Amis and Gays--2
Topic: |
Amis & Homosexuality |
Conf: |
Martin Amis Discussion Web |
From: |
Tod F
babiesdead@hotmail.com |
Date: |
Thursday, June 28, 2001 09:00 AM |
On 6/28/2001 1:26:51 AM, masma
wrote:
<<Bilge delivers the evidence - I’m sure you’ll agree that Bellow’s
statement in particular is right down there
with the very worst expressions of human
hatefulness and deeply connected with the Judaism of
his forefathers:
When *Playboy* magazine asks Saul Bellow: "What do you make of the
AIDS epidemic?" And Saul Bellow's reply is: "If I
believed in God, I would say that this is God's
way of restoring the seriousness to sexual connections."
The truly remarkable thing about this reply is that Amis
has, through a first person narrative, made an uncannily
similar observation. In Money (1984 - the date is
significant ) the narrator, after alluding to the
carryings on at “ The Water Closet ” , “ The Spike “, “The Mother Load ” and (I paraphrase from memory ):
“ the other really heavy gay joints of Manhattan where the
average patron leaves his sock in one cab but returns
in two and has, by any reasonable measure, a really
bad time. Fielding tells me that there is some
nasty new disease afoot. Mother nature, always a
champion of monogamy, is looking on at all this
crossing her arms and tut-tutting, she just will not
stand for it. ”
Make the easy substitution of “ mother nature” for Bellow’s
not-believed-in God and the comity of the minds of Amis
and Bellow on this subject is crystal clear.>>
Leaving aside the point that John Self is not intended to be Amis' alter ego in
Money, I'll address the more general issue.
You seem to be suggesting that a lack of sympathy towards the victims of AIDS
is prima facie evidence of homophobia. Well it isn't. Both these comments cited
are intended to suggest that it is promiscuity per se which 'nature'/'God' is
intending to eradicate.
Newsflash - heterosexuals can be promiscuous as well. And there's more evidence
of unthinking homophobia in the sloppy correlation between AIDS and gays and
between promiscuity and gays than is evident in the thinking of Amis or Bellow
from the examples here cited.
Brian
Topic: |
Amis & Homosexuality |
Conf: |
Martin Amis Discussion Web |
From: |
DaveL
dalch@cup.uni-muenchen.de |
Date: |
Thursday, June 28, 2001 09:51 AM |
I am with Brian on this one,
especially on
his first point - "the views expressed herein
are not necessarily those of the author"
(perhaps the novels need a confidentiality
notice/disclaimer, no, that might irritate
some folk even further...), pretty obvious
really.
As for the portrayal of homosexuals in Amis's
work, this is the same argument feminists use
to claim he is a misogynist. This argument
holds very well if you only examine the group
you are interested in proving he hates, e.g.
women or homosexuals. If you look at all the
characters in his books you'll probably find
that not many are portrayed in a very kind
light (e.g. it is easy to say "oh, misogynist
- look at Nicola Six", but are men really
getting a fair deal out of Keith and Guy?).
If anything, the homophobe/misogynist is just
a subset - if Amis is going to have this type
of accusation levelled at him, surely it
should be one of misanthropy???
Then again, the one time I saw him in the
flesh, at a reading/Q&A session, he was very
keen to stress his 110% hetero-ness at every
opportunity. I guess some people might
construe that as homophobia.
Dave
Topic: |
Amis & Homosexuality |
Conf: |
Martin
Amis Discussion Web |
From: |
bronteboy
sbrockwell@500cc.com |
Date: |
Thursday, June 28, 2001 10:41 PM |
Brian's response that Amis is not
Self and therefore it is impermissible to suggest that a first person narrative
stream might be Amis's view as well (But see my third extract of Brian's post
below). Further :
"You seem to be suggesting that a lack of sympathy
towards the victims of AIDS is prima facie evidence of
homophobia. Well it isn't."
First, I didn't make any such suggestion, it was Bill J that did in relation to
Saul Bellow. Secondly, let me state that so-called "homophobia", by
reason of its recent invention as term of abuse intended to gag discussion of
any aspect of homosexuality deemed unsympathetic, is a word that has no place in
my lexicon. Thirdly, point to a single instance where a public expression of
lack of sympathy for those sexually infected with HIV has not been greeted with
shrieks and howls of
denunciation with the usual term.
