Glances Backward: An Anthology of American Homosexual Writing, 1830-1920

Author:   James J. Gifford
Publisher:   Broadview Press Ltd
Edition:   illustrated edition
ISBN:  

9781551117287


Pages:   414
Publication Date:   21 September 2006
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Glances Backward: An Anthology of American Homosexual Writing, 1830-1920


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Overview

Glances Backward brings together in one volume a broad selection of nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century American writings about gay male love, including love stories, Westerns, ghostly tales, poetry, drama, essays, letters, and memoirs. Many of these works, such as The Cult of the Purple Rose, the story of a gay alliance at 1890s Harvard, are reprinted here for the first time since their original publication. Henry Blake Fuller’s “Allisonian Classical Academy” has until now been available only in manuscript form. In addition to works by lesser-known authors, selections by Henry James, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, Horatio Alger, Jr., Jack London, and Willa Cather are included.

Full Product Details

Author:   James J. Gifford
Publisher:   Broadview Press Ltd
Imprint:   Broadview Press Ltd
Edition:   illustrated edition
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.620kg
ISBN:  

9781551117287


ISBN 10:   1551117282
Pages:   414
Publication Date:   21 September 2006
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Introduction Part I: THE INTERSEXES Edward Prime-Stevenson From “Out of the Sun” (1913) From The Intersexes (1908) Part II: Two-Spirit People Slim Curly From “The Mothway Myth” (recorded 1930) John Tanner From A Narrative of the Captivity and Adventures of John Tanner (1830) George Catlin “Dance to the Berdashe” (1844) Part III: Luck, Pluck, and a Kindly Mentor Walt Whitman “The Child’s Champion” (1841) Selected Poems Horatio Alger, Jr. From Charlie Codman’s Cruise (1866) Harry Enton From Young Sleuth, the Keen Detective (1877) Howard Pyle From The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood (1883) Part IV: Schooldays Frederick Wadsworth Loring From Two College Friends (1871) Henry Blake Fuller From The Allisonian Classical Academy (1876) Charles Macomb Flandrau From Harvard Episodes (1897) Shirley Everton Johnson From The Cult of the Purple Rose (1902) Part V: The Oscar Model Anonymous “Wilde in Utica” (1882) Earl Lind “The Case of Oscar Wilde” (1918) Part VI: Arcadia Bayard Taylor From Poems of the Orient (1855) From The Poet’s Journal (1863) From Joseph and His Friend (1870) Charles Warren Stoddard “Pearl-Hunting in the Pomotous” (1873) Henry James “The Great Good Place” (1909) Part VII: The Domestic Homosexual Howard Overing-Sturgis From Belchamber (1905) George Santayana From Persons and Places (1986) Part VIII: Haunted Henry Blake Fuller At St. Judas’s (1896) Gertrude Atherton “The Striding Place” (1896) George Sylvester Viereck From Nineveh and Other Poems (1908) From The Candle and the Flame (1912) Part IX: Purloined Popular Fiction Bret Harte “Tennessee’s Partner” (1869) “Jim” (1870) Thomas Bailey Aldrich “Marjorie Daw” (1873) Henry Cuyler Bunner “Our Aromatic Uncle” (1895) Edward Prime-Stevenson From Mrs. Dee’s Encore (1896) Jack London “The White Silence” (1899) James Weldon Johnson From The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man (1912) Edward Prime-Stevenson “Aquae Multae Non—” (1913) Part X: Of Hearts Thrown Open Fitz-Greene Halleck Selected Poems James Whitcomb Riley “Good-Bye, Jim” (1893) Bliss Carman and Richard Hovey From Songs from Vagabondia (1894) Edward Perry Warren From Itamos (1903) George Edward Woodberry From Selected Poems Trumbull Stickney Selected Poems George Cabot Lodge From Poems and Dramas (1911) George Santayana Selected Poems Part XI: Doctors, Case Studies, and Erotopaths James Mills Peirce From Sexual Inversion “Letter from ‘Professor X’” (1897) Claude Hartland From The Story of a Life (1901) Willa Cather “Paul’s Case: A Study in Temperament” (1905) William Lee Howard “Effeminate Men and Masculine Women” (1900) “The Sexual Pervert in Life Insurance” (1906) Earl Lind From The Autobiography of an Androgyne (1918) Part XII: Men in Groups Josiah Flynt Willard Homosexuality Among Tramps (1897) Morris Schaff From The Spirit of Old West Point (1907) Alexander Berkman From Prison Memoirs of an Anarchist (1912) Part XIII: To You Alone Herman Melville Two Letters to Nathaniel Hawthorne (1851) Francis Davis Millet Letters to Charles Warren Stoddard (1875) Bernard X. “A Merry Christmas” (1887) Clyde Fitch Letter to DeWitt Miller (1891) George Sylvester Viereck Letter to George E. Woodberry (ca. 1912) Bibliography and Suggestions for Further Reading Sources

