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Life Outside - The Signorile Report on Gay Men: Sex, Drugs, Muscles, and the Passages of Life
 
 
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Life Outside - The Signorile Report on Gay Men: Sex, Drugs, Muscles, and the Passages of Life [Hardcover]

Michelangelo Signorile (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 17, 1997

Popular Out magazine columnist Michelangelo Signorile
investigates the hot-button issues
confronting gay men today.

"Exhaustively researched, surpassingly perceptive."
--New York magazine

"Life Outside bravely advances a critique of the attitudes and ideologies that have shaped the gay 'scene' and merits the attention of a broad audience for its courage and informativeness."
--New York Times Book Review

"A stunning expose. Gay men should be handed three things when they come out of the closet: a box of condoms, a videocassette of George Cukor's The Women, and a copy of Life Outside."
--The Advocate

Michelangelo Signorile galvanized a generation of lesbians and gay men when he took on the "closets of power" in his 1992 classic Queer in America. Now, in Life Outside, he offers an expose of what he calls the "cult of masculinity" within contemporary gay male culture, while finding hope and renewal in other aspects of gay life. He reveals the origins of the current obsession in much of the gay community with an impossible physical ideal and explores the malevolent commercialization of gay sex.

Life Outside also identifies another, more positive phenomenon in the gay male world. With the expansion of the gay movement, with more gays coming out--and remaining--in suburban, small-town, and rural America, the urban "scene" is no longer setting the standard for what it is to be gay in America. With the "deghettoization" and "deurbanization" of homosexuality, we find men who challenge long-held assumptions about being gay, relationships, and coping with growing older. With first-person accounts from men who are moving into midlife with pride and vitality, Signorile points the way for all gay men to face the passages of life with a new maturity.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Michelangelo Signorile was an outspoken advocate of gay culture whose brush with mortality after engaging in risky sex changed his outlook on life. In Life Outside, Signorile, a columnist for Out magazine, explores the changing lifestyles and mores of gay men through interviewing and surveying hundreds of gays--in the cities, in the country, and everywhere in between. In addition, he provides a fascinating history of gay culture, from the closeted '50s, when most homosexuals found sexual release by "servicing" straight men, through the '70s and '80s, when physical beauty and promiscuity became the hallmarks of gay life.

