{"id":1779,"date":"2014-11-14T14:33:39","date_gmt":"2014-11-14T20:33:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/historyapolis.com\/?p=1779"},"modified":"2024-01-10T13:43:34","modified_gmt":"2024-01-10T19:43:34","slug":"battle-bookstore-putting-pointergate-context","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mvt.rpw.mybluehost.me\/.website_3d6664ec\/2014\/11\/14\/battle-bookstore-putting-pointergate-context\/","title":{"rendered":"“The Battle of the Bookstore”: Kevin Ehrman-Solberg puts #pointergate in context"},"content":{"rendered":"
Published November 14, 2014 by Kirsten Delegard<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n \n This week I had the privilege of hearing the senior thesis defense of \u00a0Kevin Ehrman-Solberg, an Augsburg College senior and history major who has worked over the last year as an intern for this project.<\/p>\n Kevin has been a familiar presence on this blog. Many of you have enjoyed his work on sewers<\/a>, a topic that few of us realized could be so interesting. He has mastered digital tools that have allowed us to bring you our Hennepin Avenue panorama<\/a> and our Washington Avenue Then-and-Now slider.<\/a> \u00a0Kevin has also shared his research on feminism<\/a>, gay liberation<\/a> and the battle over pornography<\/a> that roiled Minneapolis in the 1980s.<\/p>\n For his honors thesis, Kevin wove some of the insights he presented here into a longer piece he called “The Battle of the Bookstores and Gay Sexual Liberation in Minneapolis.” It chronicles the conflicts between gay activists and the police department in Minneapolis between 1979 and 1985, when thousands of men were arrested for using pornographic bookstores to have sexual encounters with other men. These arrests galvanized the gay community to exert pressure on City Hall, where activists and politicians forced the mayor and the police department to stop the harassment of men who were using these spaces to explore consensual, same-sex desire.<\/p>\n This is history that matters, for so many reasons. First, it is critical for our community to reckon with the tragic effects of this police harassment. \u00a0Arrests were a matter of life or death for many of the targeted men, who had not chosen to identify as gay. One of the most devastating stories uncovered by Kevin is that of the Reverend James Santo<\/a>, who set himself on fire in the basement of his Hopkins church rather than face his family and congregation after his arrest in a bookstore on an indecent conduct charge. And many of these men were not only arrested, but also were beaten by police, brutality that was chronicled at the time by crusading journalist Tim Campbell in the radical GLC Voice<\/em>.<\/p>\n This work also challenges a sanitized narrative of gay liberation, which posits that this movement focused solely on the right to be protected from discrimination and led inexorably to marriage equality. “The Battle of the Bookstores” makes the question of sex central. It illuminates how gay political mobilization was animated by the desire for sex that did not conform to heterosexual social norms. While the gay press gave generous space to this struggle, it was a topic that mainstream daily newspapers chose to ignore. Though silence on this subject literally meant death for some people, establishment journalists were at a loss on how to write about dissident sexuality for a wide audience during the 1980s.<\/p>\n