Stuff We Like
Kevin Hilke
The stifled, envious subject of Jack Spicer’s early poem “The Dancing Ape,” was, for Spicer’s late-’40s Berkeley classmates, just Jack: an awkward, anguished, failed homosexual. One says (in Spicer’s biography) that “nobody was interested” in “a Neanderthal man” like Jack. Another: “He’s so ugly he doesn’t deserve to have sex.” A friend adds that he was “too apish, or animal-like, to [...]
Politics
Elliott Callahan
Same sex marriage is not the cause of marriage redefinition, but rather its fitting result.
Culture Television
Darren Franich
It is impossible for two men to become good friends nowadays without someone—often multiple someones, including the two men themselves—characterizing the friendship in a homoerotic way. “Man crush” is the preferred terminology—originating, I maintain, from the confused emotions felt by a generation of young men who saw “Fight Club” and felt pretty much the same way about Brad Pitt as Edward Norton does in the movie—utterly in awe, passionately seeking to become his best friend and to become him.