The subject has always been fascinating to your Head Trucker, for obvious reasons, and I have read quite a bit about it. Sir Noel looks just as you might expect an Oxbridge professor to look: old-fashioned haircut, wire-rimmed glasses, and slightly rumpled suit; but he's not stuffy at all, and he really knows his stuff, so what he has to say is well worth your time.
This lecture gives an overview of same-sex relations in the Mediterranean countries in the early modern period (the era formerly known as the Renaissance). Sir Noel is soft-spoken, so I turned up the volume, slowed the playback speed to 85%, and turned on the captions - which, however, are often ludicrous when he is quoting a foreign phrase. I'll be posting the rest of the series once a week.
Bonus: Your Head Trucker recommends these books for further reading in gay history.
- Allen Bernstein, Millions of Homos (Our Queer America), 1940 (unpublished manuscript available in PDF format).
- Louis Crompton, Homosexuality and Civilization, 2003. (A 640-page masterpiece, surveying homosexuality in major cultures from East to West, and from antiquity to the 18th century.)
- Kenneth Dover, Greek Homosexuality, 1978.
- Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History, 1976.
- Rictor Norton, The Myth of the Modern Homosexual, 1997.
- A. L. Rowse, Homosexuals in History, 1977.
However, your Head Trucker does not recommend anything by Michel Foucault, for reasons which will become apparent as this lecture series goes on.
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1 comment:
I will get to this post and video in the next few days. I will just say that I have a very difficult time reading books. I have a difficult time concentrating and either my mind wanders or I nod off. And if I do actually finish a book I don’t recall much about it within a very short time. An author who was in the news back in the 80s is John Boswell. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity,_Social_Tolerance,_and_Homosexuality
He died of AIDS as a still young college professor.
Anyhow catch up with you later.
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