As Jewish arts centre JW3 celebrat the bt of LGBT culture, and the release of BFI-backed documentary Who’s Gonna Love Me Now? draws closer, we remember some of the bt Jewish and Israeli gay and lbian films.
Contents:
- A GAY JEWISH READG LIST
- MEET DR. JSE EHRENFELD: A JEWISH VETERAN, AND THE FIRST OPENLY GAY PRINT OF THE AMA
- JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS ASSISTANT STRENGTH ACH KEV MAXEN OUT PUBLICLY AS GAY
A GAY JEWISH READG LIST
When I was first g out 25 years ago, there were prec few books about beg gay and Jewish. But will anyone who isn’t gay read them?
Conventnal wisdom the publishg dtry says that non-gay people won’t read books wh gay them — wh the notable exceptn of works by humorists, such as David Sedaris or Augten Burroughs, who play their liv for lghs. Straight people n’t relate serly to gay life, the thkg go; they don’t know om such thgs, and they don’t want to know.
Even if there’s a kernel of tth that notn — and I fear, sadly, that there often is — straight Jewish rears particular should be able to bridge this culture gap by choosg Jewish gay books: While some of the gay ntent might be unfaiar, at least the Jewish ntent will provi a pot of intifitn. If you’ve never read a book wh gay characters and them, I hope this’ll be your first. There are dozens, perhaps hundreds, of books on gay Jewish subjects.
MEET DR. JSE EHRENFELD: A JEWISH VETERAN, AND THE FIRST OPENLY GAY PRINT OF THE AMA
At the risk of leavg out many books and thors whose work is worth your time, here’s a brief list of GLBT books that non-gay Jewish rears will relate to.
If you’ve got a particular area of Jewish tert, there’s probably a gay-themed book that’s right for you. If you enjoy readg about Israel, check out “Between Sodom and En, ” by Lee Walzer, about the (mostly posive) suatn for gay Israelis. If you’re drawn to Holot tal, read Gad Beck’s “An Unrground Life, ” the te (and tly amazg) story of a gay Jew who survived the Holot hidg Berl.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS ASSISTANT STRENGTH ACH KEV MAXEN OUT PUBLICLY AS GAY
Gay? “Sweet Like Sugar” isn’t the only novel about gay and Jewish subjects. Two of my favor are “The Same Embrace” by Michael Lowenthal (about tw brothers divid by religsy and sexualy), and “Fah for Begners” by Aaron Hamburger (about a mother and her gay son on a journey of surprisg self-disvery Israel).
Rosenthal through “Eighty-Sixed” Feberg’s dazzlg but novel, which ntrasts gay life New York before the epimic to a time when gay men started dyg drov.