The radical lives of Barbara Deming & David McReynolds

                                by Marcus McCann, xtra.ca
March 10th 2011                                                                 
                                                                                
                 

As far as formats go, it’s a bit strange. A Saving Remnant is a dual biography, 
telling the stories of radical US activists Barbara Deming and David 
McReynolds. 

They knew each other but were hardly close friends. So the book traces their 
mostly separate lives throughout the 1950s and ’60s in alternating passages. 
The bulk of these chapters are dedicated to Deming’s work toward ending racial 
segregation and McReynolds’ work in the peace movement. 

Both are gay and had active sex lives at the time, especially Deming, whose 
appetites usually outstripped those of her partners. McReynolds had a few 
longer-term relationships over that period (plus occasional frolics in New York 
City subway bathrooms) but struggled to overcome his guilt about being gay.

Then, a funny thing happened. Stonewall. The birth control pill. Harvey Milk. 
Gay and lesbian liberation took hold among activists, especially young post-war 
boomers coming of age in the late ’60s. Deming and McReynolds — 53 and 41 years 
old in 1970, respectively — struggled to come to terms with what was happening 
around them. 

It’s fascinating. They’re both gay. Both spent countless hours in activist 
organizations. Both landed in jail for their work. Both wrote essay after essay 
about leftwing politics. And yet, the idea of a political movement based on 
their sex lives surprised them.

Deming went on to become a fierce feminist and, for a time, a lesbian 
separatist. Her essays from this period became feminist classics. McReynolds, 
on the other hand, grew more slowly. He continued to shy away from gay 
activism, preferring socialism and pacifist organizing. 

Their two lives diverge over sexuality. Deming and McReynolds agreed on much, 
but it was their differing views on pornography that ultimately divided them. 
Duberman makes good use of letters between the two and quotes their 
disagreement liberally.

Add in a little gossip (including unflattering portraits of both Andrea Dworkin 
and Marie-Claire Blais) and the occasional triumph, and it’s a compelling read.

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                        

Original Page: 
http://www.xtra.ca/public/Toronto/The_radical_lives_of_Barbara_Deming_David_McReynolds-9848.aspx

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