ABSTRACT

From the time of its first publication, 'Tearoom Trade' engendered controversy. It was also accorded an unusual amount of praise for a first book on a marginal, intentionally self-effacing population by a previously unknown sociologist. The book was quickly recognized as an important, imaginative, and useful contribution to our understanding of "deviant" sexual activity. Describing impersonal, anonymous sexual encounters in public restrooms—"tearooms" in the argot—the book explored the behavior of men whose closet homosexuality was kept from their families and neighbors. By posing as an initiate, the author was able to engage in systematic observation of homosexual acts in public settings, and later to develop a more complete picture of those involved by interviewing them in their homes, again without revealing their unwitting participation in his study. This enlarged edition of 'Tearoom Trade' includes the original text, together with a retrospect, written by Nicholas von Hoffman, Irving Louis Horowitz, Lee Rainwater, Donald P. Warwick, and Myron Glazer. The material added includes a perspective on the social scientist at work and the ethical problems to which that work may give rise, along with debate by the book's initial critics and proponents. Humphreys added a postscript and his views on the opinion expressed in the retrospect.

chapter 2|29 pages

Methods

The Sociologist as Voyeur

chapter 3|14 pages

Rules and Roles

chapter 4|22 pages

Patterns of Collective Action

chapter 5|23 pages

Risks of the Game

chapter 6|27 pages

The People Next Door

chapter 7|18 pages

The Breastplate of Righteousness

chapter |8 pages

Postscript

A Question of Ethics

chapter |2 pages

Retrospect

Ethical Issues in Social Research

chapter |22 pages

Tearoom Trade

Means and Ends in Social Research

chapter |10 pages

Impersonal Sex

chapter |11 pages

Retrospect

Ethical Issues in Social Research