their sexual practices, often in front of their families. When the student published his research, all the men in the book could be identified, even though their names were changed. This book is fascinating as a tool to understand early sociological research.

Simply the BEST!

This is just about the BEST book ever written in the entire history of the human race! Whether or not you are a sociologist, sexologist, or just someone looking for an incredible piece of scientific work ... this is the book you need to read. I read it cover-to-cover without even putting it down, it's that good. You'll be amazed how much this book says about human nature, in general, and you'll be surprised how much of yourself you'll see in it (whether or not you've ever had sex in a public bathroom in your life). Let's hope this is the beginning of opening the minds and hearts of the general public to sexual diversity. We're all only human, after all.Thank you, Laud. You are greatly missed. You will always inspire me.

Impressive research, and ethicists' tempest in a teapot

This book is the first and one of the few and to study male-male sexual behavior as it occurs between men who do not primarily identify themselves as being homosexual or bisexual. Previous studies had been largely clinical, based on the reports of individuals undergoing psychotherapy, and most ethnographic studies have been of more or less gay-identified communities -- gay bars, gay organizations, gay neighborhoods -- or male prostitutes. This was the first to study men who have sex with men but who mostly have lives as apparently ordinary, married heterosexuals. The study revealed some surprising facts about such men, and fired a controversy over sociological ethics and propriety that continues to this day.During the course of a year, Humphreys observed male-male sexual activity in certain public restrooms (known in gay slang as "tearooms") in an unidentified city in the US. A year later, after having identified many of the men he had observed, he arranged to interview them as part of a different, general sociological study, which allowed him to ask a number of questions about their backgrounds and personal lives without revealing their clandestine activities; he also approached about a dozen of the men in the tearooms themselves and was able to interview them openly. Humphreys' findings contradict a number of previously held assumptions about male-male sexual activity, and carry some important recommendations. One is that the "seduction of teenagers" does not occur in these public places, and in fact teenage boys are actively excluded despite their frequent desire to participate. Another is that the chance of anyone being unwillingly approached in a public restroom, unless he is behaving in such a way as to invite sexual advances, is practically nonexistent. Third, the most frequent criminal behavior which results from these practices is blackmail, primarily from the policemen on the vice squad who are assigned to eliminate sex in public places. Finally, the book devotes a significant space to the ethical issues which were raised by its methodology. At the time, practically nothing was known about homosexual behavior in the general population, despite a great deal of attention from police, clergy, and politicians. The study was carried out with no untoward effects, and several participants stated that they were glad of the opportunity to talk about themselves. However, the study involved potential danger to the subjects in the event that confidentiality had been broken, and the subjects could not be asked for consent without fatally compromising the study. The debate which followed among sociologists, journalists, and ethicists, regarding the balance between society's need for objective knowledge and the individual's right to privacy, has continued to this day. It is a must-read for anyone concerned with the debate over research on human behavior, both for the historical documents it contain
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