From Library Journal

A columnist for Out magazine, Signorile (Queer in America, LJ 6/1/93) here urges gay men to shun what he calls the "cult of masculinity" that has been embraced by many gay men, particularly in the largest urban areas. In the first section?the best part of the book?Signorile describes the cult, traces its origins from shortly after Stonewall, describes the "circuit parties" firsthand, and documents the rampant use of steroids and other drugs among cultists. In Part 2, he posits recent trends toward the "deghettoization" and "deurbanization" of homosexuality, a move toward "postmodern monogamy," and a breakdown in the stereotype of the lonely old queen. Unfortunately, Signorile offers little reliable evidence for these trends and relies instead on data from an informal, unscientifically selected sample of several hundred men who are quoted or paraphrased at length. Also, many chapters read like expanded columns, good in themselves but not woven into an entirely cohesive argument. Overall, this is a good, readable book that could and should have been better. Recommended for larger collections.?Robert W. Melton, Univ. of Kansas Libs., Lawrence
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Harper; 1st edition (April 17, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060187611
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060187613
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.9 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,828,771 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The mirror can be painful..., September 25, 2000
By 
P. Cello (San Francisco,CA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
....Of course this isn't dry and erudite social criticism; it doesn't pretend to be. What it does do is pose some very difficult questions and shed light on some behaviors that gay men (including myself) must address. I have to admit that there were certainly things I did not agree with in Signorile's book. And the repetitveness of terminology and thoughts ocassionally grated, but by and large this book made me pause and think. That, whether passing the muster of pretentious dialectic dogma or not, is a clear representation of the power of an author who is uncovering something that is worth considering. And the fact that many other gay men have responded to this book so powerfully means that it IS speaking to some underlying deep questioning that folks are doing about what we as gay men have become post-Stonewall. As an Ivy- educated young gay urban professional, I am more than capable of distinguishing between what I consider to be great writing or not. And Signorile is not my only choice in the panolpy of authors writing contemporary gay social critcism. However, he is one I will continue to read until the things he says no longer feel/seem relevant to me
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful wake up call..., March 15, 2000
By 
This review is from: Life Outside - The Signorile Report on Gay Men: Sex, Drugs, Muscles, and the Passages of Life (Hardcover)
This book is a gem. The words and ideas in it ring very true, at least from this writers perspective. The pressure to be "cut, ripped and pumped", and to escape "Life" with drugs and fun is REAL. It was well on its way to destroying me before I jumped off the merry go round in the early 90's. Signorile is not preaching, nor is he buying into the "Cult of the Circuit". He freely admits he works out. He wants to look good. But not at any cost. His dipiction of the flight over the desert and mountains to yet another "Circuit party" was oddly chilling and yet sad. Are we(gay men) so desperate to "blend" and yet be noticed that the cycle of attention seeking behavior will not end? I did find that the disparity between the two types of lives led (Parts One and Two) was a bit too stark, and difficult to relate to. Having been to NYC and Chelsea several times-that description was more than apt. The looks from the "Pumped" to the "Non-pumped" are amazing-very withering and pitying. Signorile hit this one on the head. I think he is saying it is time to wake up, smell the coffee, and work on ourselves from the inside out, and not the other way around.
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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Seriously flawed and disappointing, March 12, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Life Outside - The Signorile Report on Gay Men: Sex, Drugs, Muscles, and the Passages of Life (Hardcover)
As a gay man who has lived in NYC since the 50s I found Signorile's picture of gay male life in the Fifties and Sixties and the judgements he made about those years to be a mass of threadbare cliches. Good God! Who did he interview to get such a narrow and crippled portrait of those years? He clearly lacks a knowledge of the broad range and nuancing of the gay male subculture of that era. This very poor beginning makes it difficult to take the rest of the book as seriously as Signorile clearly wants the reader to.

The "post-AIDS" era of the gay male subculture has been marked by a terribly uneasy attitude toward the preceding pre-AIDS era, and has seen the male subculture become something of a caboose on the train of feminism, with ambiguous and sometimes bogus issues of political correctness and the emulation of mainstream - white, middle class - goals and lifestyles being promoted as desiderata. Signorile's book is evidence of this interesting turn of events, but it is not much in the way of an analysis.

The entire work would have come off better if the author had skipped the assertions of research and simply done it as an confessional essay entitled something on the order of "Afraid of Ourselves."

George Chauncey's "Gay New York" was a credible study of the history and sociology of pre-WW II gay New York. We need something as fine and well done on the later years of gay American history. This book isn't it.

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First Sentence:
Somewhere between the gays-in-the-military issue and the first discussions in the halls of Congress of same-sex marriage in early 1996, I began to receive hundreds of letters and E-mails from gay men seeking advice-or just sharing their sorrows-about problems confronting them, issues for which the president or Congress could be of little to no avail. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
urban gay world, lonely old queen, great many gay men, commercial sexual culture, gay sexual culture, urban gay scene, urban gay ghettos, gay psychotherapists, many young gay men, negotiated safety, circuit queen, sex outside the relationship, gay men today, younger gay men, circuit parties, circuit men, sexual monogamy, unprotected oral sex, older gay men, circuit events, physical paradigms, gay male community, circuit party, steroid users, most gay men
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, White Party, Iowa City, Fire Island, West Hollywood, Palm Springs, Circuit Noize, South Beach, The Male Couple, United States, Morning Party, Steel Party, Oscar Wilde, Queer Nation, San Diego, Sioux City, American Express, Miami Beach, Royal Oak, Betty Berzon, Metropolitan Community Church, Michael Shernoff, Rosemary Caggiano
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