400
700
900
Some Men In London: Queer Life, 1945-1959
Peter Parker

Some Men In London: Queer Life, 1945-1959

Penguin Classics (2024)
1st Edition
9780241370605
| Hardcover
458 pages | United Kingdom | EN
Value: € 39.45

Genre

  • Anthology
  • Gay & Lesbian

Subject

  • Gay Men - Great Britain
  • Gay Men - History
  • Gay Men/ Biography

Plot

In the 1940s, it was believed that homosexuality had been becoming more widespread in the aftermath of war. A moral panic ensued, centred around London as the place to which gay men gravitated. In a major new anthology, Peter Parker explores what it was actually like for queer men in London in this period, whether they were well-known figures such as John Gielgud, 'Chips' Channon and E.M. Forster, or living lives of quiet - or occasionally rowdy - anonymity in pubs, clubs, more public places of assignation, or at home. It is rich with letters, diaries, psychological textbooks, novels, films, plays and police records, covering a wide range of viewpoints, from those who deplored homosexuality to those who campaigned for its decriminalisation. This first volume, from 1945 to 1959, details a community forced to live at constant risk of blackmail or prison. Yet it also shows a thriving and joyous subculture, one that enriched a mainstream culture often ignorant of its debt to gay creators. Some Men In London is a testament to queer life, which was always much more complex than newspapers, governments and the Metropolitan Police Force imagined.