The article was co-authored by Debbie S. Dougherty from the University of Missouri.
鈥淭his project emerged from my dissertation. I described to Debbie how frustrated people are with LGBTQ+. Everybody that I鈥檝e talked to is frustrated with these important yet quickly shifting categories; we鈥檝e got a giant spectrum of terms and it鈥檚 causing confusion in the real world. I wanted to have a way to talk about sexuality on a larger scale, based in theory,鈥 Compton said.
According to the abstract, the article conveys the growing social legitimization for sexual minority relationships and a more fluid social understanding of how sexual identities have shifted how we bound 鈥渘ormal鈥 sexuality. The paper introduces the concept of co-sexuality, the push-and-pull process of communicatively organizing around sexuality. The concept was used as a grounded theory approach to explore how employees of various sexualities and in different occupations understand 鈥渘ormal鈥 sexuality and subsequently organize around it.
鈥淢y purpose was that I was tired of this heterosexual, other, binary, etc. labels so as I started talking to people across all sorts of sexual identities, I realized there鈥檚 a process going on. There鈥檚 a pushing-and-pulling around what we call 鈥榥ormal.鈥 And what we consider 鈥榥ormal鈥 changes contextually,鈥 Compton said. 鈥淚n queer-centered spaces, being heterosexual is abnormal. So how you communicatively position yourself and others will be similar but not the same process. I want to know what resources people are drawing on to communicate our identities. How are we saying or doing things a certain way to convey our identities? And so I took the research into the Midwestern workplace, where this process can have serious impacts for people.鈥