II. Social visibility and acceptance of LGBT people in Hungary

Social visibility and acceptance of LGBT people in Hungary will be examined in this chapter from three perspectives. First, I will present Hungarian as well as international opinion poll findings indicating the social acceptance level of homosexuality in Hungary, including important issues such as same-sex marriage and adoption of children by same-sex couples. In this section I won’t be able to present anything in relation to transgender or transsexual issues, simply because I have not found any such data relevant to Hungary. Naturally, the fact that there is no available data is informative in itself: it can show the lack of social awareness, visibility and acceptance of transgender issues – all at the same time.

Second, I will present the findings of a study on mainstream media visibility of homosexuality. Again, I have not found any Hungarian media analyses related transgender issues.

Third, I will sketch the socio-cultural infrastructure available for LGBT people in Hungary. Here the officially functioning organisations representing the – political and various other – interests of LGBT people are introduced as well as the main events and places where their constituencies can meet, organise themselves and socialise with each other. This section is extended with a brief description of the main actors of LGBT media products, followed by a short analysis about the main features and the significance of creating and using “Own media”. It is important to note that this is the only part of this chapter where we can find traces of transgender existence in Hungary mainly in the form of an internet portal called TransSexual Online.1

II. 1. Opinion poll findings

Social acceptance of homosexuality can be measured by opinion poll questions in which people are asked what they think about issues related to homosexuality. According to the findings of an international research project in 1991 Hungary was rated higher than average in comparison with other Eastern European countries – and Western European ones, too – in accepting homosexuality.2 According to another finding from 1993, 85 percent of the Hungarian respondents thought that homosexuality was “unforgivable”.3 Data of a Hungarian survey of 1994 showed that 78.6 % of the respondents thought that it was always inappropriate if two same-sex grown-ups have sexual relationship with each other.4 According to a Hungarian result from 1995 74.6% of the respondents found same-sex cohabitation acceptable.5 According to the research findings of Hungarian sociologist László Tóth between 1991 and 1996 the social rejection of homosexuality radically decreased and the level of tolerance increased in Hungary.6

According to the most recent research findings7 in 2003 more than one third of Hungarian respondents viewed homosexuality as an illness, almost one third thought that homosexuality was a private matter of the individual, about every seventh respondent considered homosexuality to be a form of deviant behaviour, while only about one tenth of respondents thought that choosing a same-sex sexual partner was a basic right. (See: Table I.)

TABLE I. Views on homosexuality in Hungary in 1997, 2002 and 2003

View on homosexuality

1997 January (%)

2002 July (%)

2003 August (%)

Sin (against God)

5,6

4,5

6,2

Crime (against society)

4,0

2,1

3,5

Illness

38,6

34,1

34,3

Behaviour diverging from social norms

17,8

18,3

14,1

Private matter of the individual

20,4

25,7

29,8

Basic right (to choose same-sex sexual partner)

10,3

12,5

10,5

In 2003 almost one third of the respondents stated that the life of homosexuals should be regulated by the state, by legal means, while almost two thirds rejected the possibility of state intervention. (See: Table II.)

TABLE II. Life of homosexuals should be regulated... (in 1997, 2002, 2003)

State intervention

1997 (%)

2002 (%)

2003 (%)

... would be necessary.

37,4

24,8

30,7

... would not be necessary.

53,8

66,9

62,3

No answer OR “I don’t know”

8,8

8,3

7,0

Respondents were also able to express their views on homosexual organisations, gay marriage and adoption issues: in 2003 41,8% would approve if homosexuals established an organisation to represent their interests, 21% would approve gay marriage and 17,9% would approve child adoption by same-sex couples. (See: Table III-V.)

TABLE III. Approval of establishing organisations representing the interests of homosexuals in 2002 and 2003 in Hungary

Organisation

2002 (%)

2003 (%)

Approval

51,2

41,8

Disapproval

35,7

47,0

No answer

13,1

11,2



TABLE IV. Approval of same-sex marriage in 2002 and 2003 in Hungary

Same-sex marriage

2002 (%)

2003 (%)

Approval

27,8

21,0

Disapproval

63,9

72,9

No answer

8,3

6,1



TABLE V. Approval of same-sex adoption in 2002 and 2003 in Hungary

Same-sex adoption

2002 (%)

2003 (%)

Approval

26,2

17,9

Disapproval

66,0

76,2

No answer

7,8

5,9



As we could see, the above presented opinion poll and research findings are rather controversial. Still, it can be assumed that the social acceptance level of homosexuality is relatively low in Hungary. Especially in the light of the latest results, it seems that the majority (about 60 percent) of Hungarians still express negative views on homosexuality by considering it to be a form of sin, crime, illness or deviant behaviour, while only about 10 percent acknowledge the right to choose a same-sex partner.

