Introduction

Peter Robinson (University of New South Wales, Australia)

How Gay Men Prepare for Death

ISBN: 978-1-83909-587-0, eISBN: 978-1-83909-584-9

Publication date: 12 June 2023

Citation

Robinson, P. (2023), "Introduction", How Gay Men Prepare for Death, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83909-584-920231001

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Peter Robinson. Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. This work is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this book (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

License

This work is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this book (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode


There are three characteristics of ethnographic description: it is interpretive; what it is interpretive of is the flow of social discourse; and the interpreting involved consists in trying to rescue the ‘said’ of such discourse from its perishing occasions and fix it in perusable terms. 1

The research for this book focused on gay men's end-of-life plans and experiences, or how they prepared for death. While conceived before the outbreak of Covid-19, it was conducted during the worst of the pandemic in England, New Zealand and North America. The Australian interviews were held face to face in 2019 and before its outbreak in early 2020. As explained below in the section on methodology and sample, the international interviews were made possible using the Zoom online conference platform.

Until almost six weeks before the manuscript was due to be sent to the publishers, the title of the book was intended to reflect this literally and was to be Gay Men's End of Life Plans and Experiences. When I realized, however, that while end of life fairly accurately described the focus of my research, a more precise description of what the book covered was the title that it has now, namely, How Gay Men Prepare for Death: The Dying Business.

Bibliographical Note

Gay men's end-of-life experiences is a fairly recent and emerging field of research. Early work has been done in Australia, Canada, England and the USA in the field of social work and the disciplines of law and sociology where the focus has tended to be on the end-of-life experience. Almost all publications that included the experiences or concerns of gay men were from research on the broad LGBT populations. 2

Stand-alone studies on gay men's end-of-life were few in number and very little work has been undertaken on the end-of-life plans and experience of international cohorts of only gay men. As the chapter outlines (below) make clear, this book concentrated on the plans and experiences of an international sample of gay men in relation to their will-writing and beneficiary decision-making; advance-care decisions and power-of-attorney appointments; euthanasia and afterlife beliefs; and their funeral plans. Each chapter begins with a short summary of the relevant literature.

A central argument in most of the work on queer end of life was the tension between choosing family members or partners or friends to take on legal and health-care responsibilities in the last stage of life. Early US research emphasized the importance of friends and the family of choice for ageing gays and lesbians who were likely to experience social isolation because of broken ties with their family of origin. 3 Later English research showed that when writing wills, older lesbians and gays tended to choose between children, friends, siblings, 4 or make mixed choices, while a study of the end-of-life preparations of LGBT Canadians found a preference for family members over friends for end-of-life discussions and decision makers. 5 Australian research noted how advance care or power of attorney provided LGBT people with instruments that avoided the default of family of origin as end-of-life decision makers. 6 And preliminary analysis of the beneficiary decisions of a select group of 18 participants from the full data set used in this book showed a distinct preference for family of origin over chosen family. 7

One obvious reason for the interest in findings that confirm the privileging of family over friends is that from the 1980s the chosen family was regarded as an alternative to the family of origin either completely or when the latter was not accepting of gay family members' sexuality preferences, 8 and, before that, the long history of the gay couple, which 11 participants from this study regarded as their family, and which existed outside the traditional structure of the family of origin. In summary, then, the general assumption that queer people were more inclined to form families of choice and that the family-of-choice idea was widespread also in the general population was not supported by a lot of queer end-of-life research and the research for this book.

Methodology and Sample

The data for this book came from interviews with a sample of 43 gay men aged 40 and older. The majority of participants were recruited from five countries with relatively advanced queer cultures, namely, Australia, Canada, England, New Zealand and the USA. Some had been interviewed for my previous work on gay ageing and gay men's working lives and retirement, and so this was their second interview. 9 In addition, two men were recruited from Germany and Hong Kong. The participant who was living in Germany at the time of interview was a North American expatriate who was instrumental in assisting me make contact with the group of men from California who took part in the research. I had intended to recruit a larger cohort from Hong Kong but whether because the topic was unappealing – at least one of the Chinese-Australian gay men that I consulted in the early phase of the research said that raising matters concerning death and the transfer of property might be regarded as offensive – or because Hong Kong was unsettled because of civil disorder in 2019 and the Coronavirus pandemic in 2020, only one gay Hong Kongese asked for an interview. 10

Traditional qualitative research techniques were used. Firstly, notice of the intention to conduct the research on gay men's end of life and a call for potential interviewees were sent out to gay community groups in Australia, Hong Kong and North America. Secondly, in England and New Zealand, I contacted networks of colleagues and friends to alert them to the research and asked them to disseminate a notice advertising it. To optimise the variety of end-of-life accounts, potential interviewees were purposively recruited through gay community groups and professional and social networks.

