Urban Studies is the leading international journal for urban scholarship. As might be expected, African American and working class men are often left beyond the fray of these new neoliberal ideals. These aspirations include career advancement in a transient local economy, property ownership in an out-of-reach market, and the attainment of social status based on an ability to move through multiple neighbourhoods and venues with ease. The narratives of 24 gay-identified men living in DC indicate that the social and spatial dissolution of the gay community is linked with individual aspirations that are increasingly difficult to achieve. In contrast to discourses of homonormativity, which suggest that gay men's declining attachments to gay communities stem from new equalities and consequent desires to assimilate into the mainstream, this article argues that gay men in DC have internalised neoliberal discourses that call for career development, home ownership and social hypermobilities. Paradoxically, both neoliberal re-development of North American inner-cities and the ways in which gay men become neoliberalised as individuals contribute to the dissolution of urban gay communities.
the creative city) as a 'canary' population that forecasts growth.
Abstract Gay men have been implicated in neoliberal urban development strategies (e.g.