Reviews

Glances Backward breaks new ground in gay studies. The anthology explores the full range of writing about gay males from before the Civil War to just after the First World War. In its treatment of largely unknown and inaccessible texts--from overwrought expressions of romantic friendship to modern diatribes against homosexuals as poor insurance risks--it offers the best scholarly introduction to the period when homosexuality was just finding its voice. It is a landmark text, necessary not only for queer scholars but for any student of American literature. -- David Van Leer, University of California, Davis This is an astonishing array of writing about same-sex relations. James Gifford is a scholar who leaves no archival page unturned, and he has put together an anthology that all readers can turn to for discovery, delight, and a deeper appreciation of American history and culture. -- David Bergman, Towson University A recognizably 'gay' American culture is a lot older, and a lot richer, than we thought--and here is the archive to prove it! This anthology brings together for the first time the major and minor voices of queer American literature, who together represent an astonishing range of experience, hope, and desire. -- Eric Savoy, Universite de Montreal


“Glances Backward breaks new ground in gay studies. The anthology explores the full range of writing about gay males from before the Civil War to just after the First World War. In its treatment of largely unknown and inaccessible texts—from overwrought expressions of romantic friendship to modern diatribes against homosexuals as poor insurance risks—it offers the best scholarly introduction to the period when homosexuality was just finding its voice. It is a landmark text, necessary not only for queer scholars but for any student of American literature.” — David Van Leer, University of California, Davis “This is an astonishing array of writing about same-sex relations. James Gifford is a scholar who leaves no archival page unturned, and he has put together an anthology that all readers can turn to for discovery, delight, and a deeper appreciation of American history and culture.” — David Bergman, Towson University “A recognizably ‘gay’ American culture is a lot older, and a lot richer, than we thought—and here is the archive to prove it! This anthology brings together for the first time the major and minor voices of queer American literature, who together represent an astonishing range of experience, hope, and desire.” — Eric Savoy, Universite de Montreal


Glances Backward breaks new ground in gay studies. The anthology explores the full range of writing about gay males from before the Civil War to just after the First World War. In its treatment of largely unknown and inaccessible texts-from overwrought expressions of romantic friendship to modern diatribes against homosexuals as poor insurance risks-it offers the best scholarly introduction to the period when homosexuality was just finding its voice. It is a landmark text, necessary not only for queer scholars but for any student of American literature. - David Van Leer, University of California, Davis This is an astonishing array of writing about same-sex relations. James Gifford is a scholar who leaves no archival page unturned, and he has put together an anthology that all readers can turn to for discovery, delight, and a deeper appreciation of American history and culture. - David Bergman, Towson University A recognizably 'gay' American culture is a lot older, and a lot richer, than we thought-and here is the archive to prove it! This anthology brings together for the first time the major and minor voices of queer American literature, who together represent an astonishing range of experience, hope, and desire. - Eric Savoy, Universite de Montreal


<em>Glances Backward</em> breaks new ground in gay studies. The anthology explores the full range of writing about gay males from before the Civil War to just after the First World War. In its treatment of largely unknown and inaccessible texts--from overwrought expressions of romantic friendship to modern diatribes against homosexuals as poor insurance risks--it offers the best scholarly introduction to the period when homosexuality was just finding its voice. It is a landmark text, necessary not only for queer scholars but for any student of American literature. -- <strong>David Van Leer, University of California, Davis</strong> </p> This is an astonishing array of writing about same-sex relations. James Gifford is a scholar who leaves no archival page unturned, and he has put together an anthology that all readers can turn to for discovery, delight, and a deeper appreciation of American history and culture. -- <strong>David Bergman, Towson University</strong> </p> A recognizably 'gay' American culture is a lot older, and a lot richer, than we thought--and here is the archive to prove it! This anthology brings together for the first time the major and minor voices of queer American literature, who together represent an astonishing range of experience, hope, and desire. -- <strong>Eric Savoy, Universite de Montreal</strong> </p>


Glances Backward breaks new ground in gay studies. The anthology explores the full range of writing about gay males from before the Civil War to just after the First World War. In its treatment of largely unknown and inaccessible texts--from overwrought expressions of romantic friendship to modern diatribes against homosexuals as poor insurance risks--it offers the best scholarly introduction to the period when homosexuality was just finding its voice. It is a landmark text, necessary not only for queer scholars but for any student of American literature. -- David Van Leer, University of California, Davis This is an astonishing array of writing about same-sex relations. James Gifford is a scholar who leaves no archival page unturned, and he has put together an anthology that all readers can turn to for discovery, delight, and a deeper appreciation of American history and culture. -- David Bergman, Towson University A recognizably 'gay' American culture is a lot older, and a lot richer, than we thought--and here is the archive to prove it! This anthology brings together for the first time the major and minor voices of queer American literature, who together represent an astonishing range of experience, hope, and desire. -- Eric Savoy, Universite de Montreal


Glances Backward breaks new ground in gay studies. The anthology explores the full range of writing about gay males from before the Civil War to just after the First World War. In its treatment of largely unknown and inaccessible texts--from overwrought expressions of romantic friendship to modern diatribes against homosexuals as poor insurance risks--it offers the best scholarly introduction to the period when homosexuality was just finding its voice. It is a landmark text, necessary not only for queer scholars but for any student of American literature. --David Van Leer


Author Information

James Gifford is Professor of Humanities at Mohawk Community College in Utica, New York. He is the editor of Imre: A Memorandum, by Edward Prime-Stevenson.

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