In 2003 EOS Gallup Europe conducted a large scale (N=15,074) opinion poll concerning the authorisation of homosexual marriage and the adoption of children by homosexual couples in 30 European countries, including Hungary (N=500).8 (See: TABLE VI-XI.) According to the findings, in the 15 old member states of the European Union 57% of respondents were in favour of authorising the marriage of homosexual couples, and 42% of respondents were in favour of authorising the adoption of children by homosexual couples throughout Europe. While in the ten new member states there was a much lower level of support: only 28,8% of respondents were in favour of same-sex marriage (64% opposed it), and 19,3% were in favour of adoption of children by same-sex couples (73,7% opposed it). In this light the Hungarian results of 37% of respondents supporting (55% opposing) same-sex marriage and 34% supporting (60% opposing) adoption of children by same-sex couples are not too discouraging.

From the findings, it turned out that gender, age, educational level, religious background and political orientation seemed to be determining factors in supporting these issues: women, younger people, people with higher educational level, non-religious background and left-wing political orientation tended to be more supportive than others. It was also noted that the level of support towards these issues varied in accordance with the current national legislation: countries having already adapted their laws, or in the stage of doing so, received firm support according to their respective public opinions.

TABLE VI. Attitudes to homosexual marriage in Europe


Absolutely agree

Rather agree

Rather disagree

Absolutely disagree

BELGIUM

37%

30%

9%

22%

DENMARK

66%

16%

5%

12%

GERMANY

36%

29%

13%

20%

GREECE

5%

11%

10%

71%

SPAIN

28%

40%

10%

14%

IRELAND

16%

30%

16%

32%

ITALY

17%

30%

15%

37%

LUXEMBOURG

35%

36%

9%

15%

NETHERLANDS

62%

18%

6%

12%

AUSTRIA

24%

24%

13%

28%

PORTUGAL

9%

34%

25%

28%

FINLAND

33%

23%

11%

29%

FRANCE

25%

33%

14%

26%

SWEDEN

51%

18%

5%

21%

UNITED KINGDOM

17%

30%

15%

30%






15 EU States up to 2004

27%

30%

12%

27%






BULGARIA

6%

13%

14%

55%

CYPRUS

4%

5%

4%

76%

CZECH REPUBLIC

17%

33%

20%

28%

ESTONIA

13%

22%

14%

42%

HUNGARY

14%

23%

12%

43%

LATVIA

4%

15%

9%

65%

LITHUANIA

6%

20%

20%

42%

MALTA

6%

17%

16%

54%

POLAND

7%

11%

14%

56%

ROMANIA

7%

10%

9%

69%

SLOVAKIA

4%

26%

29%

41%

SLOVENIA

19%

21%

5%

50%

TURKEY

1%

15%

26%

53%






13 Candidate States

6%

16%

18%

52%






25 EU States after 2004

25%

28%

13%

30%






SWITZERLAND

37%

28%

11%

20%

NORWAY

40%

26%

14%

17%



TABLE VII. Positive and negative attitudes to homosexual marriage in Europe


(++/+) AGREE

(--/-) DISAGREE

BELGIUM

67%

31%

DENMARK

82%

17%

GERMANY

65%

34%

GREECE

16%

80%

SPAIN

68%

24%

IRELAND

46%

48%

ITALY

47%

52%

LUXEMBOURG

71%

24%

NETHERLANDS

80%

18%

AUSTRIA

48%

41%

PORTUGAL

43%

53%

FINLAND

56%

39%

FRANCE

58%

40%

SWEDEN

70%

26%

UNITED KINGDOM

47%

45%




15 EU States up to 2004

57%

39%




BULGARIA

20%

69%

CYPRUS

9%

81%

CZECH REPUBLIC

50%

48%

ESTONIA

35%

56%

HUNGARY

37%

55%

LATVIA

19%

74%

LITHUANIA

26%

62%

MALTA

23%

69%

POLAND

19%

70%

ROMANIA

17%

77%

SLOVAKIA

30%

70%

SLOVENIA

40%

55%

TURKEY

16%

79%




13 Candidate States

23%

70%




25 EU States after 2004

53%

43%




SWITZERLAND

65%

31%

NORWAY

66%

31%



TABLE VIII.

