Blackmailed by Sex: Tennessee Williams and the Economics of Desire
Author(s) -
Steven Bruhm
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
modern drama
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.129
H-Index - 11
eISSN - 1712-5286
pISSN - 0026-7694
DOI - 10.3138/md.34.4.528
Subject(s) - anonymity , desk , queer , government (linguistics) , law , sociology , political science , history , gender studies , philosophy , linguistics
STEVEN BRUHM In 1951, Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer published a book entitled Washington Confidential. One of its chapters, called "A Garden of Pansies," had a dire warning for patriotic Americans: "With more than 6,000 fairies in government offices, you may be concerned about the security of the country. Fairies are no more disloyal than the normal. But homosexuals are vulnerable, they can be blackmailed or influenced by sex more deeply than conventional citizens; they are far more intense about their love-life." Now, Lait and Mortimer have two problems here which, while not particular to McCarthy's America, are epitomized by it. The first is one of anonymity: 6,000 in office, they say, and "One cannot snoop at every desk and count people who appear queer. Some are deceptive to the uninitiated." And this anonymity poses the larger threat of potential blackmail: because homosexuals have a secret, they are willing to hide it at any cost. What's worse, they may be willing to sell the goods on someone else, if ...
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