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Films about Queer History

 

Samuel R. Delany  (1942 - )

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Shorter Views : Queer Thoughts & the Politics of the Paraliterary

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Times Square Red, Times Square Blue (Sexual Cultures)Times Square Red, Times Square Blue (Sexual Cultures) by Samuel R. Delany

An award-winning science fiction writer, esteemed professor of comparative literature at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, and celebrated essayist and memoirist, Samuel Delany is one of America's keenest observers. He was also a longtime habitué of many of the sex theaters in New York City's Times Square, spending, by his own estimate, "thousands and thousands of hours" at the Capri, Variety Photoplays, the Eros, and the Venus. In the 1990s all of these theaters were shut down through new restrictive zoning laws, part of a combined effort by the Walt Disney Corporation and the administration of Mayor Rudy Giuliani to gentrify the area, replacing these seedily memorable institutions with antiseptic, innocuous architectural and cultural creations in the name of health safety. But as Delany reveals in his new book, Times Square Red, Times Square Blue, the decision to clean up Times Square had little to do with public health, and everything to do with corporate greed.

In the two essays that comprise this eloquent, provocative book, Delany grieves for the loss of this strip of sexual release. Though he is careful not to romanticize or sentimentalize the peep shows and porn theaters, he does illuminate the way in which these venues crossed class, racial, and sexual orientation lines, providing a delightfully subversive utopia--and a microcosm of New York life. In the first essay, "Times Square Blue," Delany details his shared erotic and conversational encounters with working-class and homeless men in the theaters (which primarily showed straight porn films) and the genuine friendships that resulted; these immensely personal reminiscences also provide a social history of late-20th-century Times Square. Drawing on historical and theoretical resources in the second essay, "Three, Two, One, Contact: Times Square Red," Delany next builds a thoughtful and passionate argument against the gentrification of the area and the classist, characterless direction in which he sees New York heading. Read together, the essays of Times Square Red, Times Square Blue are both heartfelt homage to a beloved city and lament for a quirky vitality increasingly phased out by encroaching capitalism. --Kera Bolonik

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Trouble on Triton : An Ambiguous HeterotopiaTrouble on Triton : An Ambiguous Heterotopia by Samuel R. Delany, Kathy Acker

Trouble on Triton (as it is now retitled--the publisher just called the first edition "Triton,") is one of the finest SF novels ever written. It is also one of the best books on the 1960s ever written, though it is supposedly set much later. Delany uses the semi-utopian setting to convey much of the spirit of the East Village in New York during the sixties, when he played with a band, lived in a commune, had much experimental sex and generally found himself. See Heavenly Breakfast or The Motion of Light in Water to understand the autobiographical background to Trouble on Triton. He creates an extremely unsympathetic protagonist who is ill at ease in a libertarian utopia because he is by natural instinct an uptight conservative who's at a loss in a world where self-definitions vary wildly.

This is also from the period when Delany was first becoming profoundly influenced by modern poststructuralist philosophy, and he tries to weave certain ideas (not entirely successfully) into the novel.

This is a very, very intellectual book--not at all an easy read. But if you can enjoy a satire on white male piggishness written by a gay black genius, you'll enjoy this book. It's never gotten the audience it deserves because its ideal readers tend to be people who scorn to pick up an SF novel, particularly one with such a deliberately (and mockingly) cheesy title as Trouble on Triton. -- Anonymous Review

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Samuel R. Delany's Autobiographical writing:

The Motion of Light in Water; Sex and Science Fiction Writing in the East Village, 1960-1965 by Samuel R. Delany

    

Samuel R. Delany Information

This site hosts a time line, photos, illustrations, bibliographies, reviews, criticisms, and much more.

 

We Need Essays and Resources on Samuel R. Delany
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