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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Lucas HilderbrandPublisher: Duke University Press Imprint: Duke University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.748kg ISBN: 9781478024958ISBN 10: 147802495 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 21 November 2023 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() 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 ContentsPreface. Drunk History, or I Just Wanna Hear a Good Beat xiii Acknowledgments. I Feel Love/Can’t Get You Out of My Head xxi Introduction. We Were Never Being Boring 1 Part I. Cultures 1. Nights in Black Leather: Inventing a Bar Culture in Chicago 37 Interlude 1. Triangle Lounge in Denver 62 2. Show Me Love: Female Impersonation and Drag in Kansas City 68 Interlude 2. Safe Spaces in Detroit 94 Part II. Politics 3. Somewhere There’s a Place for Us: Urban Renewal, Gentrification, and Class Conflicts in Boston 101 Interlude 3. Seattle Counseling Service 124 4. Midtown Goddam: Discrimination, Coalition, and Community in Atlanta 127 Interlude 4. Gay Switchboard in Philadelphia 151 Part III. Institutions 5. Welcome to the Pleasuredome: Legends of Sex and Dancing in New York 157 Interlude 5. The Saloon in Minneapolis 192 6. Proud Mary’s: An Institution in Houston 198 Interlude 6. The Main Club in Superior, WI 220 Part IV. Reinventions 7. Further Tales of the City: Queer Parties in Post-disco San Francisco 227 Interlude 7. The Casa Nova in Somerset County, PA 255 8. Donde Todo es Diferente: Queer Latinx Nightlife in Los Angeles / Researched and Written with Dan Bustillo 260 Interlude 8. Mable Peabody’s Beauty Parlor and Chainsaw Repair in Denton, TX 289 Epilogue. After Hours: Pulse in Orlando 294 Appendix 1. Selected Bars and Clubs 303 Appendix 2. LGBTQ+ Periodicals 313 Notes 317 Bibliography 395 Index 425Reviews"""[A] sprawling, playful and rigorous account of the clubs and bars that served as petri dishes for American gay identity. . . . The Bars Are Ours illuminates a rocky path to this great gay present."" -- Hari Nef * New York Times Book Review * “The Bars Are Ours is a joy to read. Lucas Hilderbrand is able to insert himself into his narrative in ways that make it come alive and, at the same time, steps back and analyzes. The stories are so compelling! Some made me laugh, some left me teary-eyed, and some offered eye-opening insights into a history that is shamefully undertold and underappreciated.” -- John D’Emilio, author of * Memories of a Gay Catholic Boyhood: Coming of Age in the Sixties * “Lucas Hilderbrand’s The Bars Are Ours is a true tour de force. It is a comprehensive historical study of gay bars in the United States that is at once exhaustively researched and beautifully precise. Hilderbrand demonstrates a true respect for this history and tells it in a vital new way. Clearly and elegantly written, this is a nuanced, conceptual, and moving work.” -- Christina B. Hanhardt, author of * Safe Space: Gay Neighborhood History and the Politics of Violence * ""In his historical opus, Hilderbrand makes a comprehensive study of the history of gay bars in America from 1960 to the present day."" -- Gary Day * Booklist * ""Hildebrand’s writing is transportive, which bolsters his impressive research. . . . A powerful celebration and examination of LGBTQIA+ nightlife. This book will serve as a significant record of evolving cultural touchstones and queer communities across the country."" (Starred Review, A Best Book of 2023) -- Kate Bellody * Library Journal * ""A fascinating archival deep dive. . . . Chock-full of excerpts from local gay press rags, recent oral histories, and a treasure trove of old fliers and ads that are as sexy as they are clever and funny, the book shows how the bars reflected the queer communities they attracted—in their irreverence, activism, and spirit of warmth and safety, as well as (sometimes) their overt or implicit discrimination and bias against patrons who did not fit a certain cisgender, gay white male ideal."" -- Tim Murphy * The Body * ""I have a soft spot for gay bars, which are dwindling fast for some good reasons and also for some difficult ones, and Lucas Hilderbrand’s book The Bars Are Ours tickled the sweet spot in my nostalgia, while also being pretty clear about the ways that gay bars have historically been complicated—racist, gender-policing and often unwelcoming to people who are considered too old, insufficiently fancy or not commercially attractive. Hilderbrand, a professor of media studies, is my favourite kind of smartypants—he knows an absolute ton and still manages to write