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Histories of gay and lesbian urban life typically focus on major
metropolitan areas like San Francisco and New York,
opportunity-filled destinations for LGBTQ migrants from across the
country. Yet there are many other queer communities in economically
depressed cities with majority Black and Hispanic populations that
receive far less attention. Though just a few miles from New York,
Newark is one of these cities, and its queer histories have been
neglected—until now.  Queer Newark charts a
history in which working-class people of color are the central
actors and in which violence, poverty, and homophobia could never
suppress joy, resistance, love, and desire. Drawing from rare
archives that range from oral histories to vice squad reports, this
collection’s authors uncover the sites and people of Newark’s
queer past in bars, discos, ballrooms, and churches. Exploring the
intersections of class, race, gender, and sexuality, they offer
fresh perspectives on the HIV/AIDS epidemic, community relations
with police, Latinx immigration, and gentrification, while
considering how to best tell the rich and complex stories of queer
urban life. Queer Newark reveals a new side of New
Jersey’s largest city while rewriting the history of LGBTQ life
in America. Â
In the mid-twentieth century, gay life flourished in American
cities even as the state repression of queer communities reached
its peak. Liquor investigators infiltrated and shut down
gay-friendly bars. Plainclothes decoys enticed men in parks and
clubs. Vice officers surveilled public bathrooms through peepholes
and two-way mirrors. In Vice Patrol, Anna Lvovsky chronicles this
painful story, tracing the tactics used to criminalize, profile,
and suppress gay life from the 1930s through the 1960s, and the
surprising controversies those tactics often inspired in court.
Lvovsky shows that the vice squads' campaigns stood at the center
of live debates about not only the law's treatment of queer people,
but also the limits of ethical policing, the authority of experts,
and the nature of sexual difference itself-debates that had often
unexpected effects on the gay community's rights and freedoms.
Examining those battles, Vice Patrol enriches understandings of the
regulation of queer life in the twentieth century and disputes
about police power that continue today.
In the mid-twentieth century, gay life flourished in American
cities even as the state repression of queer communities reached
its peak. Liquor investigators infiltrated and shut down
gay-friendly bars. Plainclothes decoys enticed men in parks and
clubs. Vice officers surveilled public bathrooms through peepholes
and two-way mirrors. In Vice Patrol, Anna Lvovsky chronicles this
painful story, tracing the tactics used to criminalize, profile,
and suppress gay life from the 1930s through the 1960s, and the
surprising controversies those tactics often inspired in court.
Lvovsky shows that the vice squads' campaigns stood at the center
of live debates about not only the law's treatment of queer people,
but also the limits of ethical policing, the authority of experts,
and the nature of sexual difference itself-debates that had often
unexpected effects on the gay community's rights and freedoms.
Examining those battles, Vice Patrol enriches understandings of the
regulation of queer life in the twentieth century and disputes
about police power that continue today.
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