Ben.,Gove

Cruising Culture: Promiscuity and Desire in Contemporary American Gay Culture

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360 printed pages
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Quotes

  • Igor Sinelnikovhas quoted4 years ago
    we look back at this period and see only three features: drugs, attitude, and kinky sex. We pathologize the men and the culture of the 1970s from what we consider the superior morality of the 1990s. Huge numbers of men who participated most intensely in gay culture in the 1970s are dead and thus unable to provide voices that would broaden recollections and perspectives on those years. Many men died ugly and painful deaths, yet never stopped valuing the erotic experiences of those years and died with no regrets.72

    While White realistically draws attention to the intermittent selfishness, excess and attitude of that era – qualities which can, of course, be unearthed in various forms in any period of history – his novel partly functions as a corrective to such smug justifications of an anti-promiscuous agenda for the present with a simplistically anti-promiscuous reading of the past. Indeed, The Farewell Symphony’s implicit defence of gay promiscuity, in all its difficult complexity, against this prevalent gay and straight cultural marriage-and-monogamy mandate became explicit when Kramer attacked White in his 1997 ‘Sex and sensibility’

    article for writing a novel that ‘parades before the reader what seems to be every trick he’s ever sucked, fucked, rimmed, tied up, pissed on, or been sucked by, fucked by, rimmed by, tied up by – you get the idea.

    There are so many faceless, indistinguishable pieces of flesh that litter these 500 pages that reading them becomes, for any reasonably sentient human being, at first a heartless experience and finally a boring one.’73

    In response to Kramer’s wilfully selective accoun
  • Igor Sinelnikovhas quoted4 years ago
    promiscuity than Rechy’s fiction. To be more specific, although both writers express an erotic fascination with butch (and/or straight) men, unlike Rechy’s variously defensive and self-conscious machismo, Wojnarowicz only ever indirectly identifies with conventional forms of ‘masculinity’. (More on this
  • Igor Sinelnikovhas quoted4 years ago
    nor our joy in each other . . . [T]hat meant we had to write it ourselves, learn by living it out’120; Rechy’s observation in City of Night of heterosexual women’s

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