1st Edition

From Perverts to Fab Five The Media's Changing Depiction of Gay Men and Lesbians

By Rodger Streitmatter Copyright 2009
230 Pages
by Routledge

230 Pages
by Routledge

  From "Perverts" to "Fab Five" tracks the dramatic change in how the American media have depicted gay people over the last half-century. Each chapter illuminates a particular media product that served as a milestone on the media's journey from demonizing homosexuals some fifty years ago to celebrating gay people--or at least some categories of gay people--today. The media,... Read more

Introduction  1. "Perverts" on the Potomac: Homosexuals Enter the News Arena   2. Stonewall Rebellion: Reporting on an Epic Event  3. The Boys in the Band: Homosexuality Comes to the Big Screen  4. Soap: A Gay Man Comes to TV Land  5. AIDS Enters the News: Reporting on the "Gay Plague"  6. AIDS Becomes Major News: "Now No One Is Safe"  7. Gays in the Military: The Debate over Lifting the Ban  8. Fleeting Images of Lesbians: Killing, Kissing, Being Chic  9. Philadelphia: "A Quantum Leap for Gays on Film"  10. A New Gay Man in Town: Hollywood Shifts to Positive Stereotypes  11. Ellen: Coming Out, On Screen and Off  12. Will & Grace: The Biggest Gay Hit in TV History  13. Queer as Folk: "An Unvarnished Treatment of Gay Life"  14. Queer Eye for the Straight Guy: The "Fab Five" as Gay Reality  Special section: Gay Visibility Vs. Lesbian Visibility  15. The L Word: Lesbians Move into the Spotlight  16. Same-Sex Marriage: A Journalistic Love Fest  17. Brokeback Mountain: "A Breakthrough Gay Romance"  Conclusion: From "Perverts" to "Fab Five": Progress in Three Stages . . .and Waiting for a Fourth

Biography

Rodger Streitmatter is a Professor and Senior Associate Dean in the School of Communication at American University in Washington, D.C.  He is author of six previous books, including Mightier than the Sword: How the News Media Have Shaped American History, Voices of Revolution: The Dissident Press in America, and Sex Sells! The Media's Journey from Repression to Obsession.  He holds a Ph.D. in American History. 

As a journalism historian, [Streitmatter] has been one of only a few scholars writing about the coverage of gay people in the American press. He was uniquely qualified to write this book, and his informed perspective is obvious and useful. --Johanna Cleary, University of Florida