" Both these comments cited are intended to suggest that it is promiscuity
per se
which 'nature'/'God' is intending to eradicate."
Per se? I think not. The intention of the "comments" can be gleaned
from the context in which they were made. Both were specifically directed at the
male homosexual community in which the epidemic was occurring.
" Newsflash - heterosexuals can be promiscuous as well.
And there's more evidence of unthinking homophobia in
the sloppy correlation between AIDS and gays and
between promiscuity and gays than is evident in the
thinking of Amis [ surely he means Amis's character John Self?] Bellow from the
examples here cited."
If Brian is seriously asserting (which I doubt - this is an oft repeated canard
) that promiscuity in the male homosexual community is in any way comparable
with that found in heterosexual life, I suggest he reads either of the
biographies of Michel Foucault or any text of any kind dealing with the bars,
steambaths, clubs and " beats" of San Francisco, New York, LA, Sydney,
Berlin, etc. Perhaps if he doesn't know anybody who is a member of that
community he should make the acquaintance of a few and, once a level of candour
has been established, ask them about their sex lives. Get them to estimate the
number of partners they've had. Secondly to assert that a correlation between
male homosexuality, promiscuity and AIDS is " sloppy " defies reality.
In the Western World active homosexual men still constitute the overwhelming
majority of HIV/AIDS cases. Does Brian believe that this, or the fact that AIDS
was first identified and rapidly spread in the homosexual community, is purely
coincidental. What does Brian imagine the principal means of transmission of the
virus to be ?
Topic: |
Amis & Homosexuality |
Conf: |
Martin
Amis Discussion Web |
From: |
bronteboy
sbrockwell@500cc.com |
Date: |
Thursday, June 28, 2001 11:11 PM |
Dave responds:
“ As for the portrayal of homosexuals in Amis's
work, this is the same argument feminists use
to claim he is a misogynist."
There are similarities but they are superficial ones for the following reason.
There is a spectrum of female characters in Amis ranging from Nicola and Amy
Hide at one end ranging through all the women in e.g. Dead Babies with Hope, Gina
and Martina Twain at the other end. There is no such spectrum for male
homosexuals as I endeavoured to make clear.
" This argument holds very well if you only examine the group
you are interested in proving he hates, e.g. women or homosexuals. If you look
at all the
characters in his books you'll probably find that not many are portrayed in a
very kind light (e.g. it is easy to say "oh, misogynist - look at Nicola
Six", but are men really
getting a fair deal out of Keith and Guy?).”
I don't believe that Amis "hates" homosexuals and it was not my
intention to try to "prove" it. And he is certainly not a misogynist -
as Richard Tull says, your nuts radar tells you when you've encountered the
genuine article. Curiously, the sole lesbian I recall in MA's fiction - the
scriptwriter in Money - came up quite well. Despite being subjected to Self's
oafish attempt at seduction/ sexual assault she still has the humanity to warn
him, at a point where it would save Self from ruin, that Fielding is taking him
for a ride. He's too drunk to haul it in.
But what of MA's hetero men? Again there is a spectrum across which we find
psychopaths ( Keith, Steve Cousins), villains, conceited fools, boors, dupes,
dummies, etc, and the cast is pretty skewed towards these types, but (with the
exception of the psychopaths) there is always a degree of authorial empathy
generated for them particularly Guy, Richard Tull. Even John Self.
Topic: |
Amis & Homosexuality |
Conf: |
Martin
Amis Discussion Web |
From: |
Tod F
babiesdead@hotmail.com |
Date: |
Friday, June 29, 2001 09:26 AM |
I note that the board is displaying
some antipathy toward either my quoting style or the prose contained within it
by not reproducing the points I'm addressing in full. I'll try again.
[[Brian's responds that Amis is not Self and therefore it is impermissible to
suggest that a first person narrative stream might be Amis's view as well (But
see my third extract of Brian's post below).]]
