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Out of the Past: Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the Present
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Out of the Past: Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the Present

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2300288

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Description:

A unique and hugely absorbing narrative history of gay life—from Oscar Wilde to the first gay marriage performed in San Francisco in 2004—by the award-winning journalist and distinguished author of Out in the World and Sex- Crime Panic. Miller accompanies his narrative with essays and excerpts from contemporary and historical writings, and the text is illustrated with photos and line drawings.

Neil Miller is the author of Sex-Crime Panic and winner of the 2003 Randy Shilts Award for nonfiction and an American Library Association Stonewall Honor Book. He is also the author of In Search of Gay America, winner of the 1990 American Library Association prize for gay and lesbian literature. He teaches journalism and nonfiction writing at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts.

Product Details:
Author: Neil Miller
Paperback: 408 pages
Publisher: Advocate Books
Publication Date: November 01, 2008
Language: English
ISBN: 1555838707
Product Width: 1.25 centimeters
Product Height: 2.12 centimeters
Product Weight: 0.01 pounds
Package Length: 7.8 inches
Package Width: 5.4 inches
Package Height: 1.7 inches
Package Weight: 1.3 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 8 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 4.0 ( 8 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:

5A GREAT SURVEY OF GAY HISTORYMar 27, 1998

If you are interested in history, I highly suggest this book. Marginalized for eons, gay people are now an integral part of history. Relegated to the backburner, or whispered about in history sources, gay people have come forward with a great history. Within this collection, there are heartaches and triumphs, but always searching for the ideal of equality one day. Another good thing about this book is that it includes non-Western gay and lesbian history as well, yet another subject ignored by the "mainstream" history. An incredibly transfixing and fascinating book, I couldn't put it down, and read into the late hours of the evening.

6 of 7 found the following review helpful:

5Fascinating HistoryJul 24, 1998

Neil Miller's done a great job of pulling together aspects of (western) gay history. I've read some of the sources for his lesbian chapters and he uses them intelligently to summarise main points. I assume he's does the same with the male stuff and material from other countries which was previously unfamiliar to me. His style is readable, succinct and balanced about how we look at the past from our current viewpoints.

One feature of the book which is particularly pleasing is his use of extracts from writings he's referred to in his central text. This adds a good variety to the voice of the work AND the extracts are long enough (two or more pages in length) to inspire further study.

I also like A) the pictures of famous historical figures, there's something particularly moving about them, (I never knew Willa Cather was so gorgeous!)

and B) the balance of genders and countries covered is better than average.

My advice - read it!

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:

2Would have been great- if it were accurate.Mar 01, 2011

I've been reading this book (and using it as a main reference point for a thesis paper) when I noticed a few date and fact discrepancies. This book states things that are completely different from dozens of other sources I have, and maybe some of them are right, but I know, without a doubt that a few of them were wrong. And I just noticed one isolated incident, but if one error is there, I don't feel I can trust the validity of the rest of the book.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:

5Awesome Histories!May 09, 2009
By Charley Lang "chas.lang"
This book is the BEST resource I have found on capturing the multi-faceted, insightful, humorous and moving stories of gay and lesbian history in our country (and abroad). As a professor of psychology, this is an invaluable text for numerous history classes. Kudos to Neal Miller for researching this rich, rich history, written in a manner that is imminently engaging and fascinating.

4 of 5 found the following review helpful:

3Miller's history shares the problems of writing about gay historyJul 06, 2009
By J. Edwards
Past gay histories have suffered from similar deficiencies. Although Miller has made a commendable effort, as a college history professor, I see these problems abundantly present in Miller's narrative. The following is a brief list: Until the last twenty years or so few gay histories were written by historians and as such they were poorly documented, biased, rarely analytical, and in the case of Miller's very poorly edited. In particular, the typos in Miller's narrative are far too numerous. This could result from a dearth of interest in the field in major publishing houses.

The second is that the pre-World War II era was practiced and written about in private with a considerable interest in survivors of those who we fashion as gay in destroying documentation that might provide the primary resources to support the societal and legal pressures that prevent us from truly knowing the pain suffered within. The best gay histories certainly lie ahead but unless the absence of sound evidence to support autobiographical homosexuality can be overcome to replace speculation with fact, gay history will remain as locked as the mystery of the Lost Colony.

Thirdly, there is rare coverage of the marriage of practicing one's gayness with urbanization. Therefore, we get histories which neglect the blight of gayness in and to the rural/small town gay population and we reinvigorate the notion that urban equals gay freedom without showing the sociological implications that subvert the need to adopt a night culture, bar culture, entertainment culture, and an urban culture as gays are forced to submerge their inclinations to previous formative small town behavior patterns. In short, there are two adjustments to gay freedom: to the urban environment and to the open practice of being gay within that newly learned environment. This duality layers adaption for gays which is far more complex than it would be for heterosexuals who can always return to the small town world and practice their sexuality unchallenged. Gay historians have a very difficult time grappling with the birth of one culture and the death of another that every newly urbanized gay faces.

Miller also subscribes to the fallacy that the United States is still the major bastion of gay liberation. There is no comparable area in the United States that could match London, Berlin, or Amsterdam for gay freedom nor has the nation moved as a whole with the rapidity of other western countries to mainstream homosexualtiy. It is impossible to think of any major city in this country including San Francisco and New York where a same-sex couple could stroll every area of that city hand-in-hand and kiss at will without being fearful in some of those neighborhoods. Such freedom of expression exists in a number of European cities and small towns.

Also, it is quite disturbing to continue to treat the butch-femme coupling in lesbians without presenting a case that many lesbians do not parrot maleness in their relationships and abhor the idea of bonding with the penisless man.

Finally, the dawning of the Age of Gayquarius is rarely mentioned in gay histories. With each passing year I observe an increase in the number of students who approve of a gay marriage initiative, freedom of expression, and civil liberties for homosexuals. There undoubtedly is a New Progressive Era especially in the arena of personal liberties on the horizon. Authors give very little account of such trending. The time of police raids and gay baiting will soon be completely dead in Western countries. As transnationalism replaces globalization, the rest of the world will not lag far behind.

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