Unlimited Embrace: A Canon of Gay Fiction, 1945-1995University of Massachusetts Press, 1998 - 338 pagina's In this pathbreaking book, a gay literary critic evaluates a half-century of fictional works "by, for, and about" homosexual men and situates them in the context of an emerging American gay culture. Reed Woodhouse shows how the best gay fiction of the period, like all good literature, not only reflected but anticipated social changes that were afoot -- from the founding of the first enduring gay rights organizations through the Stonewall riots to the ambiguous mainstreaming of homosexuality that continues today. Written in a personal voice, Unlimited Embrace is as much about gay identity as about gay literature. The canon Woodhouse constructs is not merely a list of gay books worth reading, but a guide to "leading a good life as a gay man" as well. In the fiction of Tennessee Williams, James Baldwin, Christopher Isherwood, James Purdy, Edmund White, Andrew Holleran, Larry Kramer, Ethan Mordden, Dennis Cooper, David Leavitt, and Neil Bartlett, Woodhouse finds intimate glimpses of lives previously veiled in euphemism, slander, and contempt and now striving to take new form. More than that, he raises questions about sexual identity and desire, defiance and wit, that are as relevant to straight readers as to gay ones. Although the book ends with a sober consideration of the literary legacy of AIDS, Unlimited Embrace is more celebration than lament -- an affirmation of the enduring power of literature to shape life. |
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... AIDS NOVELS Like Ethan Mordden's " The Dinner Party , " many of the most successful pieces of AIDS writing have been in short forms : the lyric poem , the play or film , the short story . I think of the poetry collections by Mark Doty ...
... AIDS fiction ? It hurts me to reread them [ his own stories in The Body and Its Dangers ] . " 3 I remember refusing to read Randy Shilts's And the Band Played On for the same reason . The only book I wanted to read about AIDS , I said ...
... AIDS . Semen is deadly both to the writer and to the man . " How can we sing the Lord's songs in a strange land ? " lamented the Psalmist . Peck , like many belated gay novelists , wonders how to sing the sex song in a land where sex is ...
Inhoudsopgave
1 | 17 |
Tennessee Williamss Gay Short Stories | 35 |
2 | 51 |
Copyright | |
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