Preface: Becoming Real
Part 1: Morning in Gay America (1970–1980)
Christopher Street Magazine
Dead Souls at The New Yorker: A Puzzling Case
Lovers: The Story of Two Men
“Everything Is Only Ten Years Old”: A Conversation with Felice
Picano
Decent Passions: Real Stories about Love
Blue Moves: Conversation with a Male Porn Dancer
Part 2: Beginning to Count Ourselves (1980–1983)
Archeologist of the Present: Michel Foucault in New York City
Gay Politics and Its Premises: Sixteen Propositions
Sixteen Propositions: An Exchange
Scaring the Horses; or the Question of Gay Identity
Who Are We? What Do We Want? How Best Might We Get it?
Part 3: The State of the Tribe (1983–1987)
Gay Pride and Survival in the Eighties
The State of Gay Criticism
Oedipus Revised: David Leavitt’s The Lost Language of Cranes
Paragraph 175, or How Dark Can It Get?
A Culture in a Crucible
Part 4: Workaday Publishing, or Hegel’s Ernst (1985–1988)
Further Down the Road
The Universal Voice of Gay Writers
A Conversation with Allen Barnett
How to Review a Gay Novel
Chasing the Crossover Audience and Other Self-Defeating
Strategies
Editing Fiction and the Question of “Political Correctness”
Part 5: On the Raft of the Medusa (1988–1990)
The Death of a Generation
An Intellectual Ambush
A Quilt of Many Colors
Preaching to the Choir
The Present Moment
A Letter to Ed White
Part 6: In the Gathering Darkness an Age of Heroes (1991–1996)
Eulogy for Allen Barnett
Honoring Richard Rouillard
Eulogy for Randy Shilts
Necessary Bread: Gay Writing Comes of Age
Stonewall: From Event to Idea
Three Takes on John Preston
Food for Life: A Dinner Party in Two Hours
Turning . . . Turning: The Boys in the Band
A Mouthful of Air: The Case of Larry Kramer
Key West Seminar
Part 7: Reconsiderations (1996–2014)
Hymn to the Gym
AIDS Books: Where We’ve Been, Where We’re Going
Affectionate Men
Last Letter to Paul Monette
Afterword: Looking Back
Appendix A: Out Magazine
Appendix B: A Few Words about Christopher Street’s Finances
Appendix C: The Stonewall Inn Editions
Acknowledgments
Michael Denneny is a longtime book and magazine editor who played an outsized role in promoting openly gay writers from the mid-1970s onward. In 1976, he cofounded Christopher Street magazine, one of the first gay literary magazines. He is now a freelance editor and consultant living in New York City.
“Because of his pivotal role in creating modern gay literature,
Denneny has perhaps done more than any other single individual to
actually create contemporary gay literary culture. On Christopher
Street shows that there was a first-rate intellect behind his more
familiar role as publisher and editor. While this volume is an
important window on the recent past, it also demonstrates the
extent to which one man’s lively and humane intellect influenced
the creation of contemporary gay culture.”
*David Carter, author of Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay
Revolution*
“On Christopher Street offers a remarkable glimpse into the first
decades after the Stonewall Riots, a fascinating behind-the-scenes
look at a new culture in formation. A valuable and thoughtful
account of a foundational moment in American cultural history.”
*David K. Johnson, author of The Lavender Scare*
“There simply is no other person in the LGBT community who has been
as pivotal for LGBT publishing, from newspapers and magazines to
books. This important book is a testament to the history of our
community.”
*Mark Segal, founder and publisher of the Philadelphia Gay News and
author of And Then I Danced*
"Michael Denneny’s memoir-in-essays On Christopher Street
illuminates various aspects of gay life in the past half-century. .
. . The book’s primary focus is the state of the burgeoning
gay literary scene and its public and critical reception. In
preserving articles as they appeared at the time, the book revives
the atmosphere, hopes, fears, ambitions, and challenges of the
nascent community, as experienced by Denneny as a gay man living
and working in New York. It also exposes the flawed, underdeveloped
personal perspectives that Denneny spent subsequent years grappling
with and refining."
*Foreword*
"As a founder and editor of the wildly influential literary
journal Christopher Street and later as the first
openly gay editor at a major publishing house, Denneny critically
shaped publishing around gay subjects in the 1970s and beyond. At
St. Martin’s Press, he acquired a slew of landmark titles by gay
authors—many for his groundbreaking Stonewall Inn
Editions—propelling queer voices into the mainstream cultural
conversation. . . . On Christopher Street revisits
that heady period to map out the cultural forces, geographies, and
storylines of LGBTQ in those decades. Through 41 micro-chapters,
Denneny draws on his journal writings, articles, interviews, and
more from the 1970s and ’80s to put us there in this formative and
also tragic time."
*Queer Forty*
"As the queer community has survived countless attempts at
suppression and elimination, this book offers not only a historical
account of the political environment of the 1970s-80s. It also
showcases tried and true forms of activism and rhetoric, ones that
have kept and continue to make our survival possible."
*Out in Jersey*
"If you love reading about gay life, you owe a debt to Michael
Denneny."
*Passport*
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