Gregory Woods was appointed to Britain’s first chair in Gay and Lesbian Studies by Nottingham Trent University in 1998. He lives in Nottingham, UK.
“Woods is a knowledgeable and entertaining guide.”—Caleb Crain, The
Guardian
*Guardian*
"Without letting the purveyors of clichés about cliquish
homosexuals off the hook, this lively history turns those
stereotypes on their heads, taking seriously the queer networks
that were central to modernism. Richly literary and attentive to
networks of both men and women, Homintern also has a wide
geographical range. Russian, Scandinavian and South American texts
are thoughtfully integrated with accounts of New York, London,
Berlin, Paris and their Mediterranean outposts. Gregory Woods
writes with an insider’s flair, but does not sugarcoat the
histories he tells. Frank about self-destructive behavior, he is
also sensitive to divisions among sexual minorities along lines of
ideology, class and generation."—Christopher Reed, author of Art
and Homosexuality: A History of Ideas
*Christopher Reed*
"A well-researched, compelling study of how countless gay men have
affected, influenced, and restructured the cultural climate for
more than a hundred years. . . . An information-heavy book
that provides a wonderful resource for those interested in learning
about the rise of gay poetics at the onset of the twentieth
century."—Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review
*Kirkus Reviews*
"Woods is a born storyteller, and he tells the story of the
interlocking, international gay and lesbian networks in an
unflaggingly lively way. This is a book that needs to be
published."—David Bergman, author of The Violet Hour and Gay
American Autobiography: Writings from Whitman to Sedaris
*David Bergman*
“Woods’ history of the ‘homintern’ is in turn hilarious and
horrifying… documents shocking levels of persecution. Homophobia
was pervasive and vicious… But this is not a gloomy book. Woods
lovingly presents a range of gloriously outrageous gay and lesbian
individuals and couples.”—Joanna Bourke, BBC History
*BBC History Magazine*
"Woods regales the reader with an avalanche of stories, ribald
gossip, and lengthy asides that collectively confirm the book’s
central thesis: gay culture, or at least gays and lesbians, did
indeed liberate the modern world."—Brian Kenney, Booklist
*Booklist*
“Homintern shines a fascinating spotlight on the diverse and
informal networks of people who made up the gay communities
worldwide which helped to shape art in its many forms over the
decades, involving poets, dancers, actors, artists, designers,
composers, politicians and spies. . . . This is a book which throws
unreasonable prejudice in the trash can where it belongs, clears up
misleading myths about gay people, and should be on the reading
list of every fresher starting a university degree.”—Richard
Edmonds, Hiskind
*Hiskind*
"Delicious, satisfying reading. Even readers knowledgeable about
post-Oscar Wilde gay culture are unlikely to read more than a
paragraph or two without learning something they did not know, and
I cheerfully confess that my most frequent margin note was '!!!' .
. . The range and depth of Woods' scholarship are remarkable, but
the power of Homintern owes as much to the unabated vitality of his
writing."—Tim Pfaff, Bay Area Reporter
*Bay Area Reporter*
"Gregory Woods’ Homintern is not just a first-rate work
of literary and historical scholarship but a deeply moving
narrative in its own right. In its global reach, it has no
precedent, yet Woods never sacrifices intimacy for grandeur. In the
future I have no doubt that scholars and readers will look to this
as an essential text, one of those rare books that make other books
possible."—David Leavitt, author of The Man Who Knew Too Much: Alan
Turing and the Invention of the Computer
*David Leavitt*
Finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards in the LGBTQ Studies
category.
*Lambda Literary Foundation*
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