interesting, vibrant prose with some of the sparkle still on it, not weighted down with jargon and internal politicking of the discipline."" -- S. Bear Bergman * Xtra! * ""A stunning new work of research. . . . One thing that stands out about the book is how howlingly funny some of the passages are, and this makes what could otherwise be a dry academic text both enchanting and engaging. . . . This is ultimately an uplifting and hopeful book. . . . The book leaves the reader feeling that the era of gay bars is not over and they will evolve to meet the needs of our diverse communities in the future."" -- Michael Flanagan * Bay Area Reporter * ""A history by means of a series of in-depth case studies—a bar crawl, if you will, from the Gold Coast leather bar in Chicago to the drag queens of the Jewel Box in Kansas City to the Latinx cowboys of Club Tempo in Los Angeles. . . . It’s also a crawl into the different aspect of gay culture. We get lengthy histories of leather culture, the role of gay bars in gentrification, and of the racism that often led to them becoming segregated spaces."" -- Kevin Brazil * The Baffler * ""An essential addition to the growing but still woefully incomplete published histories of gay bars. . . . The precious worth, though, of The Bars Are Ours comes from Hilderbrand’s dedication to being a 'rigorous queen' in his research, digging up delicious tidbits and remembrances from gay bars’ elusive histories that even those of us obsessed with gay bars never heard, read, or knew before."" -- Emily Colucci * Filthy Dreams * ""A lucid and refreshingly clear-eyed analysis of the bar and club scene. . . . The Bars Are Ours is a remarkable achievement and essential reading for any serious student of contemporary queer history."" -- Matthew Hays * Gay and Lesbian Review * ""Hilderbrand makes an important contribution to LGBTQIA+ history in this engagingly written book. . . . Hilderbrand warns that his volume is not intended as a comprehensive encyclopedia, but future researchers will be grateful for an appendix listing many gay bars and clubs (both active and closed), another on LGBTQIA+ periodicals, and a splendid bibliography. Hilderbrand's expertise lies in film and media studies, which helps explain the richness of his illustrations. . . . Recommended. General readers through faculty."" -- D. M. Fahey * Choice * ""Hildebrand’s book is a unique contribution in that it captures histories of bars that have long since closed and includes rarely used artifacts. It approaches the culture of gay bars and their artifacts on their own terms rather than though a single theoretical lens. Even though many gay bars have been associated with gay white men, the book is careful to identify the exclusionary histories of these bars, the politics of dealing with exclusion, and queer reinventions of spaces that address exclusion to some degree."" -- Curt Richard Winkle * Journal of Planning History *" The Bars Are Ours is a joy to read. Lucas Hilderbrand is able both to insert himself into his narrative in ways that makes it come alive and at the same time to step back and analyze. The stories are so compelling! Some made me laugh; some left me teary-eyed; and some offered eye-opening insights into a history that is shamefully under-told and under-appreciated. --John D'Emilio, author of Memories of a Gay Catholic Boyhood: Coming of Age in the Sixties The Bars Are Ours is a joy to read. Lucas Hilderbrand is able both to insert himself into his narrative in ways that makes it come alive and at the same time to step back and analyze. The stories are so compelling! Some made me laugh; some left me teary-eyed; and some offered eye-opening insights into a history that is shamefully under-told and under-appreciated. -- John D'Emilio, author of * Memories of a Gay Catholic Boyhood: Coming of Age in the Sixties * Lucas Hilderbrand's The Bars Are Ours is a true tour de force. It is a comprehensive historical study of gay bars in the United States that is at once exhaustively researched and beautifully precise. Hilderbrand demonstrates a true respect for this history and tells it in a vital new way. Clearly and elegantly written, this is a nuanced, conceptual, and moving work. -- Christina B. Hanhardt, author of * Safe Space: Gay Neighborhood History and the Politics of Violence * Author InformationLucas Hilderbrand is Professor of Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Irvine, and author of Inherent Vice: Bootleg Histories of Videotape and Copyright, also published by Duke University Press, and Paris Is Burning: A Queer Film Classic. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |