The Queerness of Home
Gender, Sexuality, and the Politics of Domesticity after World War II
Format:Hardback
Publisher:The University of Chicago Press
Published:26th Nov '21
Should be back in stock very soon
This insightful book examines how LGBTQ individuals transformed domestic life in the postwar United States, revealing the significance of home in their activism and identity.
In The Queerness of Home, Stephen Vider explores the significant role of domestic life in shaping LGBTQ identities and communities in the postwar United States. While much of the historical narrative surrounding LGBTQ activism has focused on public demonstrations and political protests, Vider shifts the lens to the intimate spaces of home. He argues that these spaces have been vital to the development of queer culture and community, serving as sites of connection, care, and resilience.
Beginning in the 1940s, LGBTQ individuals began to redefine the concept of home, challenging traditional notions of marriage and family. They engaged in a struggle against societal norms, reimagining domestic spaces to reflect their identities and values. Vider highlights how these efforts were not just about personal fulfillment; they were also about broader social justice, as LGBTQ activists worked to dismantle racial and class barriers within their communities.
Through a rich tapestry of personal stories and historical analysis, The Queerness of Home reveals how the domestic sphere has been a battleground for social change. Vider's compelling narrative demonstrates that the evolution of LGBTQ domestic life has not only transformed the lives of those within the community but has also reshaped the understanding of home for society at large. This book invites readers to reconsider the intersections of identity, space, and activism in the ongoing fight for equality.
"Stephen Vider’s crisply written, gorgeously illustrated book on queer domesticity traces the transformation of the private sphere over the second half of the twentieth century in the United States. Home-life for LGBTQ people, he argues, evolved from a haven from state-sanctioned homophobia, to a revolutionary alternative to the heteronormative household, before ultimately becoming a homonormative domain entitled to legal protection. Each chapter is fascinating and fresh in its own way, and add up to something more than the sum of its parts: this is an important corrective to a queer historiography that has focused almost entirely on the public sphere." * Susan Stryker, author of Transgender History: The Roots of Today’s Revolution *
“The Queerness of Home is a consequential achievement. Like any historian worth their salt, Vider knows how to tell a tale: this book’s prose is witty and clear as a mountain stream. More than that, it makes an irrefutable case that twentieth-century domestic environments have been momentous for LGBTQ individuals in the modern United States.” * Scott Herring, author of The Hoarders: Material Deviance in Modern American Culture *
“This strikingly original book recovers the unexpected significance of queer forms of home life to LGBTQ people and politics since the mid-twentieth century. Ranging from the gay marriages and camp cookbooks of the 1950s and 1960s to the communes, queer homeless youth shelters, and lesbian feminist experiments in domestic redesign of the post-Stonewall years, Vider provides new insights into the intimate lives and broadest political claims of queer folk—and the meaning of domesticity itself. Creatively researched, beautifully written, and unfailingly smart, this is a first-rate work of revisionist history.” * George Chauncey, author of Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940 *
“An important history of how LGBTQ peoples make and sustain the homes of their choice and fight back against norms that oppress them. Vider reveals the lives, labors, and imaginations of LGBTQ home-makers, whose experiments with queer domesticities unfurl in vivid storytelling and amazing archival photographs.” * Nayan Shah, author of Stranger Intimacy: Contesting Race, Sexuality and the Law in the North American West *
"Vider’s examination of the recent history of activist domesticity in the United States draws upon an extensive breadth of personal, public, and material sources. In its decade-by-decade chronicle the book discusses efforts to fit into the conformist households of the early Cold War, and examines later struggles to build alternative forms of domesticity, through communal living and rethinking architecture. . . . As well, despite its setting in a time of repression and epidemic, this is not a dark book. LGBTQ agency is at its core, and the narrative is a chronicle of contestation, adaptation, imagination, and, above all, creating community. In the face of hegemonic exclusion and repression, the activists in Vider’s study responded with art and humor and radical caregiving." * Journal of History *
"Stephen Vider’s innovative new book, The Queerness of Home, offers a sweeping account of the centrality of the home and homemaking in challenging and renegotiating concepts of gender, sexuality, belonging, citizenship, and family, among many others, in the United States since the mid-twentieth century . . . Vider’s book is a most welcome contribution to many fields." * The Public Historian *
"The Queerness of Home, which has already won awards for excellence, is one of the best books in LGBTQ history published in the last five years. Astute and provocative, this book challenges simplistic associations between domesticity and complacent normativity, inviting historians to reimagine the radical possibilities of 'home.'" * Reviews in American History *
ISBN: 9780226808192
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
Weight: 426g
304 pages