Amis and Gays--4
Topic: |
Martinian moral sloth (26 of 37),
Read 89 times |
Conf: |
Martin Amis Discussion Web |
From: |
StephenP
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Date: |
Sunday, July 08, 2001 04:35 AM |
Yes, dear Simon, it was an insult.
Well spotted. It certainly wasn't an attempt to appear clever that I identified
the Simon Brockwell of the belated parody with the SBrockwell@500cc.com of your
email address. (500cc.com? No wonder you're so laudably butch.)
I feel that your points are insulting to homosexuals, that's why I insulted
you. This is clearly self-righteous of me, not being one myself, but fine. Your
post is mostly sophistry; for all your high-aiming talk of literature and
history, you are simply a little disgusted by them. You have decided to accord
them rights (not EQUAL rights, of course: in your universe a seventeen year old
male can have sex with a woman but not with a man), but only because you're
worried that if you don't they'll turn into Himmler. Intelligent.
I have to congratulate you on one of the funniest sentences ever posted on the
board: "Most people would still find toilet trading, rimming, fisting and
felching contemptible acts but these are not publicised." (How would you
go about 'publicising' felching, by the way? It would be the Saatchi's toughest
brief yet, 13 years of Margaret Thatcher excepted). Simon, come and sit close
to me here: I have to tell you, my sex life has been exclusively heterosexual.
Purely legal. And yet (whisper it) I confess here and now, to a total stranger,
that I've done some pretty dirty stuff. Even a couple of the things you
describe in your scabrous hate-sheet (if you count hanging out near the ladies'
at Romeo & Juliets as toilet trading). I thought of them as fun, and
naughty, and sometimes prfoundly embarrassing, but never 'contemptible', I must
say. So why would I find it contemptible if over-16-year-old men wanted to do
them to each other?
You miss the point about all this. You seem to think that homosexuality is a
matter of brief resistance, gleeful acceptance, then a happy and guilt-free
lifetime divided between trumpeting your life choices and the privileges you
are thus entitled to, plus a bit of extra-curricular sucking your own semen out
of your partner's arse with a straw. The experience of gays I know is very
different: years 'not fitting in' during adolescence, with all the fun that
involves; a while plucking up the courage, once you've admitted to yourself the
inevitable, to tell others, ultimately your parents, with all the difficulties
involved there (sorry mum: no grandchildren, but at least you won't have to buy
a hat); and, far from the Brockwell paranoia of having to keep quiet in case
your boss is a poof (where did you get THAT from?), a nagging concern that your
own boss has a problem with you (a very justified concern in my experience). I
have never met a homosexual who has not found each stage extremely difficult,
long-drawn-out and painful. Otherwise intelligent people like you getting upset
about what they want to get up to doesn't exactly help.
So, to get round to Amis. I think he's pretty much in line with Brockwell on
this. I think he's too damn straight. I think some of the things he writes,
when he doesn't satisfy my hopes for authorial distance, about gays and blacks
and women, are regrettable. You expect them from someone who, say, works for
500cc.com, but not from the finest English writer alive today.
(Incidentally, with his usual sense of timing, my eight-month-old just summoned
me to his cot. And it made me think: why deny such joy to 'same-sexers', just
because of a couple of trivial biological necessities? Am I getting too
sanctimonious now?)
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