TABLE VIII

TABLE IX. Attitudes to child adoption by homosexual couples in Europe

 

Absolutely agree

Rather agree

Rather disagree

Absolutely disagree

BELGIUM

19%

28%

16%

34%

DENMARK

31%

23%

14%

31%

GERMANY

26%

31%

19%

22%

GREECE

4%

6%

10%

77%

SPAIN

24%

33%

17%

20%

IRELAND

10%

24%

23%

38%

ITALY

9%

16%

24%

50%

LUXEMBOURG

19%

30%

19%

31%

NETHERLANDS

39%

25%

17%

18%

AUSTRIA

14%

18%

20%

38%

PORTUGAL

5%

20%

33%

37%

FINLAND

13%

18%

19%

46%

FRANCE

12%

27%

22%

38%

SWEDEN

27%

16%

12%

38%

UNITED KINGDOM

12%

23%

22%

38%






15 EU States -2004

18%

25%

20%

35%






BULGARIA

5%

9%

12%

64%

CYPRUS

3%

3%

4%

80%

CZECH REPUBLIC

9%

26%

23%

41%

ESTONIA

9%

18%

14%

52%

HUNGARY

13%

21%

14%

47%

LATVIA

2%

9%

9%

72%

LITHUANIA

3%

10%

20%

55%

MALTA

3%

7%

12%

74%

POLAND

3%

7%

12%

63%

ROMANIA

5%

6%

8%

77%

SLOVAKIA

3%

14%

32%

51%

SLOVENIA

12%

18%

7%

60%

TURKEY

1%

15%

30%

48%






13 Candidate States

4%

13%

19%

57%






25 EU States after 2004

16%

23%

19%

39%






SWITZERLAND

18%

29%

20%

31%

NORWAY

12%

25%

26%

33%



TABLE X. Positive and negative attitudes to child adoption by homosexual couples in Europe

 

 

(++/+) AGREE

(--/-) DISAGREE

BELGIUM


47%

50%

DENMARK

54%

45%

GERMANY

57%

41%

GREECE


11%

87%

SPAIN


57%

37%

IRELAND


34%

61%

ITALY


25%

74%

LUXEMBOURG

49%

50%

NETHERLANDS

64%

35%

AUSTRIA


33%

58%

PORTUGAL

25%

69%

FINLAND


30%

65%

FRANCE


39%

60%

SWEDEN


42%

50%

UNITED KINGDOM

35%

60%





15 EU States -2004

42%

55%





BULGARIA

14%

76%

CYPRUS


6%

84%

CZECH REPUBLIC

35%

63%

ESTONIA


27%

65%

HUNGARY

34%

60%

LATVIA


11%

81%

LITHUANIA

13%

75%

MALTA


10%

86%

POLAND


10%

75%

ROMANIA

11%

85%

SLOVAKIA

17%

82%

SLOVENIA

30%

66%

TURKEY


16%

78%





13 Candidate States

17%

76%





25 EU States after 2004

38%

57%





SWITZERLAND

47%

51%

NORWAY


37%

59%

TABLE XI.

TableXI

II.2. Mainstream media visibility

Mainstream media visibility can be another indicator of the social acceptance level of homosexuality in a society. Here I would like to refer to the findings of a Hungarian study analysing media representations of homosexuality to be found in HVG – a Hungarian economic, political news magazine with a circulation of around 115.000 issues per week – between 1993 and 2000.9

HVG – modelled on The Economist – closely follows the developments within Hungarian society but at the same time it provides the Hungarian reader with a broad review of current international political, economic, social, cultural as well as scientific issues. If we accept that even though weekly papers cannot be considered primary sources of information, their content can nevertheless be assumed to be equal to that of such primary information sources as television and the daily papers (cf. Funkhauser 1973), then it can be asserted that the themes of the articles in HVG are most probably in accordance with the most important Hungarian and international developments and by their analysis we can have a picture of what were the most important events and news items in the world from a Hungarian perspective in a given period.

The scope of this examination covered 8 annual issues of HVG with a total of 40.332 articles, out of which there were 189 articles with references to homosexuality or homosexuals. Within the 189 articles, 33 were written specifically about homosexuals or homosexuality.

