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"A beautiful, beguiling journey to the ultimate queer utopia" -
Olivia Laing "Clued-up but insatiably thirsty, poignant, packed
with literary intrigue, Fire Island is a beaming beach read" -
Jeremy Atherton Lin --- Fire Island: a slim strip of land off the
coast of New York, and a place of hedonism, reinvention,
liberation. Arriving on the island after a break-up back home in
England, scholar and poet Jack Parlett was beguiled by what he
found. Here were the halcyon scenes of Frank O'Hara's poetry; the
bars where Patricia Highsmith got drunk; the infamous cruising
sites; and the dazzling beaches where couples had fallen in and out
of love, free for a sun-kissed moment to be themselves in the time
before gay liberation. Tracing Fire Island's rich history, Parlett
leads the reader through the early days of the island's life as a
discreet home for same-sex love, to the wild parties of the
post-Stonewall disco era, to the residents' confrontation with the
AIDS epidemic, and into a present where a host of new challenges
threaten the island's future. Lyrical and vivid, Fire Island is a
hymn to an iconic destination, and to the men and women whose
ardour and determination spread freedom across its shores.
To Die Alive conjures a hedonistic fever dream of Fire Island's
historic gay communities. The book contains 77 photographs by New
York artist Matthew Leifheit taken by night over the past five
years. The pictures show a world of desire layered in history,
including the Ice Palace bar's infamous underwear party, the
men-only Belvedere Guesthouse, clandestine encounters in the Meat
Rack, and landscapes in all seasons of the island's delicate
maritime forest. The wide-ranging subjects of Leifheit's portraits
are the intergenerational community who come to the island for
refuge or employment, ranging from sugar daddies to bartenders and
sex workers. The series takes the form of a tragedy, combining many
nights and many histories to form an endless night of sex, death,
and evolution towards new definitions of queerness. As
homosexuality gains mainstream acceptance, many queer Americans no
longer need to go to geographic extremes like Fire Island,
Provincetown, Palm Springs or Key West to express themselves. But
what is the cost of assimilation? To Die Alive is both romantic and
grotesque, challenging the sun-bleached history of homoerotic
representation on this fragile island, which itself is under
constant threat of erosion into the sea.
A groundbreaking new history of urban cruising through the lenses
of urban poets The Poetics of Cruising explores the relationship
between cruising, photography, and the visual in the work of
leading poets, from Walt Whitman in the nineteenth century to
Eileen Myles in the twenty-first. What is it that happens, asks
Jack Parlett, and what is it that is sought, in this often
transient moment of perception we call cruising, this perceptual
arena where acts of looking between strangers are intensified and
eroticized? Parlett believes that this moment is not only optical
in nature but visual: a mode of looking that warrants comparison
with the ways in which we behold still and moving images. Whether
it's Whitman's fixation with daguerreotypes, Langston Hughes's
hybrid photographic works, or Frank O'Hara's love of Hollywood
movie stars, argues Parlett, the history of poets cruising abounds
with this intermingling between the verbal and the visual, the
passing and the fixed. To look at someone in the act of cruising,
this history suggests, is to capture, consider, and aestheticize,
amid the flux and instantaneity of urban time. But it is also to
reveal the ambivalence at the heart of this erotic search, where
power may be unevenly distributed across glances, and gendered and
racialized bodies are marked. Thus, in identifying for the first
time this confluence of cruising, poetry, and visual culture,
Parlett concludes that the visual erotic economy associated with
gay cruising today, exemplified by the photographic grid of an app
like Grindr, is not a uniquely contemporary phenomenon. Innovative,
astute, and highly readable, and drawing on compelling archival
material, The Poetics of Cruising is a must for scholars of queer
and LGBTQ literature and culture, modern and contemporary poetry,
visual studies, and the history of sexuality.
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