Showing posts with label assimilation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label assimilation. Show all posts

Saturday, March 16, 2013

JC Penney, RFD Magazine, and the theory and practice of assimilation versus ghetto

Many people, LGBT or non-LGBT, do not think much about theory and just practice living their lives.  Even though from the very start of the movement to gain equal/civil rights for homosexual Americans there were two views on who we are and what to do to make life better for us.  Harry Hay, as is covered once again in the current issue of RFD Magazine, thought we, in a sense as outsiders, had special insight.  Those who took the movement public, as ONE, took the view that while that may be true it did not mean we were so special we needed to be a “separate” people, as had been the experience of some Jews, etc.  While early immigrants to the United States first lived among those who spoke their language and knew their “history,” they soon moved into the mainstream.

The issue of assimilation is relevant as one part of it was the fear of the founders of ONE, Inc. that it would lead into or keep us in a ghetto, to be exploited. In a sense this happened in some cities with gay bars, where we were overcharged and often used in the battle between owners and Vice. Many thought lawyers used us in our sodomy arrests, overcharging us and not giving us real defense.

Today the opposite opportunity is here in the form, perhaps, of JC Penney and its problems. It may be that the use by that firm of Ellen in commercials, and thus reaching out to the LGBT community and our friends and families, has caused it to lose customers. It may be bad management. BUT here may be an opportunity to show society that supporting our community does NOT hurt a business, a church, a politician, etc. If we do not support those who are friendly, they will not support us in the future, as they lose the bigots support and did not gain our support.  

It doesn’t matter what theory we want to support, in the real world our practice will decide our future.  But for those who want to think about the issue, there are several thoughts in articles in the current issue of RFD Magazine.  While I will take, as many do when dealing with the Bible, etc, a few of these words/thoughts, it may be worthwhile for others to read the whole articles.

The issue leads with the conference in New york in September at CLAGS celebrating the 100th anniversary of Harry Hay’s birth. The event is discussed by one of its leaders, Joey Cain, giving us details of what discussions were held, and including some papers on the issue of Harry, the Radical Faeries, etc.

As an aside, the “issue” of helping older people in our community is covered by Cain and others who took care of Harry and John Burnside till their deaths. That is the example others are now following, such as buildings in Philadelphia, Los Angeles, etc.  The “group” also wanted to honor Harry’s memory and legacy, another example that some want to do with other founders and early leaders.

The differing view of the “movement” is shown in several places, and just a quote or two will show the differences even among those who honor Harry and share their memories of knowing him. Jason Baumann says, about the group (RF), “they searched through history, and across cultures, before there was even the luxury of something that could be called gay history, looking for evidence of men who loved men… It’s both too easy and very strange to dismiss their turn to the past for inspiration given that this historical turn is so fundamental for gay culture.”

“Husk” says something that is contradictory to what seems to be the mainstream of the community today.  “Who are we?  Where do we come from? and Why are we here?” In Hay wrote (see “A Separate People Whose Time has Come” on the Tangents Web site) that answering these questions is key to both the acceptance of gay men into US culture and tapping queer potential…(He looked for answers to medieval Europe and came up with Mattachines and yet the definition is male and “a queer person was ‘the fool’ or the Mattachine; this person did not marry or raise a family, but instead denounced unjust laws and oppressive taxation.”  Thus many today in practice reject this idea of who we are. The issue of same-sex marriage and the right to have and/or adopt children is the opposite of that definition.

And to complete the disagreement, Endora says, quoting a book discussion on women and seeking and inventing mythic historical claims says, “She (Cynthia Eller) argues that in trying to legitimize women’s power by rooting it in ahistorical claims about an ancient period of matriarchy, when, as Merlin Stone put, ‘God Was a Woman,’ women are shooting themselves in the foot.”  It doesn’t matter, Eller argues, whether women ever held power in the past; they deserve to hold it now, and it is dangerous to legitimate a movement by rooting it in questionable claims about history.


“One can make a very similar argument about Radical Faeries and the myth of ancestors.” And indeed—the whole movement.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Thoughts on Frank Kameny's Role in Stonewall, etc.

Someone wrote an article asking why Frank Kameny is not treated as a “rock star” for the homosexual movement. He has been an activist since th 1960s. Then someone else, who says they were at Stonewall, said he does not deserve any credit at all, especially for Stonewall, as the NY Mattachine types did not support Stonewall.

Actually I should be happy, or gay, to hear this second opinion as it says the same thing I have been saying, not because I like it, but because it is the real world. It says that it was not the Mattachine types who were responsible for Stonewall. In fact, many had to rush back from Fire Island when they heard the news. It was young outsiders from New Jersey, etc., who were not welcome at the other bars. They were no part of a movement, and I would say they had not only never read any book on the subject but had never even discussed the subject of homosexuality in a public forum.

I’m not sure either version/view has to say that those who did or did not support Stonewall were seeking “assimilation,” since that is a separate issue. The issue was having a bar that they could go to, and they probably didn't care if heteros went there too as long as everyone got along.

Where the second view falls apart is the nonsense that the people at Stonewall were more “brave” than Kameny and the other Mattachine activists. Part of this is my opinion, but the kids at 1969 have no way of knowing how brave it was for Frank, Barbara Gittings, Jack Nichols, et al., to picket at Liberty Hall and induction centers in 1965. What did the kids have to lose? Jobs?

I still think I am right. What both Frank did and what the kids at Stonewall did was good. While Frank got a little publicity when he took legal action aganst the federal government and argued with and taunted Congress, the reason the kids got lots of media coverage is because they were sexier and the media had—largely because of the movement—finally discovered the homophile movement and issues (and they covered it much like Fox News discovers or invents an issue and pushes it night and day for ratings and to excite the right-wing base.)

The most important element in any case may be timing. But as the old saying goes: When the time comes, you have to be ready to take advantage of it. We still need to push the lazy media to cover more than the back and forth on gay marriage. And we are long past the time when any coverage of homosexuality is thought to need a comment from the bigots. You don’t need an alternative opinion from someone to argue wether 2 + 2 = 4, or an ignorant religious leader’s opinion on if the earth is more than 6,000 years old.

So welcome to the new year. Now let’s get back to work.