GEORGE CHAUNCEY'S GAY NEW YORK: A VIEW FROM 25 YEARS LATER - Volume 18 Issue 1
Contents:
- GAY NEW YORK : GENR, URBAN CULTURE, AND THE MAKGS OF THE GAY MALE WORLD, 1890-1940
- GEORGE CHAUNCEY'S GAY NEW YORK: A VIEW FROM 25 YEARS LATER
- HONORG GEE CHNCEY, A SCHOLAR OF GAY HISTORY
- GAY NEW YORK
- GAY NEW YORK SUMMARY
- GAY NEW YORK
GAY NEW YORK : GENR, URBAN CULTURE, AND THE MAKGS OF THE GAY MALE WORLD, 1890-1940
* gay new york george chauncey *
Tle: Gay New York: Genr, Urban Culture, and the Makg of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940.
GEORGE CHAUNCEY'S GAY NEW YORK: A VIEW FROM 25 YEARS LATER
Gay New York by Gee Chncey, May, 1994, Basic Books edn, Hardver English * gay new york george chauncey *
Gee Chncey unvers a prevly hidn "gay male world" New York Cy before World War II, a world that had been lost through the myths of "isolatn, visibily, and ternalizatn.
HONORG GEE CHNCEY, A SCHOLAR OF GAY HISTORY
" Instead, the world Chncey scrib is a vibrant and surprisgly visible gay culture between 1890-1940.
In this world, the later homosexual/heterosexual bary was not yet force, and men were fed on the basis of their masculy or femy rather than the sex of their sexual partners.
GAY NEW YORK
In this way, workg-class mascule men, particularly sailors and laborers, uld have sex wh effemate "fairi" yet not be nsired "gay" (provid they were the one dog the peratg).
In Part II, Chncey scrib how gay men produced the space of an urban "gay world. Chncey not that, until the 1930s, thori would often take a hands-off approach unls gay men's prence moved beyond the tegory of harmls spectacle.
GAY NEW YORK SUMMARY
He also not the tensn between private and public, where gay men were often forced out of the public sphere to engage activi and socializg public areas (although plac such as parks and streets were often dangero). Fally, he pots to the velopment of two gay neighborhood enclav: Greenwich Village the 1910s (part of a larger bohemian culture) and Harlem the 1920s and 1930s (which was much more visible and vibrant).
GAY NEW YORK
Chncey not that until the 1930s, the spac, particular Harlem, beme a space for highly visible spectacl of gay life - for example, massive drag queen balls which thoands attend and were vered by the prs.
The unrme any notns of gay life beg eply the closet until the 1960s. Chncey ends wh a discsn of the cle of this gay world. Wh s repeal the state had broar surveillance and regulatory powers which they ed to lim gay public space.