By analysing these media representations the “news value” of homosexuality could be detected, i.e. how, when and why homosexuality became a topic worthwhile to write about not on the level of daily sensationalism but especially on the level of arousing and reflecting more durable, more serious public attention.

According to the findings the topic of homosexuality was continually present in HVG from the beginning of the examined period, though this continuity started in articles written about Hungary only from 1995-96. From 1996 – and especially from 1998 – the visibility of homosexuality in Hungary became stronger by the growing opportunity for homosexual self-expression. Practically it meant more direct voicing of individuals identifying themselves as gays and lesbians, which could also be interpreted as a sign of Hungarian homosexual activism becoming more effective. (See: TABLE X.)

Within the thematic group of homosexuality – i.e. those articles focusing on the subject of homosexuality – especially those initiatives had the chance to gain news value that targeted changes in the existing penal and civil codes (in relation to decriminalisation and the legal acceptance of same-sex relationships, for example by claiming non-discriminatory age of consent and officially recognised forms of cohabitation for same-sex partners). From the beginning HVG described the “special homosexual issues” in a broader human rights context. Therefore there was increasing attention focusing on the claims that the social discrimination of homosexuals should be interpreted as a form of human rights violation to be dealt with by introducing anti-discriminatory legislation being an official expectation or already implemented practice in the European Union.

The strongest stereotype about homosexuals seemed to be their promiscuity. In maintaining this stereotypical view references to homosexuals being an “AIDS risk group” played an important role. Here the illusory correlation between homosexuality and the practice of frequent change of sexual partners could be detected. Probably it was not a coincidence that homosexuals were described in the most homogenised way in this context: being referred to as members of a unified, homogenous “risk group”; and in judging them group membership gained primary importance in relation to the reality of their sexual practices.

By examining the terminology used in HVG to describe homosexuals it turned out that besides the “traditional” use of words with negative or even obscene connotation – functioning mainly as signs to emphasise the social distance between the speaker and “the homosexuals” –, by the second half of the 1990s the word ‘meleg' (which can be interpreted as the Hungarian version of “gay”, with the literary meaning “warm”) suggesting respect for the self-definition of homosexuals gradually became widely accepted and entered into everyday use.

The media representations of HVG on homosexuality between 1993 and 2000 can be interpreted as documents of growing social visibility of homosexuality in Hungary, the extension of which can show on the one hand the level of cultural and social integration of homosexuality in society, while on the other hand it can reflect the power relations of homosexual groups in society and their abilities or opportunities for self-expression.

TABLE XII. Frequency and size of articles focusing on homosexuality in HVG (1993-2000)

Year of publication

I. Frequency and size of articles focusing on homosexuality

II. Articles on Hungary

(Within I.)

III.

Direct voicing of gays and lesbians

(Within II.)

1993

4

2016610 (14,86%)

1

5275 (8,7%)

1994

2

6137 (4,52%)

1995

3

18576 (13,7%)

1

7458 (12,3%)

1996

7

24130 (17,8%)

6

17747 (29%)

1

1554

(13%)

1997

3

15112 (11,14%)

2

11047 (18,1%)

1

1502

(12,6%)

1998

6

25050 (18,46%)

3

10694 (17,5%)

2

5620

(47,2%)

1999

3

9357 (6,89%)

1

883 (1,4%)

2000

5

17131 (12,62%)

3

8021 (13%)

1

3242

(27,2%)

Total

33 articles

135659 (100%)

17 articles

61125 (100%)

5 articles

11918

(100%)



II.3. The socio-cultural infrastructure of LGBT people in Hungary

The scope of the socio-cultural infrastructure for LGBT people in Hungary covers organisations representing their various kinds of interests, events and virtual as well as real places where they can meet, organise and socialise.

There are several officially functioning organisations representing the interests of LGBT people in Hungary at present. These are the Háttér Support Society for LGBT People, the Labrisz Lesbian Association, the Lambda Budapest Gay Association, the Habeas Corpus Working Group, the Five Loaves of Bread Community (“Öt kenyér” Christian Community for Homosexuals), the “DAMKÖR” Gay Association, the “Együtt Egymásért Kelet Magyarországon” (Together for Each Other in East-Hungary) Gay Association, the Szimpozion Association, the Atlasz LGBT Sport Association, and the Rainbow Mission Foundation.

