The Way Out: A History of Homosexuality in Modern Britain
By (Author) Dr Sebastian Buckle
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
21st May 2015
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
LGBTQ+ Studies / topics
Political structures: democracy
European history
Sociology
Sex and sexuality, social aspects
Media studies
Society and culture: general
Legal history
Social and cultural history
306.766094109045
Hardback
280
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
479g
In 1957, there were over a thousand men in prison for 'homosexual offences'. A little over half a century later, homosexuality is an active part of the mainstream. Homosexuality has a public profile - on TV, in film and in literature and popular culture. When did today's fairly open discourse on homosexuality begin Sebastian Buckle argues that homosexuality as a public identity began after the Second World War, on the release of the Wolfenden Report which recommended gay sex be decriminalised, and tells the story of homosexuality in the public eye. Buckle takes us through early images of homosexuality in the 1950s, the founding of the Gay Liberation Front, Section 28 and community radicalism under Margaret Thatcher's government, the AIDs crisis of the 1980s, the expanding musical and cultural influence of gay subcultures and the resulting partial acceptance into the mainstream of queer identities. The result is a complex and nuanced history of gay movements, society and the media, and a fresh look at how the struggle for acceptance and equality has been fought.
Sebastian Buckle gained his PhD in History and LGBT Studies at the University of Southampton. He is a blogger, writer and researcher on British queer history.