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1960s Gay Pulp Fiction The Misplaced Heritage Studies In Print Culture And The History Of The Book 1st Edition Drewey Wayne Gunn

  • SKU: BELL-51570854
1960s Gay Pulp Fiction The Misplaced Heritage Studies In Print Culture And The History Of The Book 1st Edition Drewey Wayne Gunn
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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1960s Gay Pulp Fiction The Misplaced Heritage Studies In Print Culture And The History Of The Book 1st Edition Drewey Wayne Gunn instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.98 MB
Pages: 343
Author: Drewey Wayne Gunn, Jaime Harker
ISBN: 9781613762837, 1613762836
Language: English
Year: 2013
Edition: 1

Product desciption

1960s Gay Pulp Fiction The Misplaced Heritage Studies In Print Culture And The History Of The Book 1st Edition Drewey Wayne Gunn by Drewey Wayne Gunn, Jaime Harker 9781613762837, 1613762836 instant download after payment.

As a result of a series of court cases, by the mid-1960s the U.S. post office could no longer interdict books that contained homosexuality. Gay writers were eager to take advantage of this new freedom, but the only houses poised to capitalize on the outpouring of manuscripts were "adult" paperback publishers who marketed their products with salacious covers. Gay critics, unlike their lesbian counterparts, have for the most part declined to take these works seriously, even though they cover an enormous range of genres: adventures, blue-collar and gray-flannel novels, coming-out stories, detective fiction, gothic novels, historical romances, military stories, political novels, prison fiction, romances, satires, sports stories, and spy thrillers - with far more short story collections than is generally realized. Twelve scholars have now banded together to begin a recovery of this largely forgotten explosion of gay writing that occurred in the 1960s. Descriptions of these pulps have often been inadequate and misinforming, the result of misleading covers, unrepresentative sampling of texts, and a political blindness that refuses to grant worth to pre-Stonewall writing. This volume charts the broader implications of this state of affairs before examining some of the more significant pulp writers from the period. It brings together a diverse range of scholars, methodologies, and reading strategies. The evidence that these essays amass clearly demonstrates the significance of gay pulps for gay literary history, queer cultural studies, and book history.

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