Difference between revisions of "History of the word "gay""
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+ | Stein, Gertrude. "Miss Furr & Miss Skeene". Written: 1911. (See below: 1922.) | ||
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− | Stein, Gertrude. "Miss Furr & Miss Skeene". | + | Stein, Gertrude. "Miss Furr & Miss Skeene". Written: 1911. First published in Stein's ''Geography and Plays'', page 17. |
:Sample excerpts: "Helen Furr and Georgina Keene lived together then‥. They were together then and traveled to another place and stayed there and were gay there‥not very gay there, just gay there. They were both gay there." | :Sample excerpts: "Helen Furr and Georgina Keene lived together then‥. They were together then and traveled to another place and stayed there and were gay there‥not very gay there, just gay there. They were both gay there." | ||
:They were ... gay, they learned little things that are things in being gay, ... they were quite regularly gay." | :They were ... gay, they learned little things that are things in being gay, ... they were quite regularly gay." |
Revision as of 17:15, 8 December 2011
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
Timeline of "gay" used in reference to same-sex acts, desires, persons, relationships:
1911
Stein, Gertrude. "Miss Furr & Miss Skeene". Written: 1911. (See below: 1922.)
1922
Stein, Gertrude. "Miss Furr & Miss Skeene". Written: 1911. First published in Stein's Geography and Plays, page 17.
- Sample excerpts: "Helen Furr and Georgina Keene lived together then‥. They were together then and traveled to another place and stayed there and were gay there‥not very gay there, just gay there. They were both gay there."
- They were ... gay, they learned little things that are things in being gay, ... they were quite regularly gay."
- A passage from Gertrude Stein's "Miss Furr & Miss Skeene" (1922) may be the first published use of the word to refer to a homosexual relationship. In 1951, literary critic Edmund Wilson suggested that Stein's use of "gay" referred to a homosexual relationship (quoted by James Mellow in Charmed Circle (1974).
- Discussed by Martha E. Stone, "Who were Miss Furr and Miss Skeene?" The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide, Sept–Oct, 2002.
- According to Linda Wagner-Martin (Favored Strangers: Gertrude Stein and her Family (1995), the portrait "featured the sly repetition of the word gay, used with sexual intent for one of the first times in linguistic history."
1929
Coward, Noel. Song "Green Carnation" in B. Day N. Coward: Compl. Lyrics (1998) 114/3
- Lyric: "Art is our inspiration, And as we are the reason for the ‘Nineties’ being gay, We all wear a green carnation."
1938
Nichols, D. and H. Wilde. "Bringing up Baby" (film script, final revision), page 35.
- David‥comes on‥.in negligee‥. Aunt: Why are you wearing these clothes?‥ David: Because I just went gay, all of a sudden.
1939
Coward, Noel. "I went to Marvellous Party" (song) in B. Day N. Coward: Compl. Lyrics (1998) 195/2.
- Lyric: "Everyone's here and frightfully gay, Nobody cares what people say, Though the Riviera Seems really much queerer Than Rome at its height."
1941
'Boucher, A.’ Case of Solid Key. pages xiii. 235,
- "I had deliberately changed my manners, my mannerisms. I had ‘gone gay’, as we say in Hollywood.
1941
Legman, G. "Language of Homosexuality in G. W. Henry Sex Variants II. 1167.
- "Gay, an adjective used almost exclusively by homosexuals to denote homosexuality, sexual attractiveness, promiscuity‥or lack of restraint, in a person, place, or party. Often given the French spelling, gai or gaie by (or in burlesque of) cultured homosexuals of both sexes.
1941
Painter, T. "Homosexual" (typescript) in G. Chauncey Gay N.Y. (1994) 18.
- "Supposing one met a stranger on a train from Boston to New York and wanted to find out whether he was ‘wise’ or even homosexual. One might ask: ‘Are there any gay spots in Boston?’ And by a slight accent put on the word ‘gay’ the stranger, if wise, would understand that homosexual resorts were meant."
1947
- Ben, Lisa (pseudonym of ??????????) Vice Versa in Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay/Lesbian Almanac (NY: Harper & Row, 1983), page 624.
- "Homosexuality is becoming less and less a ‘taboo’ subject, and‥I venture to predict that there will be a time in the future when gay folk will be accepted as part of regular society."
1948
Williams, Tennessee. Diary 22 Aug. (1993), page 32.
- "Met a charming young RAF fellow there obviously gay who played Debussy's Bergamasque with more understanding than I've heard for many a day."
1948
Vidal, Gore. The City and the Pillar (novel), page ix, 246.
- [In New York] the words ‘fairy’ and ‘pansy’ were considered to be in bad taste. It was fashionable to say a person was ‘gay’.
1949
De Forrest: "The Gay Year: A Novel".
For earlier and later uses of the word "gay" see the Oxford English Dictionary