Háttér Support Society for LGBT people was established in 1995 with the objectives “to further the self-organisation of Hungarian sexual minorities, to dissolve nonsensical, but widely spread stereotypes and prejudices about LGBT people, to facilitate a more open social dialogue, to stop the direct and indirect discrimination of LGBT people”.11 From 1996 they have been operating information as well as personal and telephone counselling services. In 2000 they started their legal aid program. This organisation has the largest number of members and activities in Hungary.

The Labrisz Lesbian Association was founded officially in 1999 but the core of the organisation existed already from 1996. Their main goals include organising community building activities, increasing social visibility of lesbian and bisexual women, publishing relevant material to further a social dialogue and spread information in order to draw attention to discrimination of female sexual minorities and fight against prejudices and stereotypes.12 With the support of the PHARE Democracy Micro-projects Program of the European Union in 2000, Labrisz introduced a ground-breaking educational program for secondary school students and teachers with the main aims of creating a safe and unbiased environment in schools, helping students learn to respect other people, and increasing teachers’ awareness that their students might be gay or lesbian, and instructing them in ways to help lesbian and gay students.

The Lambda Budapest Gay Association, the oldest Hungarian gay organisation that is still functioning, was founded in 1991. Their main activity has been to publish the monthly gay magazine “Mások” – the first unofficial issue of which came out as early as 1989.13

The Habeas Corpus Working Group, a human rights NGO was founded in 1996 and their legal aid service has been active since 1997. In the past few years they primarily focus on the equality of women and sexual minorities, and rights connected to sexual autonomy.14

The Five Loaves of Bread Community (“Öt kenyér” Christian Community for Homosexuals) – started as a strictly Catholic, but now an ecumenical Christian group – was founded in 1996 with a main objective “to support those gay and lesbian people trying to live with their orientation as Christians, seeking solution for emerging problems”.15

The “DAMKÖR” Souther Hungarian Gay Association is the first one of its kind functioning outside the capital of Hungary. It was established in 1999 in the city of Szeged, a major regional centre of South East Hungary. Their main activities are organising a gay and lesbian student club at Szeged University, another club for people over thirty, and other community building activities as well as maintaining a telephone help-line in order to further the social emancipation and integration of gays and lesbians.16

The “Együtt Egymásért Kelet Magyarországon” (Together for Each Other in East-Hungary) Gay Association is the second officially registered group functioning outside Budapest. They are involved in community building and AIDS prevention activities. They also cooperate with the www.melegkelet.ini.hu (Gay East) internet portal.

The Szimpozion Cultural, Educational, and Leisure Association of Young GLBT People was founded in 2002. One of their main activities is organising the biweekly meetings of the Pocok Club, a youth club with a cultural orientation.17

The Atlasz LGBT Sport Association was officially registered in 2004. It has ten sections: running, rock climbing, soccer, cycling, handball, basketball, dance, badminton, hiking, swimming.18

The Rainbow Mission Foundation was established by the Háttér Support Society for LGBT People, the Labrisz Lesbian Association and the Lambda Budapest Gay Association in 2001 with the primary aim of organising the events of the yearly Gay and Lesbian Cultural Festival and the Gay Pride Day.19

The annual Gay and Lesbian Cultural Festival is probably the most important cultural event for LGBT people in Hungary. The festival was organised for the ninth time in 2004 in Budapest, and besides the “traditional” gay pride march its program covered several workshops – on community building and coming out issues, HIV prevention, transgender issues, and legal issues such as same-sex partnership and equal treatment legislation etc. – book presentations, art exhibitions, parties and film screenings.

In Budapest mainly for the gay public there are several bars, cafés, clubs, hotels, restaurants and cruising areas available that can sometimes also serve the needs of other segments of the LGBT crowd. Exclusively lesbian places are hard to find but special “women only” events are regularly organised in Budapest. During the last few years the Hungarian countryside offers a growing number of parties and clubs, frequented mainly by gay men.

