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The Meaning of Gay: Interaction, Publicity, and Community among Homosexual Men in 1960s San Francisco [Paperback]

J. Todd Ormsbee (Author)

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Book Description

March 8, 2010 0739115987 978-0739115985
The Meaning of Gay traces the conflicts among San Francisco's gay men and with the dominant society, describing the broad range of meanings they came to ascribe onto gayness between 1962 and 1972. Combining historical method, symbolic interaction, and the concerns of John Dewey's pragmatism, the book explains why gay men created the meanings they did and challenges the prevailing view that the 1960s was merely the transformation of an assimilationist gay politic into a radical one.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Freshly theorized through John-Dewey pragmatism and historically grounded in rigorous archival research, J. Todd Ormsbee delivers a compelling story about gay-and-lesbian politics in 1960s and early-1970s San Francisco. The Meaning of Gay amply demonstrates the complex politics—sometimes uncertain and often contentious—that a specific community engaged in order to claim justice for their queer identities; indeed, the stakes were high and directly affected their lives. Undoubtedly, the political stakes The Meaning of Gay recounts still resonate to this day. (David A. Gerstner )

Ormsbee leads us on a skillfully documented journey through 1960s San Francisco, as gay men individually and collectively struggled to transform how they and others viewed their sexual identities and practices. He offers a detailed mapping of the contested landscape of private and public gay sexuality culminating in the first gay pride march in 1972—a moment of celebration and spectacle that paved a path into the present. Anyone interested in U.S. cultural history should read this book. (Joane Nagel )

Ormsbee provides a rich ethnographic account of gay cultural history in that embryonic period before Stonewall. His claims about the complexity of the gay male community experience are important not only for how we understand culture as a developmental and ongoing process of contested meaning-making, but also as a bracing tonic to those in the social sciences who clamor for parsimony at the expense of recognizing the complicated nuances comprising human realities.... (Stephen M. Engel )

Ormsbee provides a rich ethnographic account of gay cultural history in that embryonic period before Stonewall. His claims about the complexity of the gay male community experience are important not only for how we understand culture as a developmental and ongoing process of contested meaning-making, but also as a bracing tonic to those in the social sciences who clamor for parsimony at the expense of recognizing the complicated nuances comprising human realities. (Stephen M. Engel )

From the Author

Homosexual men in San Francisco had started the 1960s interacting mostly in private, informal groups, meeting in bars and house parties. But by 1972, the city had a "gay community" and "gay pride," all celebrated with a parade. Through numerous organizations and publications, gay men created a counter-publicity to fight against their domination and subordination, and had begun to try to build a community that would foster deeper, more meaningful relationships with each other. The emergent counter-publicity and community in turn created the social spaces necessary for gay men to create an expanding range of possible meanings for their "gayness," meanings that aligned more closely with their experiences and which better helped them meet their needs and desires. The gayness they created could expand and contract depending on the needs and circumstances of the individual or group. 

Rather than the typical story of the evolution from "conservative" to "radical" social movement,The Meaning of Gay sees the development of gay politics as the shift from the need to establish a public-facing gayness in the early 1960s, to the community building efforts that began in the mid-1960s, through the efforts to create a gayness based in authenticity, brotherhood, and revolution in the early 1970s. Each of these developments flowed from gay men's responses to the swiftly changing San Francisco and American environment. The dramatic explosion of possibilities for gayness that emerged during the 1960s may serve as a touchstone for those concerned with the problems of gay male life in the twenty-first century. This book traces these developments as they were recorded in the gay periodicals of the era, and analyzes them from the perspective of John Dewey's theory of mind, desire, public, valuation, and democratic community.

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More About the Author

I'm a sociologist teaching in an American Studies program at San José State University. I'm a symbolic interactionist in the core tradition that comes from William James, George H. Mead, and John Dewey, and I research the ways that interaction within a specific environment produces meaning. My interests, both teaching and research, are broad, including sexuality, globalization, religion, and pop culture. I also read frequently and deeply in social theory, especially the modernists (Marx, Durkheim, Weber, Dewey) and the contemporary theorists most concerned with democracy and multiculturalism and substantive (as opposed to symbolic) justice (Calhoun, Fraser, Appiah, etc.). I received my Ph.D. in American Studies at the University of Kansas in 2004, and I've been teaching at the University level since 1996, in sociology, history, and American Studies (at University of Kansas, San Francisco State University, University of San Francisco, and now at San Jose State University).

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