Co-creating the Psychological “White Picket Fence”: Three Gay Couples’ Relationship Reconfiguration

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-8457/5761

Keywords:

couple, extradyadic sex, gay men, nonmonogamy, open relationships, same-sex relationships

Abstract

Many gay couples engage in nonmonogamous relationships. Ideas about nonmonogamy have historically been theorised as individual pathology and indicating relational distress. Unlike mixed-sex couples, boundaries for gay couples are often not determined by sexual exclusivity. These relationships are built along a continuum of open and closed, and sexual exclusivity agreements are not restricted to binaries, thus requiring innovation and re-evaluation. Three white South African gay couples were each jointly interviewed about their open relationship, specifically about how this is negotiated. In contrast to research that uses the individual to investigate this topic, this study recruited dyads. The couples recalled the initial endorsement of heteronormative romantic constructions, after which they shifted to psychological restructuring. The dyad, domesticated through the stock image of a white picket fence, moved to a renewed arrangement, protected by “rules” and imperatives. Abbreviated grounded theory strategies led to a core category, “co-creating porous boundaries”, and two themes. First, the couple jointly made heteronormative ideals porous and, second, they reconfigured the relationship through dyadic protection. The overall relationship ideology associated with the white picket fence remained intact despite the micro-innovations through which the original heteronormative patterning was reconfigured.

Author Biographies

Prevan Moodley , University of Johannesburg

Dr Prevan Moodley, formally lecturer at Vista University and University of Pretoria, is currently lecturer at the University of Johannesburg. Registered as a counselling psychologist, he teaches evolutionary psychology, community psychology, health psychology, and the application of gender and racial diversity to psychotherapies. His expertise lies in critical research practices applied to LGBTI and health topics.

 

Francois Rabie, University of Johannesburg

Francois Rabie is a clinical psychologist in private practice. He holds MA Psychology degrees from the University of Stellenbosch and the University of Johannesburg.

Published

2020-11-06

How to Cite

Moodley, Prevan, and Francois Rabie. 2020. “Co-Creating the Psychological ‘White Picket Fence’: Three Gay Couples’ Relationship Reconfiguration”. Gender Questions 8 (2):22 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-8457/5761.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2019-02-09
Accepted 2020-03-03
Published 2020-11-06