The gay men's magaz QQ and Ciao! were unabashedly liberated, but they still tered to an exclive dience.
Contents:
DISVERG THE “GAY LIFTYLE” THROUGH 1970S MAGAZ
* gay magazine 80s *
Today, we remember the creasgly outspoken polil movement for gay and lbian rights. Lnched the sprg of 1969 wh the slogan “For Gay Guys Who Have No Hangups, ” QQ was a glossy nsumer magaze.
” But unlike gay liberatn magaz and newspapers of the time, voted ltle space to polics or activism. Hilrbrand wr that gay travel guis were not a wholly new ia.
In the 1950s and ’60s, some gay men turned word-of-mouth scriptns of lol scen to guis nsistg of the nam and addrs of bars, wh d scriptns. “The turn toward liftyle, straight and gay, volved a turn toward nsumptn as a form of self-ventn, yet the gay liftyle media stcted s rearshp not only how to bee ‘themselv, ’ as the straight publitns, but also how to bee gay, ” Hilrbrand wr.
REMEMBERG DAVID, JAX'S TRAILBLAZG GAY MAGAZE
While there have, undoubtedly, been signifint ton LGBT history earlier s, I believe the Eighti was a particularly important perd. That saw a major shift towards the emergence of a global gay culture. The gay genie me right out of s ltle pk bottle and to the streets (and the * gay magazine 80s *
’s photos reflected more racial and ethnic diversy than many other gay publitns of the time, that uld be seen more as a reflectn of fetishizatn than cln.