[A]n easily digested recent history of the gay movement...dips into popular culture and coming out stories to analyze the astonishingly swift changes in the quality of queer life. --
The Montreal GazetteSeidman's analysis of the closet, its dimensions, characteristics, and effects on its inhabitants is thoughtful and compelling. As a sociologist, Seidman has important insights to share on the way people adapt to their 'closets,' and how human identities are largely reactive and contextual. --
Lambda Book ReportSeidman's new book is perfectly constructed with just the right dosage of history and sociology...What makes this book invaluable, among other qualities, is Seidman's courageous non-avoidance of a key question. -- Cercles
The moment of the closet may now have passed, but as Seidman shows, it continues to shadow many lives. However, the life chances of lesbians and gays have changed dramatically in recent years because of profound cultural changes in gay life and in wider patterns of intimacy. Seidman powerfully captures these changes, by allowing the voices of gays themselves to lead the presentation. The book vibrates with eloquence, pain, and passion. It combines rich interview material with a subtle but clear theoretical underpinning. This is a book both readable and illuminating. -- Jeffrey Weeks, author of
Same Sex Intimacies: Families of Choice and Other Life ExperiencesAmbitious and important. Seidman makes a crucial contribution to understanding sexual citizenship in the 21st century. -- Steven Epstein author of
Impure Science: AIDS, Activism and the Politics of KnowledgeSteven Seidman's
Beyond the Closet offers us a much-needed way out for achieving equality for gay people. His analysis is radical in spirit, yet conciliatory in style. This important book deserves a wide audience. -- Martin Duberman, Professor of History at CUNY and author of
Cures: A Gay Man's OdysseyThis elegant, engaging book by eminent social analyst Steven Seidman imaginatively charts the rise and demise of the era of the closet in gay history and politics...Eschewing polemics and posturing, Beyond the Closet provides a perfect antidote to mental mildew. -- Judith Stacey, author of
In the Name of the Family: Rethinking Family Values in the Postmodern AgeSeidman suggests there's been a profound shift in the meaning of gay and lesbian life. America has changed, calling into question the dominance of the closet and the division between the 'good heterosexual' and the 'polluted queer.' This is a powerful argument, theoretically sophisticated, empirically based, and compelling. -- Arlene Stein, author of
Sex and Sensibility: Stories of a Lesbian Generation