homosexuality was still illegal when Frank Moorhouse started writing – but it was there from his earliest fiction
- Written by Catharine Lumby, Professor of Media, Department of Media, University of Sydney
Frank Moorhouse had been having sex with men since the age of 17 but did not openly identify as gay or bisexual.
David Marr, who edited Moorhouse’s work at The National Times in the early 1980s, told me in an interview about Moorhouse:
He was seen as a straight writer, no doubt about that […] it was really only with the publication of The Everlasting Secret Family[1] [in 1980] that I began to think, ‘Oh maybe Frank’s a poof, maybe he’s bi, whatever.’
According to Marr, there was often a lag between what men who had sex with men did in private and what they wrote about, prior to the era when “coming out” was acceptable.
In Patrick White’s words, the lag is disgraceful, and Patrick, of course, tended to make homosexuals figures of ridicule in his works for a very long time. I said to him once: “Why didn’t you write [positively about homosexuality or being homosexual] earlier?” […] He said: ‘It’s been impossible, my publishers told me it would be completely impossible.’
Read more: The literary life of Frank Moorhouse, a giant of Australian letters[2]
Queer literature in Australia
The history of gay and what is now known as queer literature in Australia has been fraught with debates over how homosexual characters and their desires are represented.