Lecklider's book looks at the relationship between sexual dissidence & the Left in the United States in the early 20th-century. Prior to the Cold War, Lecklider argues that those who lived on the margins of bourgeoise society understand the connections between class, race & gender in ways that were more modern than previously understood.
Between July 1954 and June 1955, the New York City Police Department swept through Times Square in a series of carefully orchestrated rays design to read the area of its undesirables. As the action unfolded, Edward Melcarth, a radical artist who had exhibited paintings at New York's left-leaning ACA Gallery, drafted an essay voicing his objection to the police’s efforts to crack down on drug users, gamblers, sex workers, homosexuals, and other dissidents. [1] Titled ‘Guerilla Warfare,’ Melcarth’s essay attacked the ‘latest ‘Search and Kill-joy’ operation in the Times Square zone,’ which, he complained, had recently ‘netted 50 bodies.’…[2. Edward Melcarth, “Guerilla Warfare,” n.D., EMC, box 1, folder “personal correspondence undated.] 1
Whether they were themselves straight, gay, or otherwise queer, many leftists, like Melcarth, brought sexual dissidence and the Left into conversation.
That Conversation is the subject for this book. Love’s Next Meeting: The Forgotten History of Homosexuality and the Left in American Culture reconsider the relationship between radical anti-capitalism and homosexuality in the United States. 6
The act of joining a revolutionary party seeking to overthrow the government of the United States pushed against the boundaries of respectability, morality, and decency that governed American life. It also threatened the dominance Bourgeois values. Homosexuality was associated with a similar refusal to submit to American norms, creating overlap between sexual dissidents and leftists blurred the line separating one group from the other. “Doctor, I'm a gay fellow, so what do I care about social position?” Wrote a homosexual to the sexologist David O. Cauldwell in 1949. “I don't want to go to any tea parties.” [17. David O. Cauldwell and E. Haldeman Julius, eds., Private Letters from Homosexuals to a Doctor (Girard, KS: Haldeman-Julius, 1949), 16] 8
Just as the policing of homosexual behaviour produced Spaces for homosexual contact in working class neighbourhoods, prisons, and other places that were already considered outside the bounds of respectable middle-class life, the Left emerge from within industrial workplaces, working class communities, and public spaces similarly located on the periphery of polite society. 9
The organization of modern urban spaces segregated by class produced vice districts in poor and working class neighbourhoods that fell between the cracks of the law and attracted radicals seeking to organize-and sometimes rub against-lawless. 9-10
Kepner’s discussion of Central Park suggest how public parks could become spaces accommodating, constructing, and uniting sexual practises and political communities.
Whether in parks or nightclubs or wandering city streets, leftists found one another in spaces where they interacted with, and sometimes sought out, sexual dissidents. 22
In the space of a bookstore, Brinnin was able to explore radical politics, obscenity, modernism, and sexual dissidence. [56.] 27
Though his most direct articulation of sexual politics, the Corydon dialogues, did not appear in an English translation until 1950, they were published and attributed to Gide in France as early as 1924, and they were eminently accessible to the artistic types for whom knowledge of French was the price of entry into rarefied cultural circles. [70.] 29
‘It takes two revolutions to make a new world: one in the sphere of economics and one in the sphere of erotics,” wrote Samuel D. Schmalhausen that same year [1927] in the Modern Quarterly, radical journal he did that was especially inclined to take up sexual matters. 50
Ford, who edited the literary magazine Blues, had written a queer modernness proletarian novel with Parker Tyler, a gay film critic, titled The Young and Evil in 1933.” 98
“Just Boys” details are sour love triangle between ‘a white boy,’ Baby Face; his Black ex lover, Kenneth; and Sammy, a Black man whom Baby Face meeting in Washington Park and bring to a party to make Kenneth jealous. The story is set in urban Chicago, carefully mapped by Farrell [James T. Farrell, Calico Shoes]…” 104-105
In Ralph Werther’s 1918 book Autobiography of an Androgyne, a meticulously detailed recounting of the author’s ‘sexual abnormality’, class struggle appeared at least as often as sex, and sex work was positioned as work as much as sex. 137