Social networking sites and participatory reluctance: a case study of Gaydar, user resistance and interface rejection
Social networking sites and participatory reluctance: a case study of Gaydar, user resistance and interface rejection
This article conceptualises ‘participatory reluctance’ as a particular orientation to social media that problematises binarised notions of connection and disconnection in social networking sites. It qualitatively examines how the concept has functioned within gay men’s social networking service, Gaydar, among 18- to 28-year-old users of the site in Brisbane, Australia. Participatory reluctance is shown to be a central aspect of the culture of this space, fostered among the studied demographic by the convergence of the growing global push for marriage equality and increasing normalisation of the kinds of gay male identities commonly adopted among this group, with three key factors rooted primarily in Gaydar’s design: (1) young users’ perceptions of the site as a space for procuring casual sex, (2) their perceptions of the imagined user as embodying existing stereotypes of gay masculinity and (3) a lack of genuine alternatives in terms of niche digital spaces for gay men’s social networking.
Cassidy, Elija M
d25494e8-cff1-40c2-b4f3-3c7632d5a2ca
9 June 2015
Cassidy, Elija M
d25494e8-cff1-40c2-b4f3-3c7632d5a2ca
Cassidy, Elija M
(2015)
Social networking sites and participatory reluctance: a case study of Gaydar, user resistance and interface rejection.
SAGE Open, 18 (11).
(doi:10.1177/1461444815590341).
Abstract
This article conceptualises ‘participatory reluctance’ as a particular orientation to social media that problematises binarised notions of connection and disconnection in social networking sites. It qualitatively examines how the concept has functioned within gay men’s social networking service, Gaydar, among 18- to 28-year-old users of the site in Brisbane, Australia. Participatory reluctance is shown to be a central aspect of the culture of this space, fostered among the studied demographic by the convergence of the growing global push for marriage equality and increasing normalisation of the kinds of gay male identities commonly adopted among this group, with three key factors rooted primarily in Gaydar’s design: (1) young users’ perceptions of the site as a space for procuring casual sex, (2) their perceptions of the imagined user as embodying existing stereotypes of gay masculinity and (3) a lack of genuine alternatives in terms of niche digital spaces for gay men’s social networking.
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Published date: 9 June 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 511160
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511160
ISSN: 2158-2440
PURE UUID: b7ee9c9f-2aca-4226-866e-0d68b35e5c42
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Date deposited: 05 May 2026 17:20
Last modified: 05 May 2026 17:20
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Elija M Cassidy
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