Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Gaysweek

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Editor
  
Alan Bell

Frequency
  
Weekly

Year founded
  
1977 (1977)

Categories
  
Newspaper

Founder
  
Alan Bell

First issue
  
February 28, 1977 (1977-02-28)

Gaysweek was a weekly gay and lesbian newspaper based in New York City printed from 1977 until 1979. Considered the city's first mainstream weekly lesbian and gay newspaper, it was founded by Alan Bell in 1977 as an 8-page single-color tabloid and finished its run in 1979 as a 24-page two-color publication. It featured articles, letter, art and poetry. It was, at the time, only one of three weekly publications geared towards homosexuals and the only mainstream publication owned by an African-American.

Contents

Background

Gaysweek was New York City's first mainstream weekly lesbian and gay newspaper. It was founded by Alan Bell in 1977. Gaysweek began as an 8-page single-color tabloid and when it ceased publication in 1979 after 104 issues, it had grown to a 24-page two-color publication. Its monthly arts supplement, Gaysweek Arts and Letters, was edited by Byrne Fone. During its run, it was one of only three gay weeklies in the world and the only mainstream gay publication owned by an African American. A portion of Gaysweek archives are housed at Cornell University Library, Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections.

Although it was eventually granted, Gaysweek's application to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for registration of the Gaysweek trademark, was opposed by Newsweek, Inc. because, according to attorneys for the publication, they are similar "both phonetically and in appearance." Newsweek later sued Gaysweek for trademark infringement

Gaysweek made news briefly in 2002, when the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston, in relation to a lawsuit filed against it by the attorney of a man who accused Boston-based Father Paul Shanley of repeated rape, turned over a copy of the February 12, 1979 issue of Gaysweek which included an article titled "Men & Boys" that described a meeting in Boston in which Shanley defended a relationship between a man and a boy.

Notable writers

  • Eric Bentley
  • Perry Brass
  • Robert Chesley
  • Daniel Curzon
  • Martin Duberman
  • Harvey Fierstein
  • Robert Patrick
  • Felice Picano
  • David Rothenberg
  • Edmund White
  • George Whitmore
  • References

    Gaysweek Wikipedia


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