Sunday, July 20, 2014

Bibliographies of Gay Literature

Over the years there have been a number of bibliographies created to define and describe literature with gay content or a gay sensibility. The titles included here focus primarily on pre-Stonewall fiction. In appropriate blog entries, I will reference these bibliographies and include any associated ratings.



New York: Castle, 1960
The Homosexual in America : A Subjective Approach, 2nd ed.
Cory, Donald Webster (pseud. Edward Sagarin)
New York: Castle, 1960
Appendix D: A Checklist of Literature

The updated checklist in Cory's 2nd edition was compiled with the assistance of The Mattachine Society so significant similarity exists with the ratings from the Mattachine Review list (see below).

I. the theme is presented in a hidden fashion; its listing is matter of personal interpretation of the readers. The presentation is usually either as a glorified friendship, or a transposition of sexes.
II. the theme is rather clear, but is brief, mentioned in passing and minor to the book as a whole.
III. a major incident or a major character deals with homosexuality.
IV. the book is primarily concerned with homosexuality.







New York: Village Press, 1959
The Homosexual in Literature : A Chronological Bibliography, c.700 B.C. - 1958
Garde, Noel I. (pseud. Edgar J. Leoni)
New York: Village Press, 1959

For more information on Edgar J. Leoni and the history of this bibliography, see Hugh Hagius' Swasarnt Nerf's Gay Guides for 1949.

Primary: Central character(s) clearly homosexual(s) and/or homosexuality is intrinsic part of central theme or network of plots.
Other Than Primary (OTP): All other works not considered as "Primary", and differentiated by the following letter-symbols:

a: substantial, explicit dialogue or exposition involving major homosexual character(s).
b: substantial dialogue or explicit exposition involving minor homosexual character(s).
c: latent, veiled, repressed or implied homosexuality of a major character.
d: brief, superficial references in dialogue or exposition, whether involving major or minor homosexual characters.
e: third-person references (character not in book); latent, veiled homosexuality of minor character in work of a significant author.
f: false suspicion or accusation, or self-suspicion.
In some cases, where use of one letter alone would give an inadequate impression, several are used in combination, e.g. c/d or b&c.

It does not by any means follow that all works which by definition are "Primary" are necessarily more significant, even with respect to substantial homosexual content, than all OTP works. To provide some further guidance, references include the following asterisk notations, uniform to both Primary and OTP listings:
*** very substantial
** quite substantial, or something of especial interest
* not very substantial
(no asterisk) rather negligible



San Francisco: Mattachine Society, 1957-1960
Mattachine Review, Homophilic Bibliography
v.3:no.8 - v.6:no.11
Aug. 1957 - Nov. 1960
San Francisco: Mattachine Society

Beginning with Part V of the bibliography the focus shifts to fiction, poetry, drama, biography, etc. (Prior installments focused on technical and reference books on homosexuality.)

I. works in which homosexuality is only implied, suggested or presented in a veiled fashion
II. works in which homosexuality, while appearing in clear-cut fashion, plays only a minor part, or in which a minor character is a homosexual.
III. works which include a major or important homosexual episode, or in which a major character is a homosexual.
IV. works dealing primarily with homosexuality, or in which homosexuality is the most important theme.




Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1982
The Male Homosexual in Literature : A Bibliography, 2nd ed.
Young, Ian
Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1982

This is the gold standard and is often referenced in the used book market for items of gay interest. Young references both Cory and Garde for their earlier lists. Although items from both Cory and Garde are included in Young, the rating systems these authors used provide a level of detail (although subjective) that Young lacks.

[W]orks of primary importance (those in which homosexuality is a major aspect or which are otherwise of particular relevance) are marked thus *. Items not marked in this way have undefined homosexual content.








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