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City of Sisterly and Brotherly Loves: Lesbian and Gay Philadelphia, 1945-1972

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In this pathbreaking history, Marc Stein takes an in-depth look at Philadelphia from the 1940s to the 1970s. What he finds is a city of vibrant gay and lesbian households, neighborhoods, commercial establishments, public cultures, and political groups. In doing so, Stein shatters the myth that lesbian and gay history began with the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York City and challenges the notion that only New York and San Francisco featured major lesbian and gay communities in the pre-Stonewall era.

Stein takes us on a tour through Philadelphia's bars, restaurants, bookstores, bathhouses, movie theaters, parks, and parades where lesbian and gay cultures thrived.

We learn about the scientific experts, religious leaders, public officials, and journalists who attacked and ignored same-sex sexualities. And we read about the courageous people who fought back with strategies of everyday resistance and organized political activism.

Stein argues against the idea that a conspiracy of silence surrounded gays and lesbians in the 1940s and 1950s. He shows that same-sex sexualities were regularly discussed in controversies concerning the tennis player Big Bill Tilden, the Walt Whitman Bridge, sex murders and crimes, and police raids. Philadelphians became national leaders in the gay and lesbian movement. They conducted sit-ins at Dewey's restaurant, organized pickets at Independence Hall, edited the movement's most widely circulated publications the Ladder and Drum, and pursued court cases all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Beautifully crafted and exceptionally well-written, Stein's book not only provides a new starting place for thinking about lesbian and gay history but also challenges readers to rethink twentieth-century urban history.

480 pages, Hardcover

First published June 1, 2000

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Marc Stein

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Larry.
489 reviews5 followers
August 21, 2024
Despite the tedious first chapter on residential zones (which could have been an appendix in my opinion), this is a great book about Philadelphia's lesbian and gay communities, their interactions, and their prominent place in the modern gay and lesbian rights struggle. I particularly admired how Stein laid out different possible explanations for events without insisting that he knew which possible explanation was the right one.
Profile Image for Liz Barr.
10 reviews10 followers
August 2, 2016
Though I wasn't always interested in Marc Stein's over-arching question of how gay & lesbian groups/histories related to each other, I was really interested in learning about Philly's gay & lesbian history, and this is the first book I've read that focuses on it. I especially enjoyed all the narratives and anecdotes from gay men & women who lived in Philly in the '40s, '50s, and '60s.
2 reviews
December 6, 2019
I like this book as an account of queer lives in Philadelphia prior to the gay liberation movement associated with the post-stonewall era. While I think the author is too ambivalent in certain sections and could trim down pieces, Stein uses oral history and public records to clearly and authoritatively lay out his argument.
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