Love's next meeting The forgotten history of homosexuality and the left in American culture

Aaron Lecklider

Book - 2021

"Well before Stonewall, a broad cross section of sexual dissidents took advantage of their space on the margins of American society to throw themselves into leftist campaigns. Sensitive already to sexual marginalization, they also saw how class inequality was exacerbated by the Great Depression, witnessing the terrible bread lines and bread riots of the era. They participated in radical labor campaigns, sympathized like many with the early, prewar Soviet Union, contributed to the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War, opposed US police and state harassment, fought racial discrimination, and aligned themselves with the dispossessed. Whether they were themselves straight, gay, or otherwise queer, they brought sexual dissidence and radical...ism into conversation at the height of the Left's influence on American culture. Combining rich archival research with inventive analysis of art and literature, Love's Next Meeting explores the relationship between homosexuality and the Left in American culture between 1920 and 1960. Author Aaron S. Lecklider uncovers a lively cast of individuals and dynamic expressive works revealing remarkably progressive engagement with homosexuality among radicals, workers, and the poor. Leftists connected sexual dissidence with radical gender politics, antiracism, and challenges to censorship and obscenity laws through the 1920s and 1930s. In the process, a wide array of activists, organizers, artists, and writers laid the foundation for building a radical movement through which homosexual lives and experiences were given shape and new political identities were forged. Love's Next Meeting cuts to the heart of some of the biggest questions in American history: questions about socialism, about sexuality, about the supposed clash still making the headlines today between leftist politics and identity politics. What emerges is a dramatic, sexually vibrant story of the shared struggles for liberation across the twentieth century"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

306.766/Lecklider
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 306.766/Lecklider Checked In
Subjects
Published
Oakland, California : University of California Press [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Aaron Lecklider (author)
Physical Description
xv, 354 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780520381421
  • List of Illustrations
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Deviant Politics
  • 1. "Flaunting the Transatlantic Breeze": Sexual Dissidents on the Left
  • 2. "After Sex, What?": Politicizing Sex on the Left
  • 3. "To Be One with the People": Homosexuality and the Cultural Front
  • 4. "If I Can Die under You": Homosexuality and Labor on the Left
  • 5. "Socialism & Sex Is What I Want": Women, Gender, and Sexual Dissidence in the 1930s and 1940s
  • 6. "Playing the Queers": Homosexuality in Proletarian Literature
  • 7. "We Who Are Not Ill": Queer Antifascism
  • 8. "The Secret Element of Their Vice": Deviant Politics in the Cold War
  • List of Abbreviations
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Love's Next Meeting might best be described as an erotic history of American Communism in the first half of the 20th century. Rather than treat political radicalism and dissident sexuality as discrete phenomena, Lecklider (Univ. of Massachusetts, Boston) convincingly demonstrates how sexual "deviance" and anti-capitalist views coevolved alongside racial and immigrant justice and women's liberation in the context of the US's diversifying urban centers. Lecklider uses archival collections, paintings, poems, and other cultural ephemera to uncover this forgotten history. The chapters consider sexuality's role from different perspectives: in leftist organizations, among key radical constituencies (laborers, women, the urban poor), and in key moments in the history of the American Left (the National Front, the Cold War). Students of sexuality, American radicalism, and urban history will learn much from Love's Next Meeting. The book recalls other explorations at the nexus of sexuality and leftist politics, including Daniel Hurewitz's Bohemian Los Angeles (CH, Dec'07, 45-2219), Terrence Kissack's Free Comrades (2008), and Sarah Schulman's Let the Record Show (2021). Lecklider's analysis of sexuality and the urban built environment also echoes George Chauncey's Gay New York (CH, Nov'94, 32-1725). Summing Up: Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty. --H. Howell Williams, Western Connecticut State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.