II.3.1. Own media: creating symbolic environments

In Hungary – besides two newsletters of gay and lesbian organisations, which are not available publicly – there is only one gay magazine, Mások (founded in 1989, officially published from 1991, now also available online20). Though Mások was – is – open to lesbians in theory, in practice it became an almost exclusively gay magazine, made almost entirely by gay men. The choice of the name “Mások” ("Others") reflected a certain "message". According to the editors if they were to start a gay magazine today, they would choose a different name. But at the very end of the 1980s and the very beginning of the 1990s Mások seemed to be the right choice: “Nowadays people have a very different approach to this than then. It became a part of everyday life that gays exist in the world, too. But when we started, it was a completely different world. During the last ten years the situation changed so much that there is no reason to choose such a name now. If we would look for a new name for the magazine, I am sure that we would not call it "others" because it has a totally different meaning now. At that time it meant that we had to assume our identity, but nowadays it rather suggests separation. So this is a very different world now.”21

There is also an advertisement leaflet-like monthly publication, called Na végre! 100% GAY (published from 2001 by the owner of a gay fitness centre). It is a free publication, based on a business venture, gaining income from advertisements. The fact that Na végre! exists now for more than four years can be interpreted as the sign of the strengthening pink economy in Hungary.

In 1997-98 four issues of the lesbian Labrisz zine were published. Though there is no Hungarian lesbian magazine, Hungarian lesbians are in fact quite active in publishing. At a certain point when they were granted a substantial amount of money by an American foundation (ASTRAEA), they decided to start publishing a book series instead of starting a "proper" magazine. There were attempts to establish a Hungarian lesbian magazine in 1997-98, but after four issues these stopped. Therefore nowadays Labrisz, the only independent Hungarian lesbian organisation regularly publishes a minimum budget, photocopied newsletter primarily to inform their members and a book series on lesbian themes.

There are four Hungarian GLBT radio programs: the Önazonos (broadcast from 1995 on the national radio), Pararádió (from 1997 on a non-profit internet radio), Szappanopera helyett (from 1998 on a non-profit alternative radio, during 2001-2002 available only on the internet), Ki más?! (broadcast from 1997 on a non-profit community radio). It is important to note that producing radio programmes can be very cost-effective compared with publishing, printing costs on the one hand and television programme producing costs on the other hand.

There are three GLBT internet portals: gay.hu, functioning from 1996, pride.hu, the "first Hungarian gay portal", an officially registered internet portal, established in 2001, and TranSexual Online, the “most significant transsexual related site in Hungary … and probably in East-Europe” about transsexuality for trans people and those interested, providing advice, reference, communication forums, support for the transsexual minority.22 These internet portals are gaining growing importance as there is growing internet access in Hungary.

LGBT media content is typically produced by sexual minority groups: mainly gays and lesbians. These minority groups usually share a common “mainstream media fate” with other relatively powerless – for example, ethnic – minority groups, which can be characterised by low visibility and stereotypical representation. Therefore sexual minority media products can be seen as means of creating a symbolic environment where people belonging to these groups can feel at home (cf. Gross 1991). It is also important to emphasise that the position of sexual minorities differs from that of "traditional" minorities in two aspects: they are usually not marked by their bodies – for example, by their skin colour –, thus they are not recognisable at first sight; and their existence challenges the "natural order of things", thus their media appearances can become problematic. Still, their media products can be perceived to be documents of, as well as tools for promoting the successful social integration of relatively powerless social groups, and – in some cases – struggling against social intolerance.

LGBT media is usually made for and by members of sexual minorities but it does not have to be exclusively so. According to a leading Hungarian gay activist “of course, it helps if you are gay, but [...] I don't think that just because you are gay you are able to create good quality gay media”.23 The peripheral of the target audience necessarily interfaces with mainstream society – through, for example, parents, friends and colleagues – and some sexual minority media producers take this into account.

As LGBT media productivity matures there appears to be a trend towards specialisation: mixed media – i.e. media produced by gays and lesbians working together, for an aggregate gay and lesbian public – tend to become more homogenous: either lesbian or gay only. Mások, the only Hungarian gay magazine targeted lesbians, too when it started, but it has now become – according to its editors – “98% gay”. Specialisation is an indicator of development. However, it does not necessarily imply that cooperative networks stop functioning: joint events, like pride and film festivals, will continue to be organised by a broad spectrum of LGBT activists working together – as this could be observed in he case of organising the Hungarian Gay and Lesbian Cultural festivals during the last nine years.

There can be cultural indicators for including erotic material, particularly in gay specialised magazines. Additionally there can be commercial reasons for doing so. On the other hand, there can be cultural indicators against the inclusion of naked images: besides the danger of over-sexualisation, or that of intimidating the public with picture-perfect bodies, the distinction between pornography and cultural eroticism is a hard one to make objectively.

