Difference between revisions of "Come Out!"
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''This page focuses on'' Come Out!'', the first paper put out by the gay liberation movement. The paper was published by a small group of [[Gay Liberation Front]] members who came together in the'' Come Out! ''collective (which became the autonomous Come Out Cell, later renamed the 28th of June Cell.)''<ref>Toby Marotta, ''The Politics of Homosexuality'' (Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1981), 105.</ref> | ''This page focuses on'' Come Out!'', the first paper put out by the gay liberation movement. The paper was published by a small group of [[Gay Liberation Front]] members who came together in the'' Come Out! ''collective (which became the autonomous Come Out Cell, later renamed the 28th of June Cell.)''<ref>Toby Marotta, ''The Politics of Homosexuality'' (Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1981), 105.</ref> | ||
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+ | [[Image:Come Out.jpg|thumb|center|635px|The masthead on the first issue of the paper, published November 14, 1969. Reprinted with the permission of Perry Brass.]] | ||
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''Come Out!'' provided a voice for the emerging gay liberation movement. Perry Brass, a member of the collective that published the paper, remembers that it '''“was rife with politics, screeds, positions, calls to action, personalities and viewpoints, the buzzed-out underground artwork of the period, poetry and stories. In it, the Underground met the queer-sexual New Left, and it flowered.”'''<ref>Perry Brass, “Sisters and Brothers: A Writer Hungering for Family Finds GLF,” in ''Smash the Church, Smash the State'', ed. Tommi Avicolli Mecca (San Francisco: City Lights Books, 2009), 129.</ref> | ''Come Out!'' provided a voice for the emerging gay liberation movement. Perry Brass, a member of the collective that published the paper, remembers that it '''“was rife with politics, screeds, positions, calls to action, personalities and viewpoints, the buzzed-out underground artwork of the period, poetry and stories. In it, the Underground met the queer-sexual New Left, and it flowered.”'''<ref>Perry Brass, “Sisters and Brothers: A Writer Hungering for Family Finds GLF,” in ''Smash the Church, Smash the State'', ed. Tommi Avicolli Mecca (San Francisco: City Lights Books, 2009), 129.</ref> |
Revision as of 21:58, 24 March 2010
This page focuses on Come Out!, the first paper put out by the gay liberation movement. The paper was published by a small group of Gay Liberation Front members who came together in the Come Out! collective (which became the autonomous Come Out Cell, later renamed the 28th of June Cell.)[1]
Come Out! provided a voice for the emerging gay liberation movement. Perry Brass, a member of the collective that published the paper, remembers that it “was rife with politics, screeds, positions, calls to action, personalities and viewpoints, the buzzed-out underground artwork of the period, poetry and stories. In it, the Underground met the queer-sexual New Left, and it flowered.”[2]
The paper was put together in Ellen Broidy and Linda Rhoades’ walkup in the East Village, and later in Brass’ apartment in Hell’s Kitchen. It was printed in the middle of the night by radicals who worked at a print shop in Brooklyn, and sold for merely a quarter.[3]
The 28th of June Cell was torn apart by many of the same fissures that wore on the Gay Liberation Front. Arguments erupted over how much space should be devoted to “women’s issues,” and whether street queens or people of color should have complete control over the paper.[4] Although Come Out! outlived the Gay Liberation Front, the paper folded in 1972 soon after GLF disbanded.
Perry Brass remembers his time on the paper, as well as its eventual collapse.
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To read all eight issues of Come Out!, visit Come Out! Magazine, 1969-1972
Return to Gay Liberation in New York City
- ↑ Toby Marotta, The Politics of Homosexuality (Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1981), 105.
- ↑ Perry Brass, “Sisters and Brothers: A Writer Hungering for Family Finds GLF,” in Smash the Church, Smash the State, ed. Tommi Avicolli Mecca (San Francisco: City Lights Books, 2009), 129.
- ↑ Brass, “Sisters and Brothers,” 129-32.
- ↑ Marotta, Politics, 239; Brass, “Sisters and Brothers,” 131.