NYR: Stalin Humiliated With 'Homoerotic Overtones'
In a review of the "Roosevelt’s Lost Alliances: How Personal Politics Helped Start the Cold War"
by Frank Costigliola, homo related details previously unknown to me were dropped. From the March 21 edition of the New York Review of Books:
Stalin himself was famously a night worker, which turned upside down the
lives not only of his immediate underlings but of many important
Communists inside and outside the Soviet Union. Few could be
acknowledged as truly belonging to the Party elite unless they worked
all night and slept through most of the day. As a host, Stalin liked to
order his underlings to sing and to dance. In the author’s words,
“Stalin liked imposing humiliation with homoerotic overtones.” ...
Official Russian receptions, however, whether at Yalta or in Moscow,
aimed at getting the guests drunk, presumably in order to coax from them
their secrets. In reality, the hosts did not take better to alcohol
than most Americans. So these nights were marked by drunken scenes,
babbled declarations of brotherly love, and traditional Russian kisses
on the mouth, which Costigliola calls “homosocial” behavior. ...
By the time of the Yalta conference in February 1945, some of
Roosevelt’s closest advisers, including his irreplaceable assistant
Marguerite “Missy” LeHand, had died; his adviser Sumner Welles had had
to resign in 1943 because of charges of homosexuality [were no longer at the president's side] ...
Always good to learn more homo history trivia and share it.
Fascinating! This explains why Eisestein was Stalin's favorite filmmaker and why Stalin put the kibosh on Ivan the Terrible. Part II features a drunken orgy with Ivan's male "favorite" traipsing about in drag.
ReplyDelete