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Gay Seattle

Stories of Exile and Belonging

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Winner of a 2004 Washington State Book Award
Winner of a 2004 Alpha Sigma Nu (ASN) Jesuit Book Award
In 1893, the Washington State legislature quietly began passing a set of laws that essentially made homosexuality, and eventually even the discussion of homosexuality, a crime. A century later Mike Lowry became the first governor of the state to address the annual lesbian and gay pride rally in Seattle. Gay Seattle traces the evolution of Seattle's gay community in those 100 turbulent years, telling through a century of stories how gays and lesbians have sought to achieve a sense of belonging in Seattle.
Gary Atkins recounts the demonization of gays by social crusaders around the turn of the century, the earliest prosecutions for sodomy, the official harassment and discrimination through most of the twentieth century, and the medical discrimination and commitment to mental hospitals that continued into the 1970s as homosexuality was diagnosed as a disease that could be "cured."
Places of refuge from this imposed social exile were created in underground theater and dance clubs: the Gold Rush-era burlesque shows, modern drag theater, and in mid-century the emergence of openly gay bars, from the Casino to Shelley's Leg. Many of these were subjected to steady exploitation by corrupt police - until bar owner MacIver Wells and two Seattle Times reporters exposed the racket.
The increasingly public presence of gays in Seattle was accompanied by the gradual coalescence of social services and self-help organizations such as the Dorian Society, gay businesses and advocacy groups including the Greater Seattle Business Association, and the stormy relationship between the Vatican, Seattle's Catholic hierarchy, and gay worshippers.
Atkins' narrative reveals the complex and often frustrating process of claiming a civic life, showing how gays and lesbians have engaged in a multilayered struggle for social acceptance against the forces of state and city politics, the police, the media, and public opinion. The emergence of mainstream political activism in the 1970s, and ultimately the election of Cal Anderson and other openly gay officials to the state legislature and city council, were momentous events, yet shadowed by the devastating rise of AIDS and its effect on the homosexual community as a whole.
These stories of exile and belonging draw on numerous original interviews as well as case studies of individuals and organizations that played important roles in the history of Seattle's gay and lesbian community. Collectively, they are a powerful testament to the endurance and fortitude of this minority community, revealing the ways a previously hidden sexual minority "comes out" as a people and establishes a public presence in the face of challenges from within and without.

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    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2003
      San Francisco and Seattle both began as frontier towns, and both are ports on the U.S. Pacific Coast, but they are as different as the Transamerica Tower and the Space Needle, and their respective queer communities have evolved along parallel but diverging paths. In Wide-Open Town, Boyd (women's studies, Univ. of Colorado, Boulder) depicts a San Francisco where a bar-based gay culture emerged from roots in the all-male saloons and drag shows of the notorious Barbary Coast and Tenderloin, which was later mimicked by lesbians after the repeal of Prohibition. Faced with increasing civic harassment after World War II, both male and female communities politicized, mutated, and eventually collaborated in the homophile movement of the Fifties and Sixties. Boyd provides deeply detailed context by relating the broader American social and historical forces at work, as well as the personal perspective of oral histories. The only flaw in this excellent chronicle is that it ends in 1965, before the heyday of gay liberation in the Seventies and the rise and assassination of Harvey Milk in the city. Atkins (communication, Seattle Univ.; coauthor, Reporting with Understanding) begins his fine Gay Seattle in the 1890s, at roughly the same time as Boyd's book, and in outline the first part of his book is not dissimilar. Seattle has never had San Francisco's "wide-open" reputation, however, and the author's choice to begin with Washington State's 1893 sodomy law indicates a darker story. Atkins takes a more parochial approach, focusing on queer life in the city through the mid-1990s, mostly implying the larger social forces Boyd details explicitly, but his broader chronological coverage permits a vivid description of the devastation wrought by AIDS. Both books compare favorably with works such as George Chauncey's Gay New York and Charles Kaiser's The Gay Metropolis, and both are recommended for gay studies collections. But as San Francisco is virtually gay Mecca, Wide-Open Town is recommended for large public libraries as well, while Gay Seattle is optional outside the Pacific Northwest.-Richard J. Violette, Special Libs. Cataloguing, Victoria, B.C.

      Copyright 2003 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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