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Queer London: Perils and Pleasures in the Sexual Metropolis, 1918-1957 (The Chicago Series on Sexuality, History, and Society)
 
 
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Queer London: Perils and Pleasures in the Sexual Metropolis, 1918-1957 (The Chicago Series on Sexuality, History, and Society) [Hardcover]

Matt Houlbrook (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0226354601 978-0226354606 September 3, 2005 1
In August 1934, young Cyril L. wrote to his friend Billy about all the exciting men he had met, the swinging nightclubs he had visited, and the vibrant new life he had forged for himself in the big city. He wrote, "I have only been queer since I came to London about two years ago, before then I knew nothing about it." London, for Cyril, meant boundless opportunities to explore his newfound sexuality. But his freedom was limite: he was soon arrested, simply for being in a club frequented by queer men.

Cyril's story is Matt Houlbrook's point of entry into the queer worlds of early twentieth-century London. Drawing on previously unknown sources, from police reports and newspaper exposés to personal letters, diaries, and the first queer guidebook ever written, Houlbrook here explores the relationship between queer sexualities and modern urban culture that we take for granted today. He revisits the diverse queer lives that took hold in London's parks and streets; its restaurants, pubs, and dancehalls; and its Turkish bathhouses and hotels—as well as attempts by municipal authorities to control and crack down on those worlds. He also describes how London shaped the culture and politics of queer life—and how London was in turn shaped by the lives of queer men. Ultimately, Houlbrook unveils the complex ways in which men made sense of their desires and who they were. In so doing, he mounts a sustained challenge to conventional understandings of the city as a place of sexual liberation and a unified queer culture.

A history remarkable in its complexity yet intimate in its portraiture, Queer London is a landmark work that redefines queer urban life in England and beyond.

“A ground-breaking work. While middle-class lives and writing have tended to compel the attention of most historians of homosexuality, Matt Houlbrook has looked more widely and found a rich seam of new evidence. It has allowed him to construct a complex, compelling account of interwar sexualities and to map a new, intimate geography of London.”—Matt Cook, The Times Higher Education Supplement
 
Winner of History Today’s Book of the Year Award, 2006

(20060110)


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

What begins as the story of Cyril L., who, at 20, was married and had a daughter, but discovered he was gay shortly after moving to London's West End in 1932, quickly turns into an overwhelming sprawl of meticulous research that, despite its commendable intentions, is too dense to appeal to anyone other than very devoted scholars. Houlbrook, a lecturer in history at the University of Liverpool, examines London's roles in self-discovery and its inextricable links to gay culture, but often loses the reader within the vast tracts of information he presents in his historic tour of "London's queer geography," which has frequent stops at public urinals ("identified as the locus of sexual offences"), clubs, bathhouses, police patrols (one officer concludes in a surveillance report the two men he'd been observing were "undoubtedly of the Nancy type," while his colleague determined the men were, actually, "West End Poofs.") and courtrooms. Surely, there is no dearth of material presented, but some tidbits, such as public urinal geography and the detailed order of police units detached to apprehend "sodomites," come off as frivolous and detract from what could be an engaging read.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

“Through an extensive trawl of police records, Matt Houlbrook provides an insight into the dangers and excitements of the underground homosexual scene during the first half of the 20th century. Homosexual behaviour was still an imprisonable offence, yet Houlbrook shows how men defined their own spaces in the metropolis, establishing covert places where they could meet like-minded men. . . . This is a well-researched book which adds to recent scholarship in the history of sexuality. The author challenges the rigid views found in current observations of homosexuality extending our understanding by, quite rightly, placing into the broader overall pattern of changing masculinity.”—Julie Peakman, BBC History

(Julie Peakman BBC History )

“From the dockside pubs and river steps of the East End to the glittering Long Bar of the Trocadero; from the Savoy Turkish Baths in Jermyn Street to the stinking cast-iron urinals on Fair Street in Bermondsey, Houlbrook’s narrative meanders across a capital city as protean as the middle-class men and working-class boys who lived and lusted, loved and (more often than not) loitered and lost within it.”—Peter J. M. Wayne, Spectator

(Peter J. M. Wayne Spectator )

Queer London explores the relationship between gay sexualities and modern urban culture, revisiting the restaurants, pubs, dance halls, Turkish baths and hotels of London, and shows how municipal authorities tried to crack down on these worlds.”—History Today

(History Today )

“As Queer London makes remarkably clear, just a few decades ago, significant numbers of (working-class) young men were not only moving freely between male and female partners but were happy to brag about it. So long as they were ‘butch’ and active—or claimed they were—it would merely enhance their reputation with the lads.”—Sunday Independent

(Sunday Independent )

