As recently as the 1970s, gay and lesbian history was a
relatively unexplored field for serious scholars. The past quarter
century, however, has seen enormous growth in gay and lesbian
studies. The literature is now voluminous; it is also widely
scattered and not always easily accessible. In Toward Stonewall,
Nicholas Edsall provides a much-needed synthesis, drawing upon both
scholarly and popular writings to chart the development of
homosexual subcultures in the modern era and the uneasy place they
have occupied in Western society.
Edsall's survey begins three hundred years ago in northwestern
Europe, when homosexual subcultures recognizably similar to those
of our own era began to emerge, and it follows their surprisingly
diverse paths through the Enlightenment to the early nineteenth
century. The book then turns to the Victorian era, tracing the
development of articulate and self-aware homosexual subcultures.
With a greater sense of identity and organization came new forms of
resistance: this was the age that saw the persecution of Oscar
Wilde, among others, as well as the medical establishment's
labeling of homosexuality as a sign of degeneracy.
The book's final section locates the foundations of present-day
gay sub-cultures in a succession of twentieth-century scenes and
events--in pre-Nazi Germany, in the lesbian world of interwar
Paris, in the law reforms of 1960s England--culminating in the
emergence of popular movements in the postwar United States.
Rather than examining these groups in isolation, the book
considers them in their social contexts and as comparable to other
subordinate groups and minority movements. In the process, Toward
Stonewall illuminates not only the subcultures that are its primary
subject but the larger societies from which they emerged.
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