Polyamory in the News
. . . by Alan M.



November 19, 2008

Queer poly advice for students

The Brandeis Hoot

Do polys qualify as "queer"? Once an insult, queer is now proudly embraced by the whole LGBTQIAA world (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, questioning, intersex, asexual, and allies). Sometimes a P gets added to that.

The poly and queer worlds certainly overlap. In the Loving More survey of 1,010 polys taken in 2000, 667 stated their sexual preference; of these, 51% said they were bisexual. (The complete survey data are now online at the Kinsey Institute; see page 23 in the documentation.) Informal estimates have put the number of bi polys at 30% to 60% of all polys. My experience is that when you ask a roomful of people at a poly conference how many consider themselves bi, 30% or 40% raise their hands.

This compares to just 2.3% of the general population. (1.8% of men and 2.8% of women age 18–44 in the U.S. gave their sexual preference as "bisexual" when surveyed for the CDC's 2002 National Survey of Family Growth; see tables 12 and 13 on pages 30 and 31 of the PDF doc.)

And to look at the equation from the other direction: a lot more queers are functionally poly, or poly-friendly, than straights are.

Nevertheless, in his always-thoughtful freaksexual blog, Pepper Mint argues that "poly is not necessarily queer". Although the two subcultures have important things in common, he gives good reasons to consider them distinct.

A few days ago at Brandeis University, it was queers who took the lead. The "Ask the Queer Resource Center!" column in a student newspaper gave the campus a good introduction to polyamory and its values:


Dear QRC,

My partner, “Taylor,” and I have been together for 7 months, and are very committed to each other. Lately, I have been interested in opening up the relationship, but I’m too embarrassed to bring it up....

Sincerely, Eager Explorer


Explorer,

In the queer community, this is known as Polyamory, an identity based on consensual non-monogamy. Polyamorous people believe that love can be strengthened, not weakened, by participation in multiple (carefully negotiated) emotional and/or sexual relationships. It is perfectly fine for you to want further romantic involvement with other people, because expecting to get everything you want from only one person is often unrealistic.

Yet as long as you want to stay with Taylor, open dialogue and consent is key: without honest negotiation, this is infidelity, not polyamory. Therefore, it is important to be completely honest with Taylor before further exploration.

You might start out by telling Taylor why you value this relationship. Then explain why you think that Polyamory could be a liberating endeavor for both of you. Propose the idea of remaining “primaries”: in Polyamory, these are long-term partners who remain each other’s first priorities....

No matter what, communication is crucial.


Read the whole article (Nov. 14, 2008).

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4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

To me, "queer" is defined by some kind of nonstandard gender role. Being poly doesn't necessarily have anything to do with gender-bending. (Though a lot of polys do tend this way.)

"Weird," however, is a superset of queer and definitely includes polys.

November 19, 2008 5:11 PM  
Blogger Ashbet said...

I self-identify as queer and poly, and I consider "queer" to be an umbrella term that embraces all types of nonstandard sexual expression. Not everyone agrees, but we *are* a sexual minority, and I don't see why we can't be included (particularly if you're going far enough to include "allies" in the acronym!)

I "qualify" as queer through my bisexuality as well, but I don't think that people who are heterosexual but identify as poly-oriented should be left out of the queer tent.

November 19, 2008 9:41 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Personally, I'd rather prefer to be included.

One remark about the numbers: if 50 % of poly people are bisexual, that does not mean that 50 % of bisexual people are poly. Very much the same as if 50% of Iceland's people are female, not 50 % of the females in the world are Icelanders.

But roughly, I think it's right that about 50 % of bisexual people might be poly.

December 05, 2008 9:14 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

i think poly folks should be considered queer as well.

there is no use bickering when we are all oppressed.

January 12, 2009 10:12 PM  

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