American Poly: A History
Recent studies have found that as many as one in five Americans have experimented with some form of sexual non-monogamy, and approximately one in fifteen knows someone who was or is polyamorous. The mainstream media has increasingly covered polyamorous lifestyles and the committed relationships of throuples, and dating apps have added polyamory as a status option.



This book is the first history to trace the evolution of polyamorous thought and practice within the broader context of American culture. Drawing on personal journals and letters, underground newsletters, and publications from the Kinsey Institute Archives, among other sources, it reconstructs polyamory's intellectual foundations, highlighting its unique blend of conservative political thought and countercultural spiritualism. Christopher M. Gleason locates its early foundations in the Roaring Twenties among bohemians. In the 1950s and 1960s it surprisingly emerged among libertarian science fiction writers. Throughout the 1990s, polyamorists utilized the internet to spread their ideas, often undermining any remaining religious or spiritual significance their ideas held.



Offering an original perspective on sexuality, marriage, and the family, American Poly reveals the history of polyamory in the United States from fringe practice to a new stage of the sexual revolution.
"1143224603"
American Poly: A History
Recent studies have found that as many as one in five Americans have experimented with some form of sexual non-monogamy, and approximately one in fifteen knows someone who was or is polyamorous. The mainstream media has increasingly covered polyamorous lifestyles and the committed relationships of throuples, and dating apps have added polyamory as a status option.



This book is the first history to trace the evolution of polyamorous thought and practice within the broader context of American culture. Drawing on personal journals and letters, underground newsletters, and publications from the Kinsey Institute Archives, among other sources, it reconstructs polyamory's intellectual foundations, highlighting its unique blend of conservative political thought and countercultural spiritualism. Christopher M. Gleason locates its early foundations in the Roaring Twenties among bohemians. In the 1950s and 1960s it surprisingly emerged among libertarian science fiction writers. Throughout the 1990s, polyamorists utilized the internet to spread their ideas, often undermining any remaining religious or spiritual significance their ideas held.



Offering an original perspective on sexuality, marriage, and the family, American Poly reveals the history of polyamory in the United States from fringe practice to a new stage of the sexual revolution.
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American Poly: A History

American Poly: A History

by Christopher M. Gleason

Narrated by Keith Sellon-Wright

Unabridged — 7 hours, 33 minutes

American Poly: A History

American Poly: A History

by Christopher M. Gleason

Narrated by Keith Sellon-Wright

Unabridged — 7 hours, 33 minutes

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Overview

Recent studies have found that as many as one in five Americans have experimented with some form of sexual non-monogamy, and approximately one in fifteen knows someone who was or is polyamorous. The mainstream media has increasingly covered polyamorous lifestyles and the committed relationships of throuples, and dating apps have added polyamory as a status option.



This book is the first history to trace the evolution of polyamorous thought and practice within the broader context of American culture. Drawing on personal journals and letters, underground newsletters, and publications from the Kinsey Institute Archives, among other sources, it reconstructs polyamory's intellectual foundations, highlighting its unique blend of conservative political thought and countercultural spiritualism. Christopher M. Gleason locates its early foundations in the Roaring Twenties among bohemians. In the 1950s and 1960s it surprisingly emerged among libertarian science fiction writers. Throughout the 1990s, polyamorists utilized the internet to spread their ideas, often undermining any remaining religious or spiritual significance their ideas held.



Offering an original perspective on sexuality, marriage, and the family, American Poly reveals the history of polyamory in the United States from fringe practice to a new stage of the sexual revolution.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

08/07/2023

Historian Gleason debuts with an enlightening history of polyamory, surveying six American thinkers of the late 20th century who challenged conventional marriage and advocated for alternative romantic arrangements. Beginning with the polyamorist impulse that emerged in the 1960s countercultural movement, he examines cultural misfit Oberon Zell, who in 1967 was inspired by conservative science fiction writer Robert A. Heinlein’s Stranger in a Strange Land to form the neopagan organization Church of All Worlds and its magazine, Green Eggs, which promoted polyamory (and notions of personal divinity) to a national readership. Heinlein’s book similarly inspired WWII veteran Jud Presmont to form the polyamorous religious community Kerista, which was active from 1960 to 1990 with branches in Manhattan, Chicago, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. Gleason also spotlights freethinkers Ryam Nearing and Deborah Anapol, who spearheaded a secular form of polyamory in the 1980s and ’90s through newsletters, conferences, and their national magazine, Loving More. Finally, he examines the disparate polyamorous communities that formed on Usenet forums and Well message boards and merged with the LGBTQ movement in the early years of the internet. These in-depth profiles and institutional histories illuminate the oddball mix of conservative political thinking and countercultural spirituality that formed the theoretical underpinnings of contemporary polyamory. It’s an equally entertaining and edifying account. (Nov.)

From the Publisher

"With thoughtful insight, Christopher Gleason's American Poly charts the unlikely juggernaut that polyamory and other forms of consensual non-monogamies have become in the United States. Framing the discussion in sexual dissent, Gleason explores the history that shaped the rise of polyamorous identity and its explosion of diverse variations. American Poly is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand the evolution of consensual non-monogamy and its impact on US relationships and families today." — Elisabeth Sheff, author of The Polyamorists Next Door

"A lively, absorbing, and insightful account of a group of Americans who boldly challenged the sexual norms of their society. American Poly offers a highly original and compellingly presented narrative of a history that has been marginalized and hidden." — John D'Emilio, author of Memories of a Gay Catholic Boyhood: Coming of Age in the Sixties

"Christopher M. Gleason's American Poly is a thoughtful, wonderfully researched, highly engaging deep dive into the exciting landscape of newly emerging sexual cultures of the twentieth century. From neo-paganism to 1960s communes to the theoretics of ethical non-monogamy, Queer activism, and Poly Pride Parades, American Poly places the Declaration of Independence's right to 'the pursuit of happiness' front and center in a continual unfolding of the affirmation of adventure, desire, and freedom." — Michael Bronski, author of A Queer History of the United States

"A carefully researched and fascinating study of a subject strangely absent in most histories of sexuality. Christopher Gleason crafts an important and detailed story of some of polyamory's most thoughtful, ethical advocates, as well as the inevitable backlash from choleric critics primed to see sexual variation as the death of civilization. This is an important history of relationship possibilities many are too anxious to take seriously, well worth a read for historians and anyone who has secretly wondered if monogamy is the be-all we're told it is." — R. Marie Griffith, Washington University in St. Louis

"An enlightening history of polyamory... In-depth profiles and institutional histories illuminate the oddball mix of conservative political thinking and countercultural spirituality that formed the theoretical underpinnings of contemporary polyamory. It's an equally entertaining and edifying account." — Publishers Weekly

"Gleason argues, persuasively, that contemporary polyamory as a set of ideas and practices was articulated by the kind of free-love advocates best positioned to survive conservative backlash in the nineteen-eighties. These tended to be socially liberal fiscal conservatives who wanted love to be as free as the market." — Jennifer Wilson, The New Yorker

"Polyamory, in this country at least, has pretty much always been the domain of nerds, as another recent (and much better) book, Christopher Gleason's American Poly: A History, makes clear. Gleason traces the genealogy of contemporary polyamorous practices back through a series of strange figures with strange views, including sci-fi-obsessed hippie libertarians, woo-woo neo-pagans, and straight-up right-wingers who thought family values could best be propagated through larger families... American Poly helps us recognize this not wholly revolutionary shift in sexual politics as a particularly acute facet of the persistent hangover of the Sixties." — Brandy Jensen, The Yale Review

Product Details

BN ID: 2940159444844
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 01/23/2024
Edition description: Unabridged
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