Posts Tagged ‘gay’

A Love, By Any Other Name…

Monday, October 13th, 2008

Impressions of Gay Life in Muslim Countries

muslimhands.jpgGay identity is denied in most Muslim countries. That there are men and women within those areas who primarily love people of their own gender is a biological certainty. But most of them would not label themselves ‘gay’ or ‘lesbian’, they would see the attraction as just one small aspect of themselves that they try to fit into their lives while adhering to what is expected of them by friends and especially family.

Family is very important, both caring for the current generation as well as raising the next one. Getting married before you are thirty and  having children is the only accepted way to live in many places. Not doing so could lead to loss of honor for you and your family. This means that most gay love and lust takes place behind closed doors and isn’t acknowledged even while everybody around knows that it happens. As long as there are no witnesses and it isn’t talked about, everybody can pretend that no social mores are being broken.

Considering that gay sex is officially frowned upon and even punishable by death in many Muslim countries, the casual intimacy between men is one that will surprise many tourists. Much more than in Western countries, men are likely to be seen touching each other in a physically intimate way or even walking around the city hand in hand. The ‘Western’ gay identity threatens this way of interacting with each other by making it look suspect and threatens the entire family-oriented society. It introduces new options and choices that could upset the basis on which the society is built. Gay Muslims may start to question things and realise that the way their heart is pulling them does not have to point towards certain doom, but could lead them to a happy, if alternative, family life.

gay-travels.jpgGay Travels in the Muslim World is a series of autobiographical short stories, edited by Michael Luongo. It gives an impression of the Muslim world as described above. The majority of them deal with contrasts and conflicts between Western culture and Muslim culture, from various perspectives. Most of the stories were written by Western visitors, one or two by people within the culture.

The style, tone and attitudes of the writers vary, and while some of the tales are likely to annoy you, you will find a couple that are touching and interesting. I liked the story of an American who starts a long-distance romance with a Turkish man, only to find out he is married and has children. Rather than break up with his long-term lover, the Turkish man integrates him as an ‘uncle’ into his family, where he is lovingly accepted. Not all the stories are sweet though; in several of them, local men desperate for money and tourists desperate for sex with locals meet each other on a sharp and uncomfortable knife’s edge between two cultures, using each other for selfish purposes.

All in all it is an interesting collection, well worth a read for anybody interested in this different perspective on gay identity. And if you want to take a more academic look at the topic, you may also want to pick up Unspeakable Love – Gay and Lesbian Life in the Middle East

Related links: Author Michael Luongo’s picture gallery. Interview with Michael Luongo on the Feast of Fools Podcast.

Overheard at the ABC

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

bush-is-so-not-gay.jpg

October 8th 2008

PeterL: I don’t know who it is, but someone keeps putting George Bush in the gay section. George Bush is SO not gay.

‘Married’ With Children

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

dan-savage.jpgDan Savage: David Sedaris for the rest of us

Dan Savage is a Republican’s worst nightmare: an American, politically outspoken, gay sex columnist, living in sin with his boyfriend, and with an adopted child. Of course, part of the sin has been imposed by the very same Republicans, who won’t allow him to get legally married and make an honest man of his partner.

Dan has a blog, a weekly column and a podcast in which he talks frankly about sex, in a country where portrayal of this activity in the media is generally still seen as a more damaging influence on morality than graphic violence.

Savage has also written several excellent books:

Savage Love is a collection of entries from his advice column. It makes for good reading on the fly because of its piecemeal structure, as you can easily dip in for a small nugget or two. But be warned: reading about sexually transmitted diseases does not combine well with cooking.

Skipping Towards Gomorrah explores the seven sins, finding them alive and well in America. Pride is explored through Gay Pride, which turns out to not be about Pride at all.

The Kid describes the mental and legal hoops Dan and his boyfriend jumped through to become parents.

In The Commitment, Dan describes the mental and legal hoops he and his boyfriend jumped through to get married. Well, by Canadian law anyway. And with little skulls on their wedding ring because of the aforementioned Kid.

Dan’s writing flows easily, and sarcasm is his best friend. He doesn’t miss an opportunity to show how misguided and irrational the anti-gay laws in America are, skewering the reasoning of the (mostly religious) opposition. Their only real issue (as condensed by me): ‘Gay sex is “ewww” and we don’t want to have to think about it.’

In The Kid and The Commitment Dan gets autobiographical, painting a picture of his family and his boyfriend. Here he comes across as a more cynical, pro-active and less fictionalized David Sedaris. If you are going to try these two books, read The Kid first, as the latter is a sort of sequel.

ABC’s Favorite Books of 2007 (pt. 4)

Monday, December 17th, 2007

Bookstack

Staying in Amsterdam, here are three lists from the Gay Buyers: PeterL, Tjeerd, and Jilles. (more…)

Tales of the City Revisited

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

Michael Tolliver LivesMichael Tolliver Lives by Armistead Maupin.
Review by Steven van Lijnden, Special Orders, ABC Amsterdam

Working at a bookstore comes with certain perks, like coming across the Advance Reader’s copy of a book by one of your favourite authors, months before it will be available to the general public. While I knew that a book was in the works, I was slightly stunned and overly excited when Armistead Maupin’s Michael Tolliver Lives was dropped in my path. The book is a sequel – of sorts – to his well-known Tales of the City series.

I had mainlined all of Maupin’s Tales during one trimester while I was a student. They chronicle the unlikely and endearing adventures of an ‘alternative’ group of friends that form a sort of family during the seventies in San Francisco, at 28 Barbary Lane. The story was originally written as a serial for a newspaper, which explains the short chapters, regular cliffhangers and fast pace. The feel for dialogue was amazing, and the easy writing style made for breathless reading. In later books, the style evolved into a more regular ‘novel’ format, though the events were still charmingly farfetched. (more…)