The
twenty-third annual Lambda Literary Awards, LLA, (also known
as the “Lammys”) took place at New York’s School of the Visual Arts Theatre on
May 26th. And this red carpet event brought out our finest
in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) literature
and publishing traditions.
Celebrities
like Bryan Batt (Mad Men), former New Jersey governor, Jim
McGreevey, TV icon, Stefanie Powers, of the TV series “Hart
to Hart”, Miss New York 2010 winner Claire Buffie, Tony
Award-winning playwright, Terrence McNally (Kiss of the
Spider Woman), and the event’s master of ceremonies, stand-up
comedienne, Lea Delaria, all lent their help in making the
evening special.
This
year’s LLA pioneers being honored were three-time Pulitzer
Prize winning playwright, Edward Albee, 83, and Diamond
Dagger Award-winning crime fiction writer, Val McDermid,
56. But as I sat in the audience, listening to several
speakers querying our present-day utility of the literary
niche “gay writer,” I wondered, in our efforts to overcome
heterosexism and to go mainstream in literature and publishing,
do we eventually want to get rid of our niche?
Were the speakers assimilationists
or homophobes?
Or, am I a relic stuck
in the ghetto of ‘identity politics”?
“I’m looking forward
to the day where it’s not ‘gay books,’ it’s just, ‘books,’”
Lea DeLaria told the audience.
And Stefanie Powers
told EW.COM (Entertainment Weekly) reporter Stephanie Lee that
“The gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities
are in a position where they’re expected to fill a niche,
to make a point of themselves,” she said. “We all long for
the time when nobody has to do that.”
In our longing to enter
into mainstream society how far is too far before we not
only lose our distinctive cultural identities, but also
the leverage from our communities and allies in our continued
battle for LGBTQ civil rights?
However, for Edward
Albee, these questions of LGBT genres in literature are,
at best, a non-issue, and, at worst, absurd, and one he
never deigned to tackle in his opuses. In accepting
his Lammy, Albee told us, “I’m not a gay writer. I’m a writer
who happens to be gay … I’ve
written a number of plays with gay characters in them, but
I have never written a play that could be considered a ‘gay
play’ because I consider that a lessening of the creative
act, to limit oneself to one’s own sexual practices as subject
matter for one’s work.”
But there was a time,
during both Albee’s and McDermid’s lives, that gay themes
were prohibited, and “…to those times when it took real
guts to tackle gay themes openly and unapologetically, in
one’s writing, risking one’s career and, up until the 1960s,
a possible jail sentence” Don Weise, Publisher of Magnus
Books, reminded LLA audience in his message as host committee
chair.
And here at home in
the U.S., many LGBTQ-themed books still have a hard
time landing with big named publishing houses. Just ask
Scottish-born writer, McDermid:
“When I was first published
in 1987, no mainstream commercial publisher would consider
my book for a nanosecond. Only niche publishers catering
to lesbians and feminist wanted books with big old queers
taking center stage. Now, in the UK at least, pretty much every big house has starry
lesbian authors headlining their catalogues.... My latest
book, Trick
of the Dark, is chock-full of lesbians, and everywhere
except in the U.S. it’s being published by all my usual
publishers,” McDermid said in an interview with Sinclair
Sexsmith, who runs the award-winning personal online writing
project, “Sugarbutch Chronicles: The Sex, Gender, and Relationship
Adventures of a Kinky Queer Butch Top” at sugarbutch.net.
As an African American
lesbian, however, I don’t have the luxury to entertain if
I am a “writer” or a “lesbian writer” or a “black writer,”
because I write at the intersections of where my race, class,
gender and sexual orientation give visibility to my experience
and authenticity to my voice.
In 2002, I attended
the “Fire and Ink: A Writer’s Festival for LGBT people of
African Descent.” It was an historic event that took place
on the campus of the University
of Illinois at Chicago. I was
delighted to be a part of the event because never have I
been at a writers’ conference where all the participants
were both black and queer. Many of us looked at each other
and asked if this was really happening.
The goal of the event
was to bring together LGBT writers, thinkers, teachers,
and publishing and media professionals of African descent
to discuss the position and importance of African Diasporic
LGBT literature. The exclusion we experience from publishing
houses and the literary world due to homophobia and/or racism,
at best, departmentalizes our works as either black or queer,
thus erasing the LGBT of African descent literary canon,
and, at worst, rendering us invisible and muting our voice.
Being both of African
descent and queer creates a distinctive epistemology that
shapes not only our identity but also shapes our distinctive
interpretative lens we zoom on the world about politics,
race, class, gender, sexual orientation, arts, music, and,
of course, literature.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion
columnist, theologian, and public speaker. She is the Coordinator of
the African-American Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and
Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the Pacific
School of Religion.
A native of Brooklyn,
Rev. Monroe is a graduate from Wellesley College and Union
Theological Seminary at Columbia University, and served
as a pastor at an African-American church before coming
to Harvard Divinity School for her doctorate as a Ford Fellow.
She was recently named to MSNBC’s list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. Reverend Monroe is the author
of Let Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible
Prayers for Not’So’Everyday Moments. As an African-American
feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of society
that is frequently invisible. Her website
is irenemonroe.com.
Click here
to contact the Rev. Monroe.
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