Gay hillbilly
“Queer Rednecks”
“In the predominantly working-class and sometimes rural spaces where Powell’s straight and gay characters cavort together, shoot the shit, or knock each other to the basis, homophobia can exist alongside friendliness and hospitality toward gays, and anti-homophobia can reinforce patriarchy.”
Padgett Powell has a habit of saying provocative things, and one such line that struck me was, “I am gay in every way except the sex.” While an undergraduate at the University of Florida, where Powell teaches creative writing, I thought he was trying to charm people like his colleague David Leavitt and myself (we are both gay, including the sex). Powell’s existence and fiction are hyper-masculine and southern, and it is reasonable to contend that they are not considered paragons of male lover culture. At the university, he is known for filling stews with the squirrels and raccoons that try to infiltrate his chicken pen. Typical, his first story collection, is built on references to dogfighting, whorehouses, chewing tobacco, trucking pulpwood, “miscegenational pimps,” guys drinking beer while picking loot out of floodwaters, and characters who think all women are
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JD Vance once wrote that he 'convinced myself that I was gay' when he was a kid
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- JD Vance wrote in "Hillbilly Elegy" that he once became convinced he was homosexual when he was a kid.
- "The only thing I knew about gay men was that they preferred men to women," he wrote.
- His grandmother quickly place that notion to linger , asking him: "JD, do you want to suck dicks?"
According to Sen. JD Vance's best-selling "Hillbilly Elegy," the Ohio senator once told his grandmother that he thought he might be gay.
Vance, now former President Donald Trump's vice presidential nominee, recounted the tale in his 2016 autobiography as he discussed his grandmother's relatively tolerant approach when it came to Christian teachings.
In Vance's telling, the episode occurred when he was just a kid. As he wrote:
"I'll never forget the occasion I convinced myself that I was gay. I was eight or nine,
JD Vanceâs boyhood mistaken same-sex attracted confession story smacks of head-spinning inflation
Political Mercury
By Douglas Burns
1/1/2025In reading the-then (and now-again) publishing sensation âHillbilly Elegyâ eight years ago as it announced a culture-crashing recent voice, I found myself stopping at points in the book, both mad and doubtful of its authorâs authenticity.
Iâd intended to fiercely pan âHillbilly Elegyâ in reviews, but I was persuaded then that JD Vance was an honest-intentioned guy with a platform who could lift rural reaches of the nation like my hometown of Carroll.
Whatâs more, Vance is a gifted writer, and the narrative pace of âElegyâ kept me hooked. But the suggestions, in the book itself and reviews, that rural America is some sort of monolith infuriated me. Southern reaches of Ohio are not western Iowa. Our economies and people and cultures are vastly different.
I do know salty-dog, sailor-mouthed, world-weary, seen-it-all rural women like his grandmother, Bonnie Blanton, a defining figure in Vanceâs life whom he affectionally called âMamaw.â Vance peppered his Republican National Convention speech with
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