On its surface, the history of the male flight attendant looks like a niche topic for a narrow market. However, Tiemeyer has done a wonderful job of showing how the airline steward fits in with broader rights struggles of the 20th century. This is absolutely worth reading for anyone interested in women's rights, gay rights and history, civil rights, labor relations, HIV/AIDS, the history of aviation, pink collar jobs… The list goes on.
I first heard about the title during an interview with the author on Michaelangelo Signorile's XM show. Tiemeyer did a wonderful job selling the book, mostly discussing the Gaetan Dugas controversy from "And the Band Played On." In short, the characterization of French-Canadian flight attendant Dugas as the man who brought AIDS to the Americas was completely false and a salacious misrepresentation that had a very mixed political legacy. As a fan of the movie, I found this fascinating; I wish Tiemeyer had been able to track down friends and family who'd known the real Gaetan for an interview.
Beyond Dugas, though, the history of the flight steward dates from the 1930s and has been a reflection of the outer boundaries of the society and times ever since. Initially, all flight attendants were white men, but during and after the second World War, the job became dominated by white women. Male stewards never really disappeared completely, though to gain employment on most airlines they eventually had to sue for the privilege under the 1964 Civil Rights Act. I have seen few cases so well and concretely laid out of the real ways in which gender-based employment discrimination hurts men and women. Race, gender, and sexual identity all intertwine to determine perceptions of who should have access to these jobs and how the people in them are treated. From the initial civil rights victories of the 1960s and 1970s, we move on to the AIDS crisis and cultural backlash of the 1980s to the gradual acceptance followed by an erosion of airline profits and labor rights in the economic downturn of the early 2000s. I found the last couple decades of history covered less interestingly than the first several, but nonetheless, this is a history absolutely worth reading, whether or not you've ever considered reading a book about flight attendants. Additionally, I can't wait to pick up several of the books Tiemeyer mentions, whether on the history of AIDS activism, the history of female flight attendants, or the cultural shifts of the 1980s.