by Lawrence R. Willy translated by Lawrence R. Schehr introduction by Lawrence R. Schehr
University of Illinois Press, 2007 eISBN: 978-0-252-09290-9 | Cloth: 978-0-252-03216-5 Library of Congress Classification HQ76.25.W5713 2007 Dewey Decimal Classification 306.766
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
A gold mine of information about a hidden queer culture
Thirty-two years before Simone de Beauvoir's classic TheSecond Sex, popular French novelist Willy published TheThird Sex, a vivid description of the world of European homosexuals in France, Italy, and Germany during the late 1920s. Stepping directly into the heart of gay men's culture, Willy follows homosexual nightlife into music halls, nightclubs, casinos, bars, and saunas. While he finds plenty of drug and alcohol abuse, he also discovers homosexual publishers, scientific societies, group rivalries, and opinions--both medical and political--about the nature of homosexuality itself. Lawrence R. Schehr's introduction provides context and translator's notes for this first-ever English edition.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
“Willy” is the pseudonym of Henry Gauthier-Villars, best remembered as the husband of Colette. He hired ghost writers whose work he signed as Willy, making the name various, mysterious, and wild. Lawrence R. Schehr is a professor in the Department of French at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He is the author French Gay Modernism and other books.
REVIEWS
"What a charming and peculiar bulletin from the past is this little book from 1927, supposedly written by a man famous in his day as a cultural impresario and libertine but now remembered as the husband of Colette. . . . Whoever wrote it, this slender volume offers a fascinating glimpse not so much of exotic homosexual practices but of something much more delicate and transitory: the moment just beforehomosexuality became an identity, before sexual acts had been organized into the solid categories we recognize and traffic in today. A collision of conflicting impulses and wildly incongruous discourses, 'The Third Sex' does not know what it is--'gay Baedeker,' cautionary tale, scientific treatise, pornographic handbook, literary essay, opportunity to slander the Italians and Germans--and that is what makes it so delightful."--New York Times Book Review
"Ostensibly a quasi-scientific tour of the male homosexual world in France, Italy, and Germany in the 1920s, 'The Third Sex' is by turns leering, sympathetic, philosophical, patronizing, exuberant, impenetrable, tender and hilarious, often all on the same page. . . . This slender volume offers a fascinating glimpse not so much of exotic homosexual practices but of something much more delicate and transitory: the moment just before sexual acts had been organized into the solid categories we recognize and traffic today. . . . It's not about the love that dared not speak its name; it's about the love that didn't quite know what its name was yet and was trying on many different ones, all at the same time."--Stacey D'Erasmo, New York Times Book Review
"Willy ends this strange and fascinating text with the old question: is it better to stay in the closet or openly celebrate one's sexuality? The questions of The Third Sex are those we seem[ed] to still be facing at the last quarter of the century."--Rain Taxi
“Well worth reading. The very idea of a widespread, trendy 1920s homosexuality is fascinating.”--Modernism/Modernity
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Translator's Introduction
Introduction
Presentation
1. Looking across the Borders
2. A Bit of Psychology
3. Some Leaders
4. The Tour for the "Curious"
5. Varied Opinions
6. Androgynous Literature
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
by Lawrence R. Willy translated by Lawrence R. Schehr introduction by Lawrence R. Schehr
University of Illinois Press, 2007 eISBN: 978-0-252-09290-9 Cloth: 978-0-252-03216-5
A gold mine of information about a hidden queer culture
Thirty-two years before Simone de Beauvoir's classic TheSecond Sex, popular French novelist Willy published TheThird Sex, a vivid description of the world of European homosexuals in France, Italy, and Germany during the late 1920s. Stepping directly into the heart of gay men's culture, Willy follows homosexual nightlife into music halls, nightclubs, casinos, bars, and saunas. While he finds plenty of drug and alcohol abuse, he also discovers homosexual publishers, scientific societies, group rivalries, and opinions--both medical and political--about the nature of homosexuality itself. Lawrence R. Schehr's introduction provides context and translator's notes for this first-ever English edition.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
“Willy” is the pseudonym of Henry Gauthier-Villars, best remembered as the husband of Colette. He hired ghost writers whose work he signed as Willy, making the name various, mysterious, and wild. Lawrence R. Schehr is a professor in the Department of French at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He is the author French Gay Modernism and other books.
REVIEWS
"What a charming and peculiar bulletin from the past is this little book from 1927, supposedly written by a man famous in his day as a cultural impresario and libertine but now remembered as the husband of Colette. . . . Whoever wrote it, this slender volume offers a fascinating glimpse not so much of exotic homosexual practices but of something much more delicate and transitory: the moment just beforehomosexuality became an identity, before sexual acts had been organized into the solid categories we recognize and traffic in today. A collision of conflicting impulses and wildly incongruous discourses, 'The Third Sex' does not know what it is--'gay Baedeker,' cautionary tale, scientific treatise, pornographic handbook, literary essay, opportunity to slander the Italians and Germans--and that is what makes it so delightful."--New York Times Book Review
"Ostensibly a quasi-scientific tour of the male homosexual world in France, Italy, and Germany in the 1920s, 'The Third Sex' is by turns leering, sympathetic, philosophical, patronizing, exuberant, impenetrable, tender and hilarious, often all on the same page. . . . This slender volume offers a fascinating glimpse not so much of exotic homosexual practices but of something much more delicate and transitory: the moment just before sexual acts had been organized into the solid categories we recognize and traffic today. . . . It's not about the love that dared not speak its name; it's about the love that didn't quite know what its name was yet and was trying on many different ones, all at the same time."--Stacey D'Erasmo, New York Times Book Review
"Willy ends this strange and fascinating text with the old question: is it better to stay in the closet or openly celebrate one's sexuality? The questions of The Third Sex are those we seem[ed] to still be facing at the last quarter of the century."--Rain Taxi
“Well worth reading. The very idea of a widespread, trendy 1920s homosexuality is fascinating.”--Modernism/Modernity
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Translator's Introduction
Introduction
Presentation
1. Looking across the Borders
2. A Bit of Psychology
3. Some Leaders
4. The Tour for the "Curious"
5. Varied Opinions
6. Androgynous Literature
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC