Blog post

It is Forbidden to Forbid: The Liberation of Desire in France After May 1968

Juliet Jacques and writer and curator Paul Clinton discuss the wave of queer radicalism that followed May 1968 in France.

Verso Books12 July 2018

Still from Ixe (Dir. Lionel Soukaz, 1980).

In a new episode of Suite (212) Extra — a monthly series on Resonance 104.4 FM that explores the arts in their social, political, cultural, and historical contexts — host Juliet Jacques speaks with writer and curator Paul Clinton about the wave of queer radicalism that followed May 1968 in France, considering figures like Guy Hocquenghem and Lionel Soukaz, and groups like Front homosexuel d'action révolutionnaire and the Bazooka graphic design collective. 

One of the more intriguing — and most Lacanian — slogans that appeared in Paris in May 1968 declared "Il est interdit d'interdire" — "It is forbidden to forbid." In this follow-up to our recent Resonance 104.4fm show about the insurrections, Juliet Jacques talks to curator/writer Paul Clinton about his "Forbidden to Forbid" exhibition, how May '68 launched a decade of queer radicalism, the tensions within its gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender elements, and its eventual collapse amidst the HIV/AIDS crisis and the decline of the wider French left. 

The episode follows a recent installment of Suite (212) focused on the relationship between the May events and French filmmaking, with guest Mitchell Abidor, author of May Made Me: An Oral History of the 1968 Uprising in France (UK: Pluto Press/US: AK Press).

[book-strip index="1" style="display"]
Trans

Trans

In July 2012, aged thirty, Juliet Jacques underwent sex reassignment surgery—a process she chronicled with unflinching honesty in a serialised national newspaper column. Trans tells of her life to ...
The Beginning of the End
In May 1968, France stood on the verge of full-blooded revolution. Here a rhythmic, vivid evocation from eyewitness Angelo Quattrocchi is complemented by Tom Nairn’s cool and elegant appraisal to t...
Come Together
Come Together tells the incredible story of the emerging radicalism of the Gay Liberation Front, providing a vivid history of the movement, as well as the new ideas and practices it gave rise to ac...
Pink Triangles
Though the interpretations of the interplay between sexism and capitalism, between the personal and the political, vary across this spectacularly wide ranging collection, each essay shares two fund...
Paperback
Homosexuality
After the leading organizations of radical sexual politics – the Gay Liberation Front and the Gay Marxist Group – imploded or dissolved, the Gay Left Collective formed a research group to make sens...
Homocons
For most of its history, the American gay movement has been part of the democratic Left. Gay liberation’s founders were Communists, and its activist core is still overwhelmingly progressive. But in...
Paperback

Filed under: 1968, art, film, france, queer