In Australia, notices were advertised with Aleph, a social support group for GLBTI Jews in Melbourne and The Country Network, a social support group for gay and bisexual men living in rural and regional Australia as well as at the Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives, Homo Histories Conference, Canberra, November 2019 and the National Tertiary Education Union's Queer Conference, January 2020. In England, recruitment proceeded almost entirely as a result of the help of Mr Rehan Kularatne as well as through an advertisement placed in London Review of Books, October 2020–May 2021. In North America, assistance to publicise the research came from Mr Eric Jannke and also from support groups in and around California including Let's Kick Ass in Palm Springs; PALS in the desert; HIV and aging (sic) research group as well as via an advertisement placed in New York Review of Books, May–December 2021. Thirdly, when potential respondents expressed an interest in being interviewed, they were sent a copy of the plain-language statement and consent form. 11 Once the signed consent form was returned and a time and date agreed upon, the interview was held and recorded.

I encountered more problems recruiting interviewees for this research than for any previous research. It is hard to know if this was because in the minds of many people, priests, doctors or lawyers are the only appropriate experts on death and end-of-life, and that it is not the domain of historians or sociologists. Wills are very personal documents, and often only discussed with a person's partner and lawyer and perhaps also whoever was nominated as executor and power of attorney. The prospect of discussing the details of such a document with a stranger, therefore, and in the context of ‘end-of-life’ might account for some of the difficulties that I experienced in recruiting interviewees, for no matter how relaxed or at ease contemporary society might appear to be with death, it is still a taboo topic, as are will-writing and inheritance. In some countries and among some classes, the latter are topics of the utmost secrecy and certainly not to be shared with strangers, let alone a stranger who is also a researcher.

I have written elsewhere about the problems of recruiting in a foreign land and how letters or emails of introduction can open previously closed doors in local gay communities. 12 No matter how sociable gay life appears online (for example on Grindr or Gay Romeo) or face-to-face (in clubs, bars, sex venues) researchers from ‘out of town’ must first establish their bona fides and acquaint themselves with the local culture and social institutions before they can hope to recruit potential interviewees. Like an anthropologist wishing to study the inhabitants of a location where they are not known, ground work is required to establish trust with the people they wish to study before the first interview can take place. And as anthropologists know also, despite the heartache of rejected invitations to interview, location is so very useful for what it reveals about cross-national similarities or differences in the data. In the case of this research whether, for example, it can show if the experience of being a gay man and preparing end-of-life documents in The Australian Capital Territory is similar to or different from that of a gay man living in England or British Columbia or if a case can be made for the existence of shared experience of an international western gay habitus.

All interviews with participants living in Australia took place before the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in Australia and were recorded face-to-face on a digital recorder. Interviews in England, New Zealand and North America were held during the Covid-19 pandemic, 2020–2021 and took place using the Zoom online conference platform. They were orally recorded (not visually) and later transcribed. All interviewees were asked if they would give permission for the oral recordings to be deposited in perpetuity with the La Trobe Library, Melbourne.

Pseudonyms were used in the book to protect the identity of the participants. In the case of interviewees who participated in my previous research, 13 the pseudonyms used then were used again in this book, so readers who have copies of my previous published research and the interviewees themselves would be able to track connections across time. Interviewees' correct age at the time of interview were used together with their country of residence, also at the time of interview.

Central to the chapters that follow are aspects of the dying business of the 43 gay men, their accounts of how they were planning to prepare for their own death, in the writing of wills, appointing of attorneys, musings on their funeral plans. The interviews are a snapshot of the preparations that these men were making for their own death at some point in the future. In answering the set of questions that I devised in the hope of gaining some insight into their thinking, they behaved as all interviewees do: some kept to the topic, others strayed off topic, but all drew on their memory of the decisions that they had made about how they hoped to die and sometimes their experience of being with others who had already died.

Chapter Outlines

The dying business that is explored in this book has practical aspects. These are explored in sequence beginning with Chapter 1. Broader theoretical questions are explored in each chapter as they arise.

Chapter 1: Affective and Intimate Lives.

This gives some of the background to decision-making by examining the nature of relationships that the participants had formed in the context of greater acceptance of queer relationships and marriage equality legislation as well as their birth families and current families. It describes how many were in couple relationships and of these what proportion were in common-law (or de facto) relationships, civil partnership, civil union or were gay married as a means of understanding in later chapters their beneficiary decisions, appointment of executors and powers of attorney.

Chapter 2: Wills and Beneficiary Decisions.

The focus of this chapter is on will-writing and decisions concerning beneficiaries. Particular attention is paid to whether participants preferred family members, partners or friends when choosing executors and beneficiaries and their reasons for doing so. Motivation for benefactions such as altruism and social solidarity are also considered.

Chapter 3: Managing Physical and Mental End of Life.

Decisions concerning advance care and power of attorney are investigated in this chapter. A relatively new end-of-life instrument, the advance care was in practice in most of the jurisdictions from which the participants were drawn, as was the long-established legal instrument, power of attorney or its equivalent. Again the focus is on the extent to which participants chose family members over partners or friends to manage their advance care or act at their attorney.

Chapter 4: Euthanasia and Afterlife Beliefs.

Participants were prompted towards the end of the interview to discuss beliefs concerning euthanasia on the one hand and life after death on the other hand, and thus the focus of this chapter. Their views on euthanasia are examined in the context of assisted suicide and dying with dignity services and for what they reveal about end-of-life suffering and the notion of the ‘good death’.

Chapter 5: Funeral Plans.

The final chapter discusses what participants' views were on how they planned or expected to have their bodies disposed of after death and whether they preferred burial to cremation or the bone crusher. Implicitly in recounting their views on what sort of funeral they wanted or whether they wanted one at all, the participants revealed something about how they regarded their life's worth.

A theme that kept recurring when I was examining the participants' decisions about the writing of wills, appointing of attorneys, or when they were musing on their funeral plans was the power that lived experience had in shaping their understanding of the present and their future. In the case of the men interviewed for this book, often it was an experience of the end of life of someone close to them, a friend, a parent or a partner, that shaped their understanding and might have influenced their decisions concerning what their own death might look like and how it might occur.

Having accepted what historian Philippe Aries argued – that death which was once tame, is now wild and can terrify us 14 – I was intrigued to find that those who had witnessed the death of someone close to them, who had borne witness, to use the religious phrase, seemed to be able to learn from that experience of death, to banish fear and to think about, conceive and plan for their own with greater strength of mind. And that practice based on such an understanding, as was revealed time and again in interviews with participants, reinforced in my mind the truth of anthropologist Clifford Geertz's argument – stated in the quotation at the head of this Introduction – that ethnographic description consists in rescuing ‘the said’ from its perishable state and setting it down for our perusal, after the event.

1

Geertz, C. (2017, 1973) The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays with a foreword by R. Danton (New York: Basic Books), p. 22.

2

Almack, K., et.al. (2010) ‘Exploring the Impact of Sexual Orientation on Experiences and Concerns about End of Life Care and on Bereavement for Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Older People’ in Sociology, 44(5): 908–924; Monk, D. (2011) ‘Sexuality and Succession Law: Beyond Formal Equality’ in Feminist Legal Studies, 19: 231–250; Monk, D. (2016) ‘“Inheritance Families of Choice?” Lawyers’ Reflections on Gay and Lesbian Wills' in Journal of Law and Society, 43(2): 167–194; Seelman, K.L., et.al. (2019) ‘Motivations for Advance Care and End-of-Life Planning among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Older Adults’ in Qualitative Social Work, 18(6): 1002–1016; Westwood, S. (2021) Regulating the End of Life: Death Rights (Milton Park: Routledge).

3

Knauer, N.J. (2010) ‘Gay and Lesbian Elders: Estate Planning and End-of-Life Decision Making’ in Florida Coastal Law Review, XII: 168, 174.

4

Westwood, S. (2015) ‘Complicating Kinship and Inheritance: Older Lesbians’ and Gay Men's Will-Writing in England’ in Feminist Legal Studies, 23: 181–197.

5

de Vries, B., et.al. (2020) ‘Advance Care Planning among older LGBT Canadians: Heteronormative Influences’, Sexualities, https://doi.org/10.1177/1363460719896968

6

Hughes, M. and Cartwright, C. (2015) ‘Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people's attitudes to end-of-life decision-making and advance care planning’, in Australasian Journal on Ageing, 34(Supp. 2), 39–43.

