HOOK-UP APPS COMPLICATE VISIBILITY FOR RURAL QUEER PEOPLE: RESULTS OF A QUALITATIVE SCOPING STUDY IN THE UNITED KINGDOM

Authors

  • Richard Rawlings Northumbria University, United Kingdom
  • Genavee Brown Northumbria University
  • Lynne Coventry Abertay University
  • Lisa Thomas Northumbria University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2023i0.13482

Keywords:

queer, rural, grindr, hook-up, visibility

Abstract

Before the millennium, finding other queer people often involved travelling to a queer venue in a city. Consequently, queer people have been at the forefront of internet technologies such as hook-up apps, namely $2 . Rural hook-up app use is under-researched, and queer visibility may be more carefully negotiated in rural areas than in cities. We carried out a qualitative study to establish whether location and/or technology use shaped social, sexual and romantic network creation and/or quality. Thirty-eight participants in cities and rural areas across the UK took part. We found hook-up apps to be the only source of local queer connection for some rural participants. Users speak of being drawn to these technologies when lonely, yet find they can contribute to feelings of isolation. Being visible, which the pictorial logic of some hook-up apps demands, can be difficult in rurality due to partial ‘outness’ about sexuality. Some fear meeting other app users in public in rural areas due to potential homophobia, yet lack access to private spaces. Some users find innovative ways to meet goals of friendship and community beyond the perceived affordances of sexual hook-ups, such as forming friendship and community groups via or beyond apps. This demonstrates that hook-up apps are inadequately-tailored tools for participants’ queerness, which extends beyond visible sexuality to negotiated communities and relationships of trust. This contributes to wider understanding of technology’s role in shaping social cohesion across diverse geographies and groups and the demands of visibility of such technologies on users.

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Published

2023-12-31

How to Cite

Rawlings, . R. ., Brown, G., Coventry, L., & Thomas, L. (2023). HOOK-UP APPS COMPLICATE VISIBILITY FOR RURAL QUEER PEOPLE: RESULTS OF A QUALITATIVE SCOPING STUDY IN THE UNITED KINGDOM. AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research. https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2023i0.13482

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Papers R