Gay Lives
Homosexual Autobiography from John Addington Symonds to Paul Monette
Paul Robinson reads the memoirs of French, British, and American gay authors—André Gide, Quentin Crisp, and Martin Duberman, among others—through the prism of sexual identity, asking fascinating questions about homosexuality and its relation to literary form. How did these authors discover their sexual identity? Did they embrace it or reject it? How did they express often conflicted desires in their words, which ranged from defiant and brutally frank to ambiguous and abstract? Robinson considers the choices each made—as a man and an author—to accommodate himself to society's homophobia or live in protest against his oppression.
Despite the threads that connect these stories, Gay Lives refutes the notion that there is a typical homosexual "career" by showing that gay men have led wildly dissimilar lives—from the exuberant to the miserable—and that they have found no less dissimilar meanings in those lives.
1. The Man of Letters and the Don
John Addington Symonds and Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson
The Memoirs of John Addington Symonds
The Autobiography of G. Lowes Dickinson
2. Auden & Co
Christopher Isherwood and Stephen Spender
Lions and Shadows
World within World
Christopher and His Kind
3. The Detective and the Comedian
J. R. Ackerley and Quentin Crisp
My Father and Myself
The Naked Civil Servant
4. Three French Novelists
André Gide, Jean Genet, and Julien Green
Si le grain ne meurt
Journal du voleur
Jeunes and années
5. Two American Diarists
Jeb Alexander and Donald Vining
Jeb and Dash
A Gay Diary
6. The Closet and Its Discontents
Andrew Tobias, Martin Duberman, and Paul Monette
The Best Little Boy in the World
Cures
Becoming a Man
Epilogue
Sources
Index
Literature and Literary Criticism: American and Canadian Literature | British and Irish Literature | Romance Languages
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