Drawing upon findings from an ethnographic study of lap-dancing club customers, and those generated from desk-based research which examined lap-dancing club websites and promotional materials, this article will argue that the lap-dancing club is a heteronormative space, in which male customers practice normative masculinity. In exploring normative masculinity, this article will draw upon the work of Connell (1995), to demonstrate how different normative masculine practices are evident in the different attendance patterns of lap-dancing club customers. Overall, the findings discussed in this article make two important assertions, in support of Connell’s work. First, that masculinity is fluid, and context dependent; men can enact different ve...
This paper draws upon Foucauldian theory and considers Eric Anderson\u27s (2009) more recent inclusi...
Research on lad culture and gender-based violence (GBV) in student communities has examined hypermas...
This research examines the way in which customers in an urban cafe “do gender.” This research expand...
This article engages with current debates on ‘lad cultures’ by questioning how we understand the ter...
Studies suggest that feminised and female-concentrated contexts provide men with opportunities to ch...
While the study of emotional and aesthetic labour in interactive service work is well established, l...
This article questions the progressive potential of media depictions of male strip shows. I examine ...
Within the dance world, gender (as a binary concept) appears to be central to lived experience. Whi...
Rarely addressed in academic scholarship, the puttan tour is a well-known form of entertainment in I...
This dissertation interrogates the relationship between sex work and masculinity. The project was gu...
This article is based on a semiotic analysis of corporate websites in the lap dancing industry. Form...
Within the dance world, gender (as a binary concept) appears to be central to lived experience. Whil...
Strictly Come Dancing and Dancing on Ice are primetime reality television shows that promote partner...
The rise of male strip shows marketed towards heterosexual women has called into question the idea t...
Scholarly work on club culture has frequently focused on the sites and experiences of marginalised g...
This paper draws upon Foucauldian theory and considers Eric Anderson\u27s (2009) more recent inclusi...
Research on lad culture and gender-based violence (GBV) in student communities has examined hypermas...
This research examines the way in which customers in an urban cafe “do gender.” This research expand...
This article engages with current debates on ‘lad cultures’ by questioning how we understand the ter...
Studies suggest that feminised and female-concentrated contexts provide men with opportunities to ch...
While the study of emotional and aesthetic labour in interactive service work is well established, l...
This article questions the progressive potential of media depictions of male strip shows. I examine ...
Within the dance world, gender (as a binary concept) appears to be central to lived experience. Whi...
Rarely addressed in academic scholarship, the puttan tour is a well-known form of entertainment in I...
This dissertation interrogates the relationship between sex work and masculinity. The project was gu...
This article is based on a semiotic analysis of corporate websites in the lap dancing industry. Form...
Within the dance world, gender (as a binary concept) appears to be central to lived experience. Whil...
Strictly Come Dancing and Dancing on Ice are primetime reality television shows that promote partner...
The rise of male strip shows marketed towards heterosexual women has called into question the idea t...
Scholarly work on club culture has frequently focused on the sites and experiences of marginalised g...
This paper draws upon Foucauldian theory and considers Eric Anderson\u27s (2009) more recent inclusi...
Research on lad culture and gender-based violence (GBV) in student communities has examined hypermas...
This research examines the way in which customers in an urban cafe “do gender.” This research expand...