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The End of the Homo Sexual?

The End of the Homo Sexual? 1

by Dennis Altman
Paperback
Publication Date: 24/07/2013
5/5 Rating 1 Review

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From the author of the groundbreaking 1971 classic Homosexual- Oppression and Liberation comes a new work reflecting on all that has changed over the past four decades. In The End of the Homosexual? - part memoir/part politics - Dennis Altman connects what has happened within the changing queer world over the past forty years to larger social, political and cultural trends. This is a case study of both local and global change, yet one told from personal experience. Written engagingly, this timely new book explores the idea that major changes in the understanding of sexual and gender diversity reflect larger social and cultural shifts. For example, the internet has changed patterns of sexual behaviour as widely as did the contraceptive pill forty years ago. In both cases the changes were neither foreseen nor intended, and in both cases the impact of new technologies partly depended on political and ideological controls. Homosexuality has become a faultline for debates about western influence, and human rights. In this riveting and personally revealing work, Altman reflects on decades of cultural and political change and considers the future of sexuality- is this the end of the homosexual that gay liberationists predicted forty years ago? 'In this personal memoir of an Age, Dennis Altman has placed changes in attitudes towards sex and gender alongside the social, political and cultural upheavals that have occurred in the past forty years in Australia and elsewhere in the world. With profound insight, wry humour and admirable story-telling flair, Altman presents a gripping and comprehensive social history, one that never loses sight of the value of diversity. This is a grand story of change. Whenever an important event on the politics and culture of gender and sexuality was occurring, Dennis Altman was there.' Andrea Goldsmith, author of The Memory Trap and Reunion 'Dennis Altman is a hero. He has courage, energy and insight in abundance. For decades, he has been foremost among the Australia chroniclers of gay inequality. Now, in this brilliant book, he asks whether the struggle is over and if homosexuality is just part of the new norm.' The Hon Michael Kirby AC CMG, Justice of the High Court of Australia 1996-2009 'Like the author himself, this book is - in a word - indispensable. Inexhaustibly intelligent as ever, Altman elegantly unpacks and unravels queer history and present-day politics, never failing to illuminate all its contradictions and conundrums. I lost track of how many times I reached for a highlighter or dog-eared a page, with nothing less than a constant sense of gratitude.' Benjamin Law, author of Gaysia and The Family Law.
ISBN:
9780702249815
9780702249815
Category:
Cultural studies
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
24-07-2013
Language:
English
Publisher:
University of Queensland Press
Country of origin:
Australia
Pages:
256
Dimensions (mm):
226x152x19mm
Weight:
0.34kg

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Altman asks a single core question in this book: Do we still have need for an identity based on sexuality?

In his seminal 1971 Homosexual: Oppression & Liberation, foretold the coming of polymorphous perversity time when people would be free of labels around their sex lives.

He starts End of the Homosexual with a step back in time, looking at the world before gay liberation. He asks in one chapter, What has changed? What remains the same?

The next section covers the Triumph and Tragedy period of gay history. The years following Stonewall, when for the first time gay was affirmed as good. The sidelining and segregation of women by the gay male community. The devastation of HIV/AIDS and how it rewrote the rules of the game. The rise of queer theory in the 1990s. The globalisation of the gay identity and the tropes that make it up.

The last section looks at what the world is like today. Is normalisation a good thing? Is same sex marriage a good thing? These are important questions because only a short time ago being non-mainstream and having the freedom to invent our own rules was part of the gay identity.

I read Homosexual in 1995 when I was 19, taking Dennis Altmans Gender Politics subject at La Trobe University. A year before, I made an awkward attempt to come out to him after spending four years in a Christian cult.

In the years since, as Ive seen the world become more accepting and sexual identity more fluid, Ive remembered Altmans discussion of polymorphous perversity. The full extent of it didnt hit home until I met my partner last year. If you had to give him a label, hed pick pansexual. He rarely finds men attractive; he notices women every day. He chooses to be in a monogamous relationship with me because of my personality. Its always a challenge explaining our relationship to outsiders, especially gay men.

What makes Altman so appealing is his humility. Hes contributed so much to the development of the LGBTIQ communities, yet in this book hes willing to re-evaluate his earlier thinking. He asks new questions that matter.

This book is my must-read LGBTIQ book for 2013 and I think it will become another classic.

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