Out of the Past: Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the PresentA unique and hugely absorbing narrative history of gay life—from Oscar Wilde to the first gay marriage performed in San Francisco in 2004—by the award-winning journalist and distinguished author of Out in the World and Sex- Crime Panic. Miller accompanies his narrative with essays and excerpts from contemporary and historical writings, and the text is illustrated with photos and line drawings. Neil Miller is the author of Sex-Crime Panic and winner of the 2003 Randy Shilts Award for nonfiction and an American Library Association Stonewall Honor Book. He is also the author of In Search of Gay America, winner of the 1990 American Library Association prize for gay and lesbian literature. He teaches journalism and nonfiction writing at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts. |
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The person who committed such acts , notes Foucault , was nothing more than the legal subject of them . The acts did not define him as a person or provide him with an identity . But the nineteenth century's mania for classification and ...
Germany's Golden Age > In Germany , as in England , male homosexual acts were against the law . Paragraph 175 of the German legal code , enacted in 1871 after the unification of the German states , stipulated that , “ a male who ...
The Moscow and St. Petersburg juridical societies debated whether homosexual acts should remain a criminal offense . Interest in the subject is reflected in a scene in Leo Tolstoy's 1899 novel , Resurrection , in which three senators ...