As London emerged from the devastation of the
Second World War, planners and policymakers sought to
rebuild the city in ways that would reshape the behavior
of its citizens as much as it would its buildings and
infrastructure--a program defined by a strong emphasis
on civic order and conservative values of national
community. One of the groups most significantly affected
by this new, moralistic climate of reformation and
renewal was queer men, whom the police, the media, and
lawmakers targeted as an urgent urban problem by marking
their lives and desires as criminal and deviant. In
The Spiv and the Architect, Richard Hornsey examines how
queer men legitimized, resisted, and reinvented this
ambitious reconstruction program, which extended from
the design of basic public spaces and municipal
libraries to private living rooms and home decor. From
their association with the urban stereotype of the spiv
(slang for a young petty criminal who lived by his wits
and shirked legitimate work) and vilification in the
tabloids as perverts to the assimilated homosexuals
within reformist psychology, Hornsey details how these
efforts to transform London fundamentally restructured
the experiences and identities of gay men in the city
and throughout the country. Providing the first
critical history of this cultural moment, In The Spiv
and the Architect weaves together a vast archive of
sources--canvases and photobooth self-portraits by the
painter Francis Bacon, urban planning documents and
drawings, popular fiction and films, autobiographical
and psychological accounts of homosexuality, design
exhibitions about the modern British home, and the
library books defaced by the playwright Joe Orton--to
present both a radically revised account of
homosexuality in postwar London and an important new
narrative about mid-twentieth-century British
modernity.
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