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‘What a juxtaposition!’

The bigotry of chaste Britannia
by
October 2024, no. 469

Some Men In London: Queer life, 1945-1959 edited by Peter Parker

Penguin Classics, $65 hb, 464 pp

‘What a juxtaposition!’

The bigotry of chaste Britannia
by
October 2024, no. 469

The fifteen years from the end of the World War II to 1960 were in many ways a dark period of queer history in the United Kingdom. The 1920s and 1930s were relatively relaxed in their attitudes to the gay world. As Adam de Hegedus, writing as Rodney Garland, wrote in his novel The Heart in Exile (1953), ‘the war broke down inhibitions and the element of danger made sex rampant. Public opinion was lax and the understaffed police had many other things on their minds.’

Things changed after the war. Clement Attlee’s prim Labour government (1945-51) was hardly a staunch proselytiser for gay rights. It is true that Attlee later became a founding member of the Homosexual Law Reform Society, but, like most of his parliamentary colleagues, he considered homosexuality to be ‘evil’ and sponsored a bill to make anal sex illegal. It was, however, when the Tories under Winston Churchill returned to power in 1951 that queer life in London came under intense pressure. Churchill’s home secretary, Sir David Maxwell Fyffe, made the persecution of homosexuals a personal quest and prosecutions increased dramatically under his watch.

Some Men In London: Queer life, 1945-1959

Some Men In London: Queer life, 1945-1959

edited by Peter Parker

Penguin Classics, $65 hb, 464 pp

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