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Films about Queer History

 

Before Sexuality

Before Sexuality
by David M. Halperin (Editor), John J. Winkler (Editor), Froma I. Zeitlin (Editor)

David M. Halperin

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The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader

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Saint Foucault : Toward a Gay HagiographySaint Foucault : Toward a Gay Hagiography by David M. Halperin

The acclaimed author of One Hundred Years of Homosexuality offers an uncompromising and impassioned defense of the late French philosopher and historian Michel Foucault as a galvanizing thinker whose career as a theorist and activist will continue to serve as a model for other gay intellectuals, activists, and scholars.

"My work has had nothing to do with gay liberation," Michel Foucault reportedly told an admirer in 1975. And indeed there is scarcely more than a passing mention of homosexuality in Foucault's scholarly writings. So why has Foucault, who died of AIDS in 1984, become a powerful source of both personal and political inspiration to an entire generation of gay activists? And why have his political philosophy and his personal life recently come under such withering, normalizing scrutiny by commentators as diverse as Camille Paglia, Richard Mohr, Bruce Bawer, Roger Kimball, and biographer James Miller?

David M. Halperin's Saint Foucault is an uncompromising and impassioned defense of the late French philosopher and historian as a galvanizing thinker whose career as a theorist and activist will continue to serve as a model for other gay intellectuals, activists, and scholars. A close reading of both Foucault and the increasing attacks on his life and work, it explains why straight liberals so often find in Foucault only counsels of despair on the subject of politics, whereas gay activists look to him not only for intellectual inspiration but also for a compelling example of political resistance. Halperin rescues Foucault from the endless nature-versus-nurture debate over the origins of homosexuality ("On this question I have absolutely nothing to say," Foucault himself once remarked) and argues that Foucault's decision to treat sexuality not as a biological or psychological drive but as an effect of discourse, as the product of modern systems of knowledge and power, represents a crucial political breakthrough for lesbians and gay men. Halperin explains how Foucault's radical vision of homosexuality as a strategic opportunity for self-transformation anticipated the new anti-assimilationist, anti-essentialist brand of sexual identity politics practiced by contemporary direct-action groups such as ACT UP. Halperin also offers the first synthetic account of Foucault's thinking about gay sex and the future of the lesbian and gay movement, as well as an up-to-the-minute summary of the most recent work in queer theory.

"Where there is power, there is resistance," Michel Foucault wrote in The History of Sexuality, Volume I. Erudite, biting, and surprisingly moving, Saint Foucault represents Halperin's own resistance to what he views as the blatant and systematic misrepresentation of a crucial intellectual figure, a misrepresentation he sees as dramatic evidence of the continuing personal, professional, and scholarly vulnerability of all gay activists and intellectuals in the age of AIDS.

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One Hundred Years of Homosexuality : And Other Essays on Greek Love (The New Ancient World Series) by David M. Halperin

Halperin's subject is the erotics of male culture in ancient Greece. Arguing that the modern concept of "homosexuality" is an inadequate tool for the interpretation of these features of sexual life in antiquity, Halperin offers an alternative account that accords greater prominence to the indigenous terms in which sexual experiences were constituted in the ancient Mediterranean world. Wittily and provocatively written, Halperin's meticulously drawn windows onto ancient sexuality give us a new meaning to the concept of "Greek love."

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David M. Halperin

University of New South Wales

David M. Halperin (BA Oberlin, MA PhD Stanford) has a background in classical philology and comparative literature; he now works in the history of sexuality and lesbian/gay studies. He taught for more than fifteen years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge (United States) before coming to UNSW in 1996. He is a founding editor of GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. Recent publications include: One Hundred Years of Homosexuality and other essays on Greek Love (1990) and Saint Foucault: Towards a Gay Hagiography (1995) as well as two edited volumes, Before Sexuality: The Construction of Erotic Experience in the Ancient Greek World (1990) and The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader (1993). David is currently Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, U.S.A.

   

Forgetting Foucault: Acts, Identities, and the History of Sexuality

David M. Halperin, Representations Online, UC Berkeley

Excerpt:

Just how far Baudrillard was willing to go in order to render this sort of unsolicited service to Foucault emerges from another remark of his in the same passage: "Foucault's death. Loss of confidence in his own genius. . . . Leaving the sexual aspects aside, the loss of the immune system is no more than the biological transcription of the other process." [1] Foucault was already washed up by the time he died, in other words, and AIDS was merely the outward and visible sign of his inward, moral and intellectual, decay Leaving the sexual aspects aside, of course...

  

How to Do The History of Male Homosexuality

By David M. Halperin, Copyright © 2000 Duke University Press

  

Journal of Gay and Lesbian StudiesJournal of Lesbian and Gay Studies

 GLQ is the leading journal in lesbian and gay studies today.  Providing a much-needed forum for interdisciplinary discussion, it publishes scholarship, criticism, and commentary in areas as diverse as law, science studies, religion, political science, and literary studies.  Its aim is to offer queer perspectives on all issues touching on sex and sexuality.  

Edited by Carolyn Dinshaw and David M. Halperin.

Available Past Issues from Amazon.com:

Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, Vol 5, No 4, 2000 (Thinking Sexuality Transnationally) by Elizabeth A. Povinelli(Editor), et al
The Transgender Issue (Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, Vol 4, No 2, 1998)
by Susan Stryker(Editor)

 

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