Gay bars in utica ny

 

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Small-City Gay Bars, Big-City Urbanism

Small-City Gay Bars, Big-City Urbanism* Greggor Mattson Associate Professor of Sociology Oberlin College Accepted, Capital & Community. Keywords: small cities, urbanism, LGBT placemaking Despite the widely hailed importance of same-sex attracted bars, what we know about them in the U.S. comes from outliers: gay neighborhoods in four big cities. This essay explores the similarities of 52 small-city lgbtq+ bars to each other, and their differences from big-city gayborhood bars. Small-city gay bars are surprisingly integrated with straight people in their often red-state communities and are as racially diverse than the counties in which they reside. They are subcultural amenities not just for LGBT people but for straights as adv, fostering cosmopolitan lifestyles for large geographical regions. I conclude with an argument for the importance of small cities to understand urbanism generally. Small cities are a key analytic object to disentangle urban effects from modern existence generally. They make known the way in which contemporary urban scholars often implicitly define urbanism in terms of commercial diversity at the expense of the reasons why many people prefer



That place Utica (CLOSED)
216 Bleeker St
Utica, Fresh York13501
Get Directions
(315)724-1446
Type: Male lover Club


In a nutshell: Well known and friendly bar for over 20 years. Play a game of pool, darts or just unbend on the second floor lounge. Mixed dance bar, specialty theme nights with entertainment, leather and Goth nights. Unlock Sundays on extraordinary events...

That place Hours: (Call ahead to confirm)

Tags for That place: leather, drag, goth, dancing, pool, video, DJ, hip-hop, go-go, smoking, techno,

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Coming Out Stories

Jay Salsberg 

Growing up in Southern Maryland in the 1970s, I was surrounded on three sides by water and on the fourth by a 40 mile stretch of tobacco fields. Although we only lived 75 minutes from the Nation’s Capital, we may as well own been in the middle of the Sahara Desert for all the culture it brought us. The main employer was the Navy, and the main pastime was driving around town with a Confederate flag hanging in the back window of your pick-up. Needless to say, St. Mary’s County was not a good place to be gay.

As a teenager attending a Catholic boy’s school, I learned to hide my sexuality. I had no gay friends … at least none that I knew of. My only confidant was my diary, into which I poured all my unanswered questions, most of which began “Why am I like this?” I never had to deal with the moral dilemma of coming out to my parents. One day when I was 17, I came home from institution to find my mother looking like the cat