Your defensiveness is telling. I didn't say that it is impermissible to do so. I
was merely pointing out that you failed entirely to acknowledge the possibility
of the distinction.
[[Further :
" You seem to be suggesting that a lack of sympathy
towards the victims of AIDS is prima facie evidence of
homophobia. Well it isn't."
First, I didn't make any such suggestion, it was Bill J that did in relation to
Saul Bellow. ]]
The tone and context implied approval. But perhaps that was just me.
[[Secondly, let me state that so-called "homophobia", by reason of its
recent invention as term of abuse intended to gag discussion of any aspect of
homosexuality deemed unsympathetic, is a word that has no place in my lexicon.
]]
Nor indeed is there much apparent room for "brevity" in that tome.
"Homophobia" is the best term we have to concisely refer to a certain
mindset on homosexuality. Although bearing in mind the
meandering *concisophobic* tone of your initial argument I am hardly surprised
that you reject it. Perhaps you also inhabit a world of perambulators,
wellingtons and influenza while the rest of us spew their vulgar contractions
for the crass purpose of saving time. Would it be possible for you to indulge
those of us with MTV-concentration spans and fast-food-queue patience and
surmise your point on Amis in a sentence?
(Personally I'd make a case for "homosceptic" being oft-times more
appostite than "homophobia" but until it catches on I and the rest of
the great-unwashed will just make do.)
[[Thirdly, point to a single instance where a public expression of lack of
sympathy for those sexually infected with HIV has not been greeted with shrieks
and howls of
denunciation with the usual term.]]
The "everybody else is doing it so why can't I?" line of reasoning.
Answer: you can, but you'll get called on it. Just as anyone else would if they
did it within my range of perception.
[[" Both these comments cited are intended to suggest that it is
promiscuity per se
which 'nature'/'God' is intending to eradicate."
Per se? I think not. The intention of the "comments" can be gleaned
from the context in which they were made. Both were specifically directed at the
male homosexual community in which the epidemic was occurring. ]]
No "gay" context was provided for the Bellow remark. For the Amis one
the context can be finely gleaned from the line, "Mother nature, always a
champion of monogamy". That's the context: pro-monogomy, anti-promiscuity.
Like I said.
[[If Brian is seriously asserting (which I doubt - this is an oft repeated
canard ) that promiscuity in the male homosexual community is in any way
comparable with that found in heterosexual life, I suggest he reads either of
the biographies of Michel Foucault or any text of any kind dealing with the
bars, steambaths, clubs and " beats" of San Francisco, New York, LA,
Sydney, Berlin, etc. Perhaps if he doesn't know anybody who is a member of that
community he should make the acquaintance of a few and, once a level of candour
has been established, ask them about their sex lives. Get them to estimate the
number of partners they've had. ]]
I'm not asserting it either seriously, frivolously, rambunctuously, manically or
in any manner whatsoever. I'm not asserting it at all. Yes, gay men are more
promiscuous. But that doesn't mean that promiscuity = gay. Gay people are
disproportionately involved in the fashion industry. But fashion does not = gay.
So if I attack fashion, I'm not attacking homosexuality. And if I attack
promiscuity I'm not attacking homosexuality. The distinction is there to be
grasped (and if you knew how much and how well I know many gay people, you'd be
embarrassed at trying to obscure it with your hackneyed second-hand
shopping-list of wannabe-hip homo-referentia.)
[[Secondly to assert that a correlation between male homosexuality, promiscuity
and AIDS is " sloppy " defies reality. In the Western World active
homosexual men still constitute the overwhelming majority of HIV/AIDS cases.
Does Brian believe that this, or the fact that AIDS was first identified and
rapidly spread in the homosexual community, is purely coincidental]]
Back to the fashion-gay thing. There is a difference between *some* correlation
and the absolute correlation which you have willed yourself into detecting.
<<. What does Brian imagine the principal means of transmission of the
virus to be ?
Let's leave this as an essay question for the readers, who will no doubt join
you avidly in your frenzied anticipation of the inner-most workings of my
imagination. Perhaps I'll offer a suitable prize for the candidate who gets
nearest the mark.
Brian
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