7

Robinson, P. (2022) ‘Gay Inheritance Decisions: Family of Choice or Family of Origin?’ in S. Brunn and M. Blidon (eds.) Mapping LGBTQ Places and Spaces: A Changing World (Springer eBook, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-03792-4), pp. 711–723. The smaller sample was based on a preliminary data set of interviews with 18 participants whose transcripts were available at the time of writing (January 2021).

8

Monk “Inheritance Families”, p. 168; Weston, K. (1997) Families We Choose: Lesbians, Gays, Kinship (New York: Columbia University Press), p. 27.

9

Robinson, P. (2013) Gay Men's Relationships across the Life Course (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan); Robinson, P. (2017) Gay Men's Working Lives, Retirement and Old Age (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan).

10

As an indication of the level of distress Hong Kongese experienced in 2019, more than 600,000 Hong Kong residents were expected to apply for British resettlement: Graham-Harrison, E. (2020) ‘UK Government has “underestimated takeup for resettlement scheme”’, The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/dec/12/uk-government-underestimates-takeup-hong-kong-resettlement accessed 12 December 2020.

11

See Appendix 1.

12

Robinson Gay Men's Relationships, pp. 24–30.

13

Robinson Gay Men's Relationships, pp. 21–34.

14

Ariès, P. (1991) The Hour of Our Death, trans. H. Weaver (New York: Oxford University Press), p. 28; Ariès, P. (1975) Western Attitudes toward Death: From the Middle Ages to the Present, trans. P. Ranum (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press), p. 13.

References

Almack et al., 2010 Almack, K. , et al. . (2010) ‘Exploring the Impact of Sexual Orientation on Experiences and Concerns about End of Life Care and on Bereavement for Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Older People’ in Sociology, 44(5): 908924.

Ariès, 1975 Ariès, P. (1975) Western Attitudes toward Death: From the Middle Ages to the Present, trans. P. Ranum (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press).

Ariès, 1991 Ariès, P. (1991) The Hour of Our Death, trans. H. Weaver (New York: Oxford University Press).

de Vries et al., 2020 de Vries, B. , et al. . (2020) ‘Advance Care Planning Among Older LGBT Canadians: Heteronormative Influences’, Sexualities, https://doi.org/10.1177/1363460719896968

Geertz, 2017, 1973 Geertz, C. (2017, 1973) The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays, with a Foreword by R. Danton (New York: Basic Books).

Graham-Harrison, 2020 Graham-Harrison, E. (2020) “UK Government Has ‘underestimated Takeup for Resettlement Scheme’”, The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/dec/12/uk-government-underestimates-takeup-hong-kong-resettlement

Hughes and Cartwright, 2015 Hughes, M. and Cartwright, C. (2015) ‘Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender People’s Attitudes to End-of-Life Decision-Making and Advance Care Planning’, Australasian Journal on Ageing, 34(Supp. 2): 3943.

Knauer, 2010 Knauer, N.J. (2010) ‘Gay and Lesbian Elders: Estate Planning and End-of-Life Decision Making’ in Florida Coastal Law Review, XII: 163215.

Monk, 2011 Monk, D. (2011) ‘Sexuality and Succession Law: Beyond Formal Equality’ in Feminist Legal Studies, 19: 231250.

Monk, 2016 Monk, D. (2016) ‘“Inheritance Families of Choice?” Lawyers’ Reflections on Gay and Lesbian Wills’, Journal of Law and Society, 43(2): 167194.

Robinson, 2013 Robinson, P. (2013) Gay Men's Relationships across the Life Course (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan).

Robinson, 2017 Robinson, P.B. (2017) Gay Men's Working Lives, Retirement and Old Age (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan).

Robinson, 2022 Robinson, P. (2022) ‘Gay Inheritance Decisions: Family of Choice or Family of Origin?’ in S. Brunn and M. Blidon (eds.) Mapping LGBTQ Places and Spaces: A Changing World (Springer eBook, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-03792-4), pp. 711723.

Seelman et al., 2019 Seelman, K.L. , et al. . (2019) “Motivations for Advance Care and End-of-Life Planning Among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Older Adults” in Qualitative Social Work, 18(6): 10021016.

Weston, 1997 Weston, K. (1997) Families We Choose: Lesbians, Gays, Kinship (New York: Columbia University Press).

Westwood, 2015 Westwood, S. (2015) ‘Complicating Kinship and Inheritance: Older Lesbians’ and Gay Men’s Will-Writing in England in Feminist Legal Studies, 23: 181197.

Westwood, 2021 Westwood, S. (2021) Regulating the End of Life: Death Rights (Milton Park: Routledge).