The article is based on the first soclogil study of the attus and preferenc of Czech men who intify themselv as gay towards (gay) fatherhood, fay, and parenthood. The ma arguments of the study evolve around the them of the (overwhelmgly posive) parental sir of the gay men participatg the study; their ternalised moral dilemmas nnected to gay fatherhood; the reproductive choic and lims that stcture the attus of gay men towards parenthood and fay; and genr stereotyp about fay/parentg mols and the rol the men occupy. The article is divid to two ma parts. The fi rst part troduc the ntext and current state of soclogil scholarship and rearch on gay fatherhood and homoparentaly. The send part of the article discs rults, an terpretatn, and an analysis of the empiril fi ndgs of the study.
Contents:
OTEC, OTEC A DíTě: GAY MUžI A RODIčOVSTVí
VĚRA SOKOLOVÁ, Otec, otec a dítě: Gay muži a rodičovství / Father, Father, and Child: Gay Men and Parenthood the Czech Republic, Soclogický Časopis / Czech Soclogil Review, Vol. 45, No. 1, Monotematické číslo Soromé je veřejné: genr, péče a veřejnost (2009), pp. 115-145 * otec otec a dítě gay muži a rodičovství *
Otec, otec a dítě: Gay muži a rodičovství / Father, Father, and Child: Gay Men and Parenthood the Czech Republic on JSTOR.
The article is based on the first soclogil study of the attus and preferenc of Czech men who intify themselv as gay towards (gay) fatherhood, fay, and parenthood. The ma arguments of the study evolve around the them of the... * otec otec a dítě gay muži a rodičovství *
Father, Father, and Child: Gay Men and Parenthood the Czech Republic. The article is based on the first soclogil study of the attus and preferenc of Czech men who intify themselv as gay towards (gay) fatherhood, fay, and parenthood. The ma arguments of the study evolve around the them of the (overwhelmgly posive) parental sir of the gay men participatg the study; their ternalised moral dilemmas nnected to gay fatherhood; the reproductive choic and lims that stcture the attus of gay men towards parenthood and fay; and genr stereotyp about fay/parentg mols and the rol the men occupy.
The fi rst part troduc the ntext and current state of soclogil scholarship and rearch on gay fatherhood and homoparentaly.