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This study explores the way in which some Chinese gay men negotiate dance performances in parks and other public spaces in an attempt to invent and experiment with ‘possible selves’. In most circumstances, these same men conceal their sexual orientation for fear of stigma and discrimination, experiencing in the process something of a ‘divided self’. Little attention has been given to understanding the way such individuals negotiate and construct same-sex experiences, especially through the negotiation of specific and restricted social interactions and performances. Based on participant observation with a group of dancers practising in a Chinese public park, this paper analyses how these men explore same-sex relations and lifestyles through the circumscribed performance of collective public dance.

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This page is a summary of: May I have the next dance? Chinese gay men exploring selves and practices through the tradition of dance in public spaces, Culture Health & Sexuality, November 2017, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/13691058.2017.1392613.
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