BaldorTyler. 2018. “No Girls Allowed? Fluctuating Boundaries Between Gay Men and Straight Women in Gay Public Space.” Ethnography. https://doi.org/10.1177/1466138118758112
2.
BartonBernadette. 2012. Pray the Gay Away: The Extraordinary Lives of Bible Belt gays. New York: NYU Press.
3.
BellDavid, and ValentineGill (eds.). 1995. Mapping Desire: Geographies of Sexualities. London: Psychology Press.
4.
BrekhusWayne. 2003. Peacocks, Chameleons, Centaurs: Gay Suburbia and the Grammar Of Social Identity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
5.
BrodynAdriana, and GhazianiAmin. 2018. “Performative Progressiveness: Accounting for New Forms of Inequality in the Gayborhood.” City & Community17:307–29.
6.
BrownMichael. 2014. “Gender and Sexuality II: There Goes the Gayborhood?” Progress in Human Geography38:457–65.
7.
Brown–SaracinoJaponica. 2004. “Social Preservationists and the Quest for Authentic Community.” City & Community3:135–56.
8.
Brown–SaracinoJaponica. 2007. “Virtuous Marginality: Social Preservationists and the Selection of the Old–Timer.” Theory and Society36:437–68.
9.
Brown–SaracinoJaponica. 2009. A Neighborhood That Never Changes: Gentrification, Social Preservation, and the Search for Authenticity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
10.
Brown–SaracinoJaponica. 2011. “From the Lesbian Ghetto to Ambient Community: The Perceived Costs and Benefits of Integration for Community.” Social Problems58:361–88.
11.
Brown–SaracinoJaponica. 2014. “From Methodological Stumbles to Substantive Insights: Gaining Ethnographic Access in Queer Communities.” Qualitative Sociology37:43–68.
12.
Brown–SaracinoJaponica. 2015. “How Places Shape Identity: The Origins of Distinctive LBQ Identities in Four Small US Cities.” American Journal of Sociology121:1–63.
13.
Brown–SaracinoJaponica. 2017. How Places Make Us: Novel LBQ Identities in Four Small Cities. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
14.
Brown–SaracinoJaponica. 2018. “Where are the Welcome Signs? Finding Lesbian, Bisexual and Queer Community in Unexpected Places.” Autostraddle, August 20.
15.
Brown–SaracinoJaponica, and ParkerJeffrey Nathaniel. 2017. “‘What is Up With My Sisters? Where Are You?’ The Origins and Consequences of Lesbian–Friendly Place Reputations for LBQ Migrants.” Sexualities20:835–74.
16.
CarrilloHector. 2018. Pathways of Desire: The Sexual Migration of Mexican Gay Men. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
17.
CastellsManuel. 1983. The City and the Grassroots: A Cross–Cultural Theory of Urban Social Movements. Berkeley: University of California Press.
18.
DoanPetra L. 2007. “Queers in the American City: Transgendered Perceptions of Urban Space.” Gender, Place and Culture14:57–74.
19.
DoanPetra L. 2010. “The Tyranny of Gendered Spaces—Reflections from Beyond the Gender Dichotomy.” Gender, Place and Culture17:635–54.
20.
DoanPetra L (ed.). 2015. Planning and LGBTQ Communities: The Need for Inclusive Queer Spaces. New York: Routledge.
21.
EsterbergKristin G.1997. Lesbian and Bisexual Identities: Constructing Communities, Constructing Selves. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
22.
Faiman–SilvaSandra L.2004. The Courage to Connect: Sexuality, Citizenship, and Community in Provincetown. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
23.
ForstieClare. 2018. “Ambivalently Post–Lesbian: LBQ Friendships in the Rural Midwest.” Journal of Lesbian Studies22:54–66.
24.
ForsythAnn. 1997. “‘Out’ in the Valley.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research21:38–62.
25.
GhazianiAmin. 2011. “Post–Gay Collective Identity Construction.” Social Problems58:99–125.
26.
GhazianiAmin. 2014. There Goes the Gayborhood?Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
27.
GiesekingJen J. 2013. “Queering the Meaning of ‘Neighbourhood’: Reinterpreting the Lesbian–Queer Experience of Park Slope, Brooklyn, 1983–2008.” In AddisonMichelle and TaylorYvette (eds.), Queer Presences and Absences, pp. 178–200. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
28.
GiesekingJen J.2016. “Crossing Over Into Neighbourhoods of the Body: Urban Territories, Borders and Lesbian–Queer Bodies in New York City.” Area48:262–70.
29.
Gorman–MurrayAndrew, WaittGordon, and GibsonChris. 2008. “A Queer Country? A Case Study of the Politics of Gay/Lesbian Belonging in an Australian Country Town.” Australian Geographer39:171–91.
30.
