Banned from California: -Jim Foshee- Persecution, Redemption, Liberation ... and the Gay Civil Rights Movement

Author:   Robert C Steele
Publisher:   Wentworth-Schwartz Publishing Company, Lrcs
ISBN:  

9781734010817


Pages:   378
Publication Date:   05 June 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Banned from California: -Jim Foshee- Persecution, Redemption, Liberation ... and the Gay Civil Rights Movement


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Overview

This is the previously untold story of a 1950s gay teenager who runs away from home, setting out on an adventure that redefines his life and puts him in the midst of the civil rights struggle of gay people across the United States of America spanning a half-century. Born in 1939, Jim Foshee lives his young life openly, honestly and defiantly in the underground world of homosexuals and early queer subculture decades before that lifestyle eventually progressed into a modern LGBTQ society.This biography is an intimate portrait of gay life in the 1950s and beyond into a new millennium. It takes readers on a unique and personal journey through a part of American history as seen through the eyes of this gay American-an exploration seldom revealed in American literature.

Full Product Details

Author:   Robert C Steele
Publisher:   Wentworth-Schwartz Publishing Company, Lrcs
Imprint:   Wentworth-Schwartz Publishing Company, Lrcs
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.671kg
ISBN:  

9781734010817


ISBN 10:   1734010819
Pages:   378
Publication Date:   05 June 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

"""Steele draws you in with the first chapter, California Here I Come, taken out of an otherwise chronological context, describing Foshee's first of many escapes from the confines of religious and heteronormative suffocation in a small Idaho town. ""The parishioners at my parents' churches always ranted and raved and claimed that California was the place where all the queers and fruits were located,"" Foshee is quoted, ""so I figured that's the place for me!"" In Hollywood at 15 Foshee finds himself, if not his dream, only to be arrested and expected to finger an adult who befriended him. The fact that he refused is the first indication of a precocious proclivity of purpose, nearly unwitting. This story of a kid enmeshed in The System through no fault of his own-other than his gumption-shines as an example of how utterly unredeemable our institution of policing was, is, and will be, if it's not dismantled. As I said, Chapter 1 is only one of several iterations. Many of us have pushed that runaway envelope to a greater or lesser degree; it's a rite of passage. But for Foshee the euphoria obtained by on-the-edge existence was a smack that smote him: flagellation, ostracization, incarceration, starvation, prostitution. And finally a kind of stultification when he settled down in Denver. Domesticity led to distraction, and Foshee began volunteering with the Gay Coalition in Denver and eventually with chronicler Jim Kepner in Los Angeles and historian Jonathan Ned Katz in New York. A speed reader, Foshee combed newspaper microform to reveal forgotten same-sexers in the Rockies-including Native Americans. One could say he's the accidental archivist, but it was curiosity that compelled him to leave comfort and conformity in the first place. Banned from California has the quality of an oral history because of author Steele's access to the many interviews of Foshee that he conducted-and fact-checked. And so the book has a remarkable amount of detail; too much, some might think. There's also a fair amount of repetition. But those are minor faults in a work that is quite readable on several levels. Students of history, culture, penology, sexuality (and fluidity), consanguinity, criminology, and the politics and compassion of resistance will want to pick this up."" - David Hughes, TangentGroup.org *** ""This compelling story recounts the life of a gay man born in the late 1930s. He is defiant and resilient, flawed and complicated. This touching narrative left me feeling that I belong to a lineage of older, passed, LGBT individuals who lived in the complex, troubled, gay humanity of the 1940s, 1950s and beyond-embedded with burden yet conquered through perseverance."" - Dr. Ramon Silvestre, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco *** ""Jim Foshee was an intrepid community-based researcher of LGBT history who, long before historic newspapers and books were digitized, read through them page by dusty page, and sent me amazing discoveries, enriching my own work to recover an unknown past. I'm delighted that Jim's own fascinating, poignant history is now honored in this wonderful biography."" - Jonathan Ned Katz, author, Gay American History, Gay/Lesbian Almanac and Love Stories"


Steele draws you in with the first chapter, California Here I Come, taken out of an otherwise chronological context, describing Foshee's first of many escapes from the confines of religious and heteronormative suffocation in a small Idaho town. The parishioners at my parents' churches always ranted and raved and claimed that California was the place where all the queers and fruits were located, Foshee is quoted, so I figured that's the place for me! In Hollywood at 15 Foshee finds himself, if not his dream, only to be arrested and expected to finger an adult who befriended him. The fact that he refused is the first indication of a precocious proclivity of purpose, nearly unwitting. This story of a kid enmeshed in The System through no fault of his own-other than his gumption-shines as an example of how utterly unredeemable our institution of policing was, is, and will be, if it's not dismantled. As I said, Chapter 1 is only one of several iterations. Many of us have pushed that runaway envelope to a greater or lesser degree; it's a rite of passage. But for Foshee the euphoria obtained by on-the-edge existence was a smack that smote him: flagellation, ostracization, incarceration, starvation, prostitution. And finally a kind of stultification when he settled down in Denver. Domesticity led to distraction, and Foshee began volunteering with the Gay Coalition in Denver and eventually with chronicler Jim Kepner in Los Angeles and historian Jonathan Ned Katz in New York. A speed reader, Foshee combed newspaper microform to reveal forgotten same-sexers in the Rockies-including Native Americans. One could say he's the accidental archivist, but it was curiosity that compelled him to leave comfort and conformity in the first place. Banned from California has the quality of an oral history because of author Steele's access to the many interviews of Foshee that he conducted-and fact-checked. And so the book has a remarkable amount of detail; too much, some might think. There's also a fair amount of repetition. But those are minor faults in a work that is quite readable on several levels. Students of history, culture, penology, sexuality (and fluidity), consanguinity, criminology, and the politics and compassion of resistance will want to pick this up. - David Hughes, TangentGroup.org *** This compelling story recounts the life of a gay man born in the late 1930s. He is defiant and resilient, flawed and complicated. This touching narrative left me feeling that I belong to a lineage of older, passed, LGBT individuals who lived in the complex, troubled, gay humanity of the 1940s, 1950s and beyond-embedded with burden yet conquered through perseverance. - Dr. Ramon Silvestre, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco *** Jim Foshee was an intrepid community-based researcher of LGBT history who, long before historic newspapers and books were digitized, read through them page by dusty page, and sent me amazing discoveries, enriching my own work to recover an unknown past. I'm delighted that Jim's own fascinating, poignant history is now honored in this wonderful biography. - Jonathan Ned Katz, author, Gay American History, Gay/Lesbian Almanac and Love Stories


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