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J Homosex ; 65(7): 884-911, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28799888

ABSTRACT

In recent years, scholars have pointed to the Black church as the driving force behind Blacks' more conservative lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered (LGBT) attitudes. Although evidence suggests a robust association between religiosity and LGBT attitudes, contemporary scholarship has not examined the role of class or the extent to which religiosity actually explains these trends. Using the 2004-2014 waves of the General Social Survey, we find that class moderates in the effect of race on negative LGBT attitudes, resulting in a noticeably larger gap between middle-class Blacks and Whites than in the top or the bottom of the class distribution. Although religiosity and moralization explain a portion of racial differences in homosexual attitudes across class groups, we find that neither fully accounts for the more conservative attitudes of the Black middle class. We conclude by discussing the shortcomings of these narratives for understanding Blacks' more conservative LGBT attitudes.


Subject(s)
Attitude , Black or African American , Christianity , Homosexuality , Religion and Sex , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Adolescent , Adult , Attitude/ethnology , Bisexuality , Female , Homophobia/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Multivariate Analysis , Narration , Racism , Transgender Persons , White People , Young Adult
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