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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/985697

The gay metropolis 1940-1996

"For hundreds of thousands of gay Americans, New York City is the literal gay metropolis: the place where they have learned how to live openly, honestly, and without shame. But the figurative gay metropolis is much larger: it encompasses every place on every continent where gay people have found the courage and the dignity to be free." "The Gay Metropolis is a compelling social and political history of modern gay life in America. Charles Kaiser is the first author to devote equal attention to the personal and the political, alternating between the intimate stories of people as famous as Leonard Bernstein and Gore Vidal and as little known as Sandy Kern, a young Brooklyn woman who first heard the word lesbian when a neighbor spied her with an arm around her girlfriend at the end of a wartime blackout ... Though it focuses on New York City, The Gay Metropolis includes visits San Francisco, Paris, and Egypt to capture wry, important, or novel tales. It covers the major social, political, and cultural events that have affected the way gay people view themselves and how they have been treated by the larger society"--P. [4] of cover.

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  • ""For hundreds of thousands of gay Americans, New York City is the literal gay metropolis: the place where they have learned how to live openly, honestly, and without shame. But the figurative gay metropolis is much larger: it encompasses every place on every continent where gay people have found the courage and the dignity to be free." "The Gay Metropolis is a compelling social and political history of modern gay life in America. Charles Kaiser is the first author to devote equal attention to the personal and the political, alternating between the intimate stories of people as famous as Leonard Bernstein and Gore Vidal and as little known as Sandy Kern, a young Brooklyn woman who first heard the word lesbian when a neighbor spied her with an arm around her girlfriend at the end of a wartime blackout ... Though it focuses on New York City, The Gay Metropolis includes visits San Francisco, Paris, and Egypt to capture wry, important, or novel tales. It covers the major social, political, and cultural events that have affected the way gay people view themselves and how they have been treated by the larger society"--P. [4] of cover."@en
  • "For hundreds of thousands of gay Americans, New York City is the literal gay metropolis: the place where they have learned how to live openly, honestly, and without shame. But the figurative gay metropolis is much larger: it encompasses every place where gay people have found the courage and the dignity to be free. This book is a social and political history of modern gay life in America, covering events that have affected the way gay people view themselves and how they have been treated by the larger society. Journalist Kaiser devotes equal attention to the personal and the political, alternating between the intimate stories of people as famous as Leonard Bernstein and Gore Vidal and as little known as Sandy Kern, a young Brooklyn woman who first heard the word "lesbian" when a neighbor spied her with an arm around her girlfriend at the end of a wartime blackout.--From publisher description."

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  • "Manuscripts"@en
  • "Galley proofs"@en
  • "History"@en
  • "History"

http://schema.org/name

  • "The gay metropolis 1940-1996"
  • "The gay metropolis 1940-1996"@en
  • "The gay metropolis : 1940-1996"@en
  • "The gay metropolis : 1940-1996"
  • "The gay metropolis, 1940-1996"
  • "The Gay Metropolis 1940-1996"
  • "The gay metropolis, 1940 - 1996"