GrayMary L.2009. Out in the Country: Youth, Media, and Queer Visibility in Rural America. New York: NYU Press.
31.
GreenAdam I.2008. “The Social Organization of Desire: The Sexual Fields Approach.” Sociological Theory26:25–50.
32.
GreeneTheodore. 2014. “Gay Neighborhoods and the Rights of the Vicarious Citizen.” City & Community13:99–118.
33.
HalberstamJ.2005. In a Queer Time and Place: Transgender Bodies, Subcultural Lives. New York: NYU Press.
34.
HanChong–suk, AyalaGeorge, PaulJay P., and ChoiKyung–Hee. 2017. “West Hollywood Is Not That Big on Anything but White People: Constructing ‘Gay Men of Color’.” The Sociological Quarterly58:721–37.
35.
HunterMarcus A. 2010a. “All the Gays are White and All the Blacks are Straight: Black Gay Men, Identity, and Community.” Sexuality Research and Social Policy7:81–92.
36.
HunterMarcus A.2010b. “The Nightly Round: Space, Social Capital, and Urban Black Nightlife.” City & Community9:165–86.
37.
HuppkeRex W.2010. “The Times Catch Up to Popular Lesbian Bar.” Chicago Tribune, Feb 2.
38.
KazyakEmily A. 2010. “The Space and Place of Sexuality: How Rural Lesbians and Gays Narrate Identity.” Ph.D. Dissertation. Department of Sociology, The University of Michigan.
39.
KazyakEmily A.2011. “Disrupting Cultural Selves: Constructing Gay and Lesbian Identities in Rural Locales.” Qualitative Sociology34:561–81.
40.
KirkeyKenneth, and ForsythAnn. 2001. “Men in the Valley: Gay Male Life on the Suburban–Rural Fringe.” Journal of Rural Studies17:421–41.
41.
KrahulikKaren C.2007. Provincetown: From Pilgrim Landing to Gay Resort. New York: NYU Press.
42.
KriegerSusan. 1983. The Mirror Dance: Identity in a Women's Community. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
43.
LloydRichard D.2006. Neo–Bohemia. New York: Routledge.
44.
McFarland BruceKatherine2016. Pride Parades: How a Parade Changed the World. New York: NYU Press.
45.
MooreMignon R. 2010. “Articulating a Politics of (Multiple) Identities: LGBT Sexuality and Inclusion in Black Community Life.” Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race7:315–34.
46.
MooreMignon R.2011. Invisible Families: Gay Identities, Relationships, and Motherhood Among Black Women. Berkeley: University of California Press.
47.
MooreMignon R.2015. “LGBT Populations in Studies of Urban Neighborhoods: Making the Invisible Visible.” City & Community14:245–8.
48.
MurrayDavid AB.2014. “Real Queer: ‘Authentic’ LGBT Refugee Claimants and Homonationalism in the Canadian Refugee System”. Anthropologica56:21–32.
49.
OrneJason. 2017. Boystown: Sex and Community in Chicago. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
50.
PérezGina. 2004. The Near Northwest Side Story: Migration, Displacement, and Puerto Rican Families. Berkeley: University of California Press.
51.
PodmoreJulie A.2006. “Gone ‘Underground’? Lesbian Visibility and the Consolidation of Queer Space in Montréal.” Social & Cultural Geography7:595–625.
52.
ReedChristopher. 2003.“We're from Oz: Marking Ethnic and Sexual Identity in Chicago.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space21:425–40.
53.
RosenbergRae. 2017. “The Whiteness of Gay Urban Belonging: Criminalizing LGBTQ Youth of Color in Queer Spaces of Care.” Urban Geography38:137–48.
54.
SilvaTony J.2018. “‘Helpin’ a Buddy Out’: Perceptions of Identity and Behaviour Among Rural Straight Men That Have Sex With Each Other.” Sexualities21:68–89.
55.
SmithDarren P., and HoltLouise. 2005. “‘Lesbian Migrants in the Gentrified Valley'and ‘Other’ Geographies of Rural Gentrification.” Journal of Rural Studies21:313–22.
56.
StoneAmy L. 2017. Cornyation: San Antonio's Outrageous Fiesta Tradition. San Antonio, TX: Trinity University Press.
57.
StoneAmy L.2018.“The Geography of Research on LGBTQ Life: Why Sociologists Should Study the South, Rural Queers, and Ordinary Cities.” Sociology Compass12:e12638.
58.
TangDenise T.–S.2011. Conditional Spaces: Hong Kong Lesbian Desires and Everyday Life. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.
59.
ValentineGill. 2013. From Nowhere to Everywhere: Lesbian Geographies. New York: Routledge.
60.
WolfDeborah G.1980. The Lesbian Community: With an Afterword, 1980. Berkeley: University of California Press.