Peter Furtado calls it “not a story of persecution, but a lucid, sane and fascinating account of how gay people negotiated space for themselves within a hostile cultural environment, dealing with policing, housing, geography, identity and politics. . . . It will also make readers think about London and its public spaces differently.”
(Longman-History Today Book Awards )

"A ground-breaking work. While middle-class lives and writing have tended to compel the attention of most historians of homosexuality, Matt Houlbrook has looked more widely and found a rich seam of new evidence. It has allowed him to construct a complex, compelling account of interwar sexualities and to map a new, intimate geography of London. . . . Houlbrook vividly illustrates the significance of actual places and things in London, and so indicates the importance of material culture to the way men were experiencing themselves and each other. He takes chiffon, suede, lipstick, powder and puffs, urinals, parks, pavements, shops, bars and lodging houses as seriously as sexological tomes and earnest fiction. All of these were, after all, the stuff of everyday life. . . . All this vivid detail is delivered with analytic acumen and theoretical sophistication. We rarely lose sight of the point of stories and anecdotes as they build to illustrate arguments about the city and the plural and shifting understandings of queer sex and affections. Houlbrook reminds us that there was no singular queer type or unified queer scene, and neither is there a seamless queer history telling the story of progressive liberation."--Matt Cook, The Times Higher Education Supplement
(Matt Cook The Times Higher Education Supplement )

"Houlbrook, in this well-researched and fascinating study, seeks to rescue the lives of men who loved other men . . . from the ''condescension of posterity.'' Drawing upon personal memoirs, novels and criminal records he depicts a population which lived in a very different framework from that of gay men today."—Bob Cant, The Lecturer
(Bob Cant The Lecturer )

"This theoretically informed, innovative, cleverly researched, subtle, graceful, brilliant book demonstrates just how good history can be. . . . Althgough Houlbrook has published some of the material before in well-crafted articles, none of them prepares the reader for the sheer power and delight of this book."—Barry Reay, American Historical Review
(Barry Reay American Historical Review )

"Houlbrook weaves together a rich diversity of material—oral and published memoirs, biographies, newspaper reports and opinion pieces. and a vast range of archival materials—into a compelling and thought-provoking narrative."—Lesley A. Hall, Urban History
(Lesley A. Hall Urban History )

"In this ambitious study, Matt Houlbrook shows why for many men coming to London and becoming homosexual were part of the same process. . . . Engaging and well written."
(Angus McLaren Journal of Modern History )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 398 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press; 1 edition (September 3, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226354601
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226354606
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.3 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,364,614 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A dry, technical, and academic look at queer subculture, March 2, 2011
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A dry, technical, and academic look at queer subculture in London between 1918 and 1957. Interesting in that it reduces to a science the rather inexpressible notions and progressions of gay life. There is certainly a parallel to be found between the passive->excluded->marginalized->subculture->pride progression of gays and other social movements. Houlbrook tries to weave in personal stories that humanize the concepts presented, and while he does a good job in those parts, the people reading such a book are in no need of convincing; the parts serve only to make the technical bits endurable. A great book, I'm sure, for academics, but not for pleasure reading.

Continued at: [...]
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5.0 out of 5 stars A brilliant history!, March 21, 2011
Perhaps it isn't for non-academics. But this book is an invaluable examination of the tension between public v. private and the ways in which queer subculture played out in the metropole of London. With a vast array of sources, Houlbrook challenges the traditional Whiggish history that suggests there was a "coming out" moment for gay men in London. He skillfully recreates the "underground" society of queer culture that emerged in response to police scrutiny and the increasingly private culture of homosexuality in the 20th century. His four main sections on Police, Places, People, and Politics create an easy to follow structure, and his thread of the public and private practices of queer culture are thoroughly refreshing. This is a must read, perhaps not for the public at large, but for grad students, professors, and those interested in a new interpretation of the progression of gay rights and culture in Europe.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
queer urban culture, queer urban life, queer sociability, queer social networks, public queer culture, rooming districts, other queer men, commercial sociability, sexual offences laws, queer venues, boy menace, purity organizations, public sociability, young workingmen, painted boys, bourgeois observers, commercial venues, queer life, medical etiologies, male sexual practices, metropolitan magistrates, queer lives, hegemonic understandings
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
West End, Second World War, Hyde Park, John Bull, Piccadilly Circus, Michael Schofield, John Alcock, First World War, Emlyn Williams, Waterloo Road, Taylor Croft, News of the World, Running Horse, Quentin Crisp, Leicester Square, Harrow Road, Robert Hutton, Alex Purdie, Dilly Boy, Thomas Burke, John Lehmann, Edgware Road, Maida Vale, East End, Holland Park Avenue
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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