Probably the most stable function of LGBT media is the information function. It is stable in the sense that the importance of this function seems to be independent from changing socio-cultural contexts. While the importance of other functions – such as community building, helping people in their coming out, or entertaining them – can change according to the changing social environments. Identity politics is a system-specific concept: it can hardly be interpreted in anti-democratic political systems characterised by the extensive erosion of private identities as well as the rigid and forced separation of public and private identities. The natural context of identity politics is civil society, the field of social self-organisation, being the framework as well as the guarantee of modern identity formations (cf. Erős 1994). In Hungary, where involvement in civil activities still counts as a relatively new and not at all wide-spread experience, LGBT identity building is still an important media function. However, the very strong connection between LGBT activism and sexual minority media production characteristic especially in the early 1990s seems to be diminishing gradually.

In places where mainstream media are unable to mediate the special needs and claims of sexual minorities, special media segments must be created by the concerned groups in order to provide their constituencies with positive reference points for identity formation. Inability to use mass media to project LGBT cultural elements into the mainstream can reflect the relatively high level of social discrimination of LGBT people in present day Hungary. Probably the ideal of Hungarian activists would be that sexual minority media would no longer be necessary as an autonomous entity, the mainstream media would encompass the various sexual minority media products, thus nullifying the distinction between sexual minorities and the majority in this respect.

Once LGBT media production outgrows the no-budget, self-financing, small scale stage, further expansion is only possible either through commercial financing or through grants. This usually implies that a choice has to be made: commercial financing can lead to compromises in politics, while the grant option faces the problem that grants are hard to find. Activists dream of large grants with no strings attached, but market rules can force their hand too. So, whereas in some cases only the philanthropic finance option is possible, in other cases a commercial approach may be the only option for survival.

Ultimately these types of media must be of a transient nature as they are in a way working towards making themselves irrelevant politically, but on the other hand, they advance themselves culturally doing so. Own media have a cultural impact. LGBT media can provide a cultural contra-weight against societal oppression. It seems that in the long run culture is at least as effective as an emancipatory agent as legislation.

1 http://tsonline.uw.hu/

2 Permissive attitudes towards homosexuality (8-10 values on a one to ten scale. Percentage of respondents given.): Czech Republic - 17,4; East-Germany - 18,8; Poland - 3,6; Slovakia - 10,2; Hungary - 14,7; Bulgaria - 3,8; Eastern-Europe (average) - 9,1; Western Europe (average) - 13,9 (cf. Ester et.al. 1994:223).

3 Data from surrounding countries (Percentage of respondents expressing total agreement with the statement): Austria - 52; Italy - 49; Slovenia - 66; Croatia - 49; Romania - 87 (cf. Inglehart et.al. 1996; Stulhofer 1996:157).

4 TÁRKI - ISSP Family Model research project 1994 – I would like to thank Olga Tóth for providing me with the data.

5 The survey was conducted by the Medián Opinion and Market Research. Omnibusz research project 1995. – I would like to thank László Tóth for providing me with the data.

6 According to the research findings of László Tóth in 1991 69,2%, in 1996 30,8% of the population viewed homosexuality as something to be rejected, while in 1991 17,4%, in 1996 45,4% viewed homosexuality as socially acceptable. (cf. HVG 1997.08.30. p. 87.)

7 The surveys were conducted by the Medián Opinion and Market Research. Omnibusz research project 1997, 2002, 2003. (Sample size: N=1200.) – I would like to thank Tímea Venczel for providing me with the data.

8 http://www.eosgallupeurope.com/homo/index.html

9 cf. Takács, 2004 pp. 97-139.

10 The size of the articles is given in the number of characters.

11 http://www.hatter.hu/

12 http://www.labrisz.hu/

13 http://www.masok.hu/

14 http://hc.netstudio.hu/

15 http://www.otkenyer.hu/

16 http://www.tar.hu/damkor/

17 http://szimpozion.hu/

18 http://www.atlaszsport.hu/

19 http://www.szivarvany-misszio.hu/

20 http://www.masok.hu/

21 Interview conducted with Gábor Bencze, editor in chief of Mások magazine, by Judit Takács.

22 http://tsonline.uw.hu/

23 Interview conducted with László Mocsonaki, Board Member of Háttér Society for LGBT People, by Judit Takács