Fifty years after Stonewall, critic James Polchin reveals the hidden history of violence against gay men in America.
James Polchin is a cultural critic and professor at New York University. He's held faculty appointments in the Princeton Writing Program, the Parsons School of Design, and the New School for Public Engagement, and has given talks on art history, literary journalism, and queer history at universities in the US and UK.
In his revelatory and meticulously researched book, James Polchin
has discovered a forgotten chapter of queer history hiding in plain
sight: in sensationalistic newspaper articles documenting decades
of anti-gay violence, often in coded terms. Looking at gay life
through this novel lens offers an entirely fresh take on what
previous generations endured. Like the best true crime stories,
Indecent Advances is both brutal to read and impossible to put
down.
*Wayne Hoffman, author of An Older Man*
A grisly, sobering, comprehensively researched new history.
*The New Yorker*
A reflective, thoughtful first book that perfectly blends true
crime and the history of discrimination against gay men in the 20th
century.
*Library Journal*
Thoughtful, accessible and well-researched, Polchin's book offers
useful insight into some of the lesser-known cultural currents that
gave rise to the gay rights movement. An enlighteningly provocative
cultural history.
*Kirkus Reviews*
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