“He has all that virily,” Steve Bannon told The Spectator of London. “He also had amazg fashn sense, right, that whole thg wh the uniforms.” Social media feeds l up wh quips about the homoerotic subtext of Bannon’s Msoli csh. This may have been an unexpected stance of a nnectn ma between fascism and gay masculism, but is hardly whout precent. If fascism has had an allure for gay men, is anti-egalarianism that provis the nnective tissue—the belief that homosexualy belongs to an ele ste.
Contents:
- THE PK TRIANGLE: FROM NAZI LABEL TO SYMBOL OF GAY PRI
- GAY MEN UNR THE NAZI REGIME - PHOTOGRAPHS
- GAY MEN UNR THE NAZI REGIME
THE PK TRIANGLE: FROM NAZI LABEL TO SYMBOL OF GAY PRI
* gay nazi uniforms *
He was received that day wh meras, bouquets of flowers, and a greetg om the openly gay former mayor of Berl, Kls seven s earlier, Brazda survived a spell Buchenwald, the ncentratn mp to which he was sent havg twice been arrted for vlatg Paragraph 175, the German law prohibg male homosexual activy.
GAY MEN UNR THE NAZI REGIME - PHOTOGRAPHS
Pk triangl were origally ed ncentratn mps to intify gay men. * gay nazi uniforms *
Published 2016, Whisnant’s book subverts the notn that the only queer people targeted durg the Third Reich were gay men, suggtg stead that the Nazi party’s broar terpretatn of Paragraph 175 meant that a small portn of terned dividuals were what we today would ll genr-nonnformg or trans. What’s more, Whisnant pots out that while lbian women were not necsarily arrted bee of their sexualy, that is neher to say that some lbian women did not end up ncentratn mps, nor that the homophobia of the time didn’t impact them more broadly.
GAY MEN UNR THE NAZI REGIME
”Nazi-era propaganda, like this 1933 electn poster, often prented an ialized, homoerotic-tged view of ArchiveWhatever illn of acceptance queer members of the Nazi party might have felt the early 1930s vanished the aftermath of a pivotal event lled The Night of the Long Kniv.