ABSTRACT

The Bear Book brings together an impressive range of bear--usually big, hairy men who favor full-face beards and prefer to wear jeans and flannel shirts--viewpoints to explore this unique social and cultural phenomenon that stretches from America to western Europe to Australia! On the personal level, you learn what beardom means to different people in their daily lives, and on a broader level, its cultural implications for not only the gay community, but also society as a whole. As this book moves across the wide spectrum of bear identities, you learn about the defining forces of identity, the significance of differences among masculinities, and the shapings of the bear movement from different viewpoints.The Bear Book is the first compilation of sociological and cultural analytical investigations of the contemporary gay bear phenomenon. To this end, Editor Les Wright brings together both objective and subjective viewpoints to create a forum where bears can speak for themselves. Through their voices, you’ll learn about:

  • bears and sexual identity
  • gay male iconography
  • socializing on the Internet
  • sexual politics (gender, class, “looks-ism,” and body image)
  • gay mass media, the single most powerful force in the current construction of ”bears”
  • bears, power, and glamor
  • bear-as-image vs. bear-as-attitude

    Gays, lesbians, lesbigay scholars, bears, and social scientists are sure to find The Bear Book thought-provoking and insightful as it broaches questions such as: Are bears caught up in a utopian-romantic impulse to reinvent themselves? What was radical lesbianism’s impact on the bear movement? To what extent are bears only another group of exploited consumers in a fragmented market system? And, is it possible to establish social liberation through enslavement to your sexual passions? For both your pleasure and your education, The Bear Book examines nearly every corner of beardom, including bear history, identity, social spaces, iconography, and its constituency abroad.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Theoretical Bears

part 1|81 pages

History

chapter 2|9 pages

Bear Roots

chapter 3|14 pages

The Bear Clan

North American Totemic Mythology, Belief, and Legend

chapter 4|18 pages

Aroused from Hibernation

chapter 5|6 pages

Bearaphernalia

An Exercise in Social Definition

chapter 6|11 pages

Academics as Bears

Thoughts on Middle-Class Eroticization of Workingmen's Bodies

part 2|66 pages

Bear Images

chapter 7|38 pages

Male Images in the Gay Mass Media and Bear-Oriented Magazines

Analysis and Contrast

chapter 8|8 pages

Beardom

The Delimited Bear as a Sign of the Recurrence in History of the Archetypal Green Man

chapter 9|8 pages

The Natural Bears Classification System

A Classification System for Bears and Bearlike Men Version 1.10

chapter 10|10 pages

John Rand, Photographer

An Interview with Les Wright

part 3|31 pages

Bear Spaces

chapter 11|17 pages

The Original Bears Mailing List

An Interview with Steve Dyer

chapter 12|3 pages

Front Range Bears

A History

chapter 13|7 pages

The Bear Essentials of Country Music

part 4|23 pages

Bear Spaces: San Francisco

chapter 14|5 pages

The Bear Hug Group

An Interview with Sam Ganczaruk

chapter 15|11 pages

BEAR Magazine

chapter 16|3 pages

Bear Mecca

The Lone Star Saloon Revisited

part 5|45 pages

Bears Abroad

chapter 17|14 pages

Bears in the Land Down Under

chapter 18|12 pages

Kiwi Bears

chapter 19|9 pages

Atlantic Crossing

The Development of the Eurobear

chapter 20|7 pages

A French Bear Asks

Are Bears an American Thing?