cover image A Little Gay History: Desire and Diversity Across the World

A Little Gay History: Desire and Diversity Across the World

R.B Parkinson. Columbia Univ., $19.95 trade paper (128p) ISBN 978-0-231-16663-8

Through meticulous research and compassionate narration, British Museum curator Parkinson (Voices from Ancient Egypt) brings to light a collection of art objects from the British Museum’s collection that illustrate same-sex desire, many of which had previously been censored or concealed from historians. These 40 objects come from various civilizations and eras, some being clear-cut examples of same-sex love, such as Grecian urns decorated with homoerotic scenes, the poetry of Sappho, and the Roman Emperor Hadrian’s well-documented affair with the young Antinous. Other pieces are more ambiguous: artistic renderings that suggest love between Samurai warriors; an Ancient Egyptian tomb that may have been made for a same-sex couple; and Shakespearean sonnets that allude to “bisexual” relationships. The book also includes brief, captivating profiles of gay and lesbian artists, including the sculptors Hedwig Marquardt and Augusta Kaiser, and novelist Virginia Woolf. The long history of intolerance is interwoven through the artwork as well, and while facts surrounding the persecution and execution of “sodomites” are unsettling, the book is not overtly political. Parkinson successfully shows that same-sex love and desire are an integral part of human history: “On a long view, no one occupies the centre. It belongs to all of us.” 80 color photos. (Sept.)