What does it mean to be post-gay?

I’m missing the Pride festivities this year.   I’ll be in Mykonos, Greece, having a more private Pride celebration—my 10th anniversary with my partner—along with close friends and family.

Last year’s Pride month had me thinking about growing older in the Gay community. This year, I’m stuck on the concept of “the post-gay generation,” which has gotten some chatter lately.

It’s come up through reactions to the Broadway revival of Larry Kramer’s 1980s AIDS saga The Normal Heart, or—more to the point—the revival of Kramer calling out the younger generation as “tragic” and “apathetic.” Then, there was the responding, angry “Open Letter to Larry Kramer” by J. Ricky Price from the youngish queer media site TheNewGay.net.

To be precise, Kramer and Price don’t use the term post-gay generation per se in their interviews or letters, but the issues and questions surrounding this new identity are evident through their exchange.

Are Gen Y-gays unappreciative of the extraordinary work their forebears accomplished to make life better for them?

Do Baby Boomer-gays place too much emphasis on sexual identity and politics, to the exclusion of the many interesting facets of being an individual?

Is it necessary to identify as gay, at all times, first and foremost, to push the civil rights movement along?

Are young gay men who prefer to stay outside of gay politics and the gay community feeble assimilationists, and likely self-hating?

As a Gen Xer, my views on all these debates are, predictably, somewhere in the middle.

But first, what does post-gay mean?  According to the Urban dictionary:

The notion that homosexuals should be able to define their identities by something other than sexual preference.

OK.   Doesn’t sound so new, or terrible for that matter.   This is the Urban Dictionary, after all, so I’ll even forgive the specious, antiquated terminology like “homosexual” and “sexual preference.”   I believe people should be able to identify however they want, and if a young man sees his gayness as secondary or tertiary to say…being an artist…or being Black…or having an eclectic mix on his iPod…that seems perfectly reasonable.

The problem I see with the term post-gay—-which is the same problem I see with “post-racial” or “post-feminist”—-is it seems to imply putting something in the past, as though certain experiences, histories, or I guess identities are no longer important or relevant.

I could but won’t argue the relevancy issue, since I think it’s pretty obvious.   Instead, I’ll frame the post-gay debate in the context of our broader post-identity culture (which is not the sole creation of Gen Y).

We live in a world where becoming skin color “blind” is considered to be a state of enlightenment.   Our most visible female politicians may invoke sexism when their qualifications are questioned, but their platforms say nothing about promoting the status of women.   It makes sense that many gay men are gravitating toward “neutral” identities that make navigating the decreasingly identity-conscious, decreasingly community-conscious world easier.   It’s not precisely assimilation, I don’t think, or social conformity.   It’s more about individualism trumping group identity.

There’s something sad in that, but every generation has demanded the right to identify on its own terms, not just to spite their older detractors, but because that’s how we find ourselves in the world.

At 18, I was a retro Dead Head.   Five years later I was a gay-liberationist graduate student in Doc Martens.   At 41, I’m a gay writer slash social worker cum humanist-atheist cum social justice enthusiast.   Maybe our identities get longer the older we get.   I’d never use the label post-gay.   Maybe gay-plus.

andrewjpeterswrites.com goes dark next week due to vacation!!

 

Is Dumb the New Smart?

A little social commentary, a little writerly update this week…

Is Dumb the New Smart?

It’s actually a political/pop culture trend that started under the George W. Bush administration, and the concomitant rise of celebrities like Paris Hilton.

But it reached its zenith with Sarah Palin and her recent commentary on Paul Revere. He made his famous ride, gun in hand, to warn the British:   we Americans have the right to bear arms.   Remember from history class?

Education is passe, intellectual inquiry is for assholes, and everything you needed to know, you learned at Sunday family suppers, between Church and rifle practice.

For a recent pop culture counterpart, see Charlie Sheen.

Writing Brief

In writing news, my manuscript wends its way to a climax and denouement (isn’t that a great word?).   I just finished up a murder scene (mwah, ha, ha, ha).

Excitement is building for Lambda’s 2011 Writers’ Retreat.   I’ve made my flight arrangements and sent in my photo/bio.

Lambda started a listserv for Fellows so we can share transportation and get to know each other.   I’m already amazed (and a bit intimidated) by the list of authors.   Lots of writers to learn from.

 

Randomness

Squeezing in a quick post this week while I’ve been writing around the clock, mainly for work (grant proposal) rather than my own projects (sigh).

I thought I’d just talk about some random things that inspired me this week…

1. Thor, the movie.

I’m usually disappointed by big budget, action/adventure Hollywood films, but Thor was so good, on so many levels.

First level—a fantasy world that is not a thinly veiled allegory for America, at its freedom-loving, platitude-wagging, jingoistic best.   (I love freedom too, but I prefer it with a touch of subtlety).

Second level—a hero who starts off as a (believable) jerk, and ends up as a (believable) hero.   Chris Hemworth plays it just right:   a swaggering, single-minded hunk when he needs to be, and a broken outcast, later, who quickly gets himself back on track.   Bravo.

Third level—Natalie Portman.   There is no role too cliche or doofy that she can’t make work.

2. An Archie comics character comes out.

I haven’t read the series since, erm, 1985, but I’m feeling the joy.   Positive LGBT media representations!!

3. Beta readers.

Just got myself a new one and—wow—she’s good.   Not all writers are good critiquers, and the opposite is true as well.   But this new online friend (I can’t reveal her name because she’s shy) really made my week with incredible, thoughtful feedback on a short story I’m getting ready to submit.   Thank you (you know who you are).

4. French Open Tennis.

The most obscure Grand Slam event is also, kinda, my favorite.   Because it’s an underdog kind of event, and it’s weird playing on clay, and there’s longer rallies, and spins, and strategy, and it takes place in Paris for chrissake!

This year it’s an open field on the women’s side, and, arguably, up for grabs between the top three seeded men. And two of my favorite longshot female players are still in the draw: Marion Bartoli and Li Na. Awesome.

Key West: A Photo Essay

The marina, late morning

Brown pelicans usurp the motorboats

 

The cats of Hemingway House

 

Manatee at the docks

 

Searching for dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico

 

Elevated rail bridge at Bahia Honda National Park, a trace of Henry Flagler's railway through the Keys

 

Sunset on the Atlantic Ocean, from the Adirondack III

Goodnight

Activism and some Book Buzz

Cranking out a weekly post is a trifle hard these days, as I’m in the midst of beta reading a novel and deep in funding advocacy for New York State youth services.

Every now and then, I use my site as a platform for my ‘other life’ as a social worker.   This is one hell of a year for not-for-profits, and if you agree that government deficits should be solved by higher-minded strategies than eliminating services for homeless youth, stop by Facebook and ‘like’ this page:

RESTORE NYS YOUTH FUNDING

If you are a New York State resident, you can also send a message to elected officials with a couple of clicks.

My rewrite crawls along—not much to report there—but I have two really exciting, meaty projects coming up for my website. Stay tuned.

In the meantime, I wanted to suggest that folks check out John Morgan Wilson’s excellent column—Book Buzz—over at Lambda Literary.

Lambda has really stepped up it’s e-communications since their website was relaunched last year.   They have wonderful, newsy bulletins with quite a range of book reviews, publishing news, and literary events.   It’s one of the few e-newsletters that I read top to bottom.

JMW’s Book Buzz is an easily digestible, tasty even, round-up of recent and upcoming pub’s, awards and prizes, etc., and it’s a place where authors can plug their books.   Read it here.