Nicholas F. Benton, pioneer gay liberation activist of the Stonewall
era and for 22 years the founder, owner and editor of the award-winning
Northern Virginia general interest weekly newspaper, the Falls Church
News-Press, wrapped up a 100-part weekly series entitled, "Nick
Benton's Gay Science," last week that ran weekly from Oct. 15, 2010 to
Sept. 7, 2012 on the web edition of the Falls Church News-Press (fcnp.com), and reprinted weekly in the Washington, D.C.-based gay community news magazine, Metro Weekly.
Benton announced to friends assembled in Falls Church,
an inside-the-beltway suburb of Washington, D.C., for an informal "Gay
Science Wrap Party" last Friday that the series will soon be published
in book form, tentatively entitled, "The Gay Science Papers, A Gay
Pioneer's 100 Weekly Columns Published in Washington, D.C, October
2010-September 2012 on How Same-Sex Erotic Attraction is Natural and
Indispensable for the Progressive Humanizing of Society."
The
columns challenge contemporary assumptions and values of urban gay
culture and the impact of the hedonistic 1960s counterculture on shaping
it, arguing from history dating from Plato and King David forward that,
as Benton wrote in his 100th part, "Contrary to the shallow conceits of
current, hedonistic urban gay culture, we gay souls have been a major,
constructive factor in civilization since before the beginning.
Sensitive to the plight of women, children, the elderly and downtrodden
in savage patriarchal male chauvinist, war-mongering cultures, we worked
to build the institutions over eons that have advanced compassion over
cruelty, science over superstition, beauty over corruptions and equality
over tyranny."
"Preponderant qualities of heightened empathy," he wrote, "and
compassion for the underdog, of an alternate sensual perspective (our
same-sex erotic attraction being a natural derivative of humanity's
powerful impulse for empathy and not a variant of the drive for
reproduction) applied to all aspects of life, and a constructive
non-conformity account for the amazing contributions our 'tribe' has
brought to the benefit of all humanity for thousands of years."
Benton drew heavily on the work of gay historic and literary giants including Oscar Wilde, Christopher Isherwood and Tennessee Williams, and many others, in his 100 columns. They can be viewed at nfbenton.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment