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[Marxism] Allan Bérubé



NY Times, December 16, 2007
Allan Bérubé Is Dead at 61; Historian of Gays in Military
By MARGALIT FOX

Allan Bérubé, a MacArthur Award-winning independent scholar whose
history of gay men and lesbians in the military in World War II is
widely considered the definitive book on the subject, died on Tuesday in
Liberty, N.Y. He was 61. A former resident of Manhattan, Mr. Bérubé had
lived in Liberty in recent years.

The cause was complications of stomach ulcers, a friend, Wayne Hoffman,
said.

“Coming Out Under Fire” (Free Press), published in 1990, explores the
uneasy but at times surprisingly benign relationship between the United
States military and its gay members.

Mr. Bérubé’s book was invoked frequently during the debate that simmered
in the 1990s around President Bill Clinton’s “don’t ask, don’t tell”
policy, which officially allowed gay people to serve in the military if
they kept their sexual orientation secret.

“Coming Out Under Fire” was also the basis for a documentary film of
that name, released in 1994.

The book sprang from a box of letters. One day in the 1970s, a friend of
one of Mr. Bérubé’s neighbors salvaged from a Dumpster a cache of
correspondence exchanged by a dozen gay G.I.’s during the war. The men,
who had met at an Army base in Missouri, were posted to different spots,
but they continued to write — in particular about what it was like to be
gay wherever they had fetched up.

The letters found their way to Mr. Bérubé. “I sorted them out and had a
good cry,” he told the University of Chicago alumni magazine in 1997.
“It really captured my heart and raised a lot of questions, so I started
doing research.”

“Coming Out Under Fire” draws on interviews with dozens of men and women
from all branches of the service. It argues that although gays were
specifically barred from the armed forces from 1942 onward,
homosexuality and military service, at least early on, were not as
incompatible as they might seem.

At the start of World War II, the military, desperate to meet enlistment
quotas, quietly admitted gay people with the tacit understanding that
they would be discreet about their sexuality. For many gay men and
lesbians, Mr. Bérubé wrote, military service was actually a godsend: It
took them away from small-town life and gave them their first
opportunity to meet other gay people.

On the whole, Mr. Bérubé found, gay service people who did their jobs
ably were treated well by comrades and superiors. (Conditions worsened
toward the end of the war, when the military stepped up its purges of
homosexuals.) But those early war years, Mr. Bérubé concluded, were the
wellspring of the gay-rights movement of the late 1960s and beyond.

Reviewing “Coming Out Under Fire” in The New York Times Book Review,
Doris Kearns Goodwin called it “a timely and valuable perspective,”
adding: “Mr. Bérubé tells his story with a clear and remarkably
evenhanded voice.”

A longtime community organizer, Mr. Bérubé was also active in the civic
life of Liberty, a former Catskill resort lately grown careworn. In a
project that attracted considerable attention in the news media, he
arranged to have the Munson Diner, a derelict Hell’s Kitchen landmark
from the 1940s, moved there from Manhattan.

Allan Ronald Bérubé was born in Springfield, Mass., on Dec. 3, 1946.
(His family name is pronounced BEH-ruh-bay.) His father was a television
cameraman for NBC, a job that in the early days of the medium was more
glamorous than lucrative; Allan spent part of his childhood living with
his family in a trailer park in Bayonne, N.J.

Mr. Bérubé studied at the University of Chicago before dropping out in
his senior year to work against the war in Vietnam. He came out as gay
in 1969 and later settled in San Francisco, where, in the 1970s, he
helped found the San Francisco Lesbian and Gay History Project.

Mr. Bérubé’s approach to history was pragmatic rather than academic: he
traveled the country giving illustrated lectures on gay military history
and other subjects. (He did teach at several universities, among them
Stanford; the University of California, Santa Cruz; and Portland State
University in Oregon.) In 1996, he was awarded a MacArthur “genius grant.”

After living in Manhattan in the 1990s, Mr. Bérubé moved to Liberty a
half-dozen years ago. In 2005, he convened a group of investors to buy
the Munson Diner and transport it, in its faded chrome-and-neon
splendor, from 11th Avenue and 49th Street to Liberty. After extensive
refurbishment, the diner opened there last month.

Mr. Bérubé is survived by his companion, John Nelson; his mother,
Florence A. Bérubé of Monson, Mass.; and three sisters, Florence J., of
Westfield, Mass.; Annette, of Mint Hill, N.C.; and Dianne Taylor of
Healdsburg, Calif. At his death, he was working on a history of gay men
in the Marine Cooks and Stewards Union in the 1930s and afterward.

Though “Coming Out Under Fire” deals with a serious subject, it also has
moments of deep subversive levity. At one point in the book, Ben Small,
a gay former Army Air Corpsman, talks about a drag show he organized
while stationed on a tiny atoll near New Guinea. For costumes, he
ordered a stack of gold lamé dresses from San Francisco.

Mr. Small recalled the day the glittering package arrived. “Well, here’s
everybody in the office from the lieutenant on down trying on dresses!”
he told Mr. Bérubé. “Everybody suddenly becomes a drag queen!”

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