Technology and gay identity: the case of the pre-Second World War male flight attendant |
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Authors: | Phil Tiemeyer |
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Affiliation: | Senior Lecturer, Thermodynamics and Fluids Section, Mechanical Engineering Department , Sunderland Polytechnic , |
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Abstract: | This article examines 1930s aviation in the USA through an unconventional lens – the male flight attendant, a figure who served as a cultural touchstone for negotiating gender roles in the emerging business of commercial air transport. As aviation had broad resonance as a symbol of modern and cosmopolitan life, the male flight attendant, too, became bound to this larger context of technological development and the futuristic transformations of society it promised. My aim is to detail these connections between the flight attendant and technological innovation, but also to make a deeper claim: that the occupation of flight attendant, the place of gay men therein, and the cultural acceptance and resistance to this fact were constituent, not ancillary, to the history of the 1930s. In the process, I am arguing not only that gender serves as a fundamental category of historical analysis – via the assumptions and power relations through which historical actors make history – but also that issues of gay identity and homophobia are integral to such analysis |
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Keywords: | flight attendants homosexuality gay identity masculinty labor 1930s |
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