Today we’re celebrating the launch of Coming out by Jeffrey Weeks.
Coming Out explores the definitive history of the LGBT community’s struggle for equality.
From the barbaric legal and social oppression of the nineteenth century to the seismic impact of the gay liberation movement in the 1970s and beyond, COMING OUT maps the story of British LGBT identities and the ongoing struggle for equality. A compassionate and moving social history written in an open and accessible way, it lucidly illustrates the resilience and grit of the LGBT community in the face of unprecedented challenges.
Originally published to great acclaim in 1977 as a pioneering study of gay and lesbian lives, this classic prize-winning title is newly reissued in a revised and updated edition at a time when LGBT issues are a matter of national importance. As a gay activist and campaigner, Jeffrey Weeks has been on the frontline of the fight for equality for decades.
‘Undoubtedly the best book on the British gay movement’ – Gay News
‘An extremely able study of the development of a political homosexual consciousness’ – Dennis Altman
‘A major contribution towards uncovering a homosexual past’ – John D’Emilio
Colin Spencer’s play Spitting Image, last performed 58 years ago, is to be staged at the King’s Head Theatre, London, from 5 August until the 27 August. The play tells to story of Gary and Tom,
long-term lovers who are having a baby, set in 1960’s London. The play was undoubtedly one of the UK’s first openly gay plays, and was first staged in 1968 to critical acclaim. Spitting Image now reimagines Colin Spencer’s uproarious satire of bigotry and biology for a whole new generation.
In an exclusive interview with The Independent, Spencer comments: ‘It is undoubtedly the first openly gay play but it was never published because homophobia was still rife,..it wasn’t even possible for amateur groups to do it over the years.’ He also goes on to say how surprised he is that Spitting Image is still as relevant today as it was then. The play, as well as many of his writings and musings, is a very personal story to Spencer, as he was denied access to his young son after his first marriage broke down and faced hostility in a 1960s court system which viewed homosexuals as degenerates.
Spencer is the author of Backing into Light: My Father’s Son, the first volume of his memoir, and is a stunning account of art school life in 1950s Brighton and London’s literary Bohemia of the Swinging Sixties. Best remembered now perhaps as a food writer, his column was published for fourteen years in the Guardian and his epic British Food: An Extraordinary Thousand Years of History reissued in 2011.