This article is about revealing personal secrets. For expeditions, see
outdoor
excursion.
In the late twentieth century, outing became a common term for taking someone "out of the
closet" - that is, publicising that someone is gay. The term can be used to refer to any
publicising of a person's homosexuality without their consent, or only to cases where those doing the outing support gay rights,
and object to what they see as the target's hypocrisy, rather than their homosexuality. The term can also be used more broadly to
mean publicly disclosing other personal characteristics, such as political affiliation or religion, that someone wishes to keep
secret.
History of outing
It is hard to pinpoint the first use of outing in the modern sense. In a 1982 issue of
Harper's, Taylor Branch predicted that "outage" would become a political tactic
in which the closeted would find themselves trapped in crossfire. "Forcing Gays like Mike Howes Out of the Closet" by William A.
Henry III in Time (January 29, 1990) introduced the
term "outing" to the general public. (Johansson&Percy, p.4)
While the term is recent, the practice goes back much further. Outing was a common put-down of Greek and Roman orators. Before the Christian
era, sodomy was not illegal in Greek or, most believe,
in Roman law, between adult citizens, but homosexual
acts between citizens were considered acceptable only under certain social circumstances. Both Romans and Greeks sneeringly
deemed the "guilty" vulgar.
The Harden-Eulenburg affair of 1907-1909 was the first public outing scandal
of the twentieth century. Left-wing journalists opposed to Kaiser Wilhelm II's policies outed a number of prominent members of his cabinet and inner
circle - and by implication the Kaiser - beginning with Maximilian Harden's indictment
of the aristocratic diplomat Prince Eulenburg. Harden's accusations incited
other journalists to follow suit, including Adolf Brand, founder of Der Eigene, a
journal which advocated Greek style paederasty.
Left wing journalists outed Hitler's closest ally Ernst
Röhm in the early 1930s, causing Brand to write, "when someone - as teacher, priest, representative, or statesman - would
like to set in the most damaging way the intimate love contacts of others under degrading control - in that moment his own
love-life also ceases to be a private matter and forfeits every claim to remain protected hence-forward from public scrutiny and
suspicious oversight."[1]
After the Stonewall riots of 1969, swells of gay-libbers came out aggressively in the 1970's, crying out, "Out of the closets, Into the streets!"
Reinventing the ideals of the pre-Hitler Germans, some began to demand that all homosexuals come out, and that if they weren't
willing to do so, then it was the community's responsibility to do it for them. Such radical measures provoked opposition. Some
argued that privacy should prevail, and felt it was better for the movement to protect closeted gays, especially in
homophobic religious institutions and the military. Despite their best efforts, most
gays and lesbians were still unwilling to come out.
Some political conservatives opposed to increased public acceptance of homosexuality
engaged in outing in this period as well, with the goal of embarrassing or discrediting their ideological foes. Conservative
commentator Dinesh D'Souza, for example, published the letters of gay fellow students at
Dartmouth College in the campus newspaper he edited (The Dartmouth Review) in 1981; a few years later, succeeding Review editor
Laura Ingraham had a meeting of a campus gay organization secretly tape-recorded, then
published a transcript as part of an editorial denouncing the group as "cheerleaders for latent campus sodomites".
In the 1980s, the AIDS epidemic led to the outing of several major entertainers, including
Rock Hudson.
The first outing by an activist in America occurred on February 23 1989. Michael Petrelis, along with a few others, decided to out Mark
Hatfield, a Republican Senator
from Oregon, because he supported legislation initiated by Jesse Helms. At a fundraiser in a small town outside of Portland,
the group stood up and outed him in front of the crowd. Petrelis later tried to make news by standing on the Capitol steps and reading the names of "twelve men and women in politics and music who ... are
secretly gay." Though the press showed up, no major news organization published the story. (Gross, p.85) Potential libel suits
deterred publishers.
OutWeek, which had begun publishing in 1989, was home to activist and outing pioneer Michelangelo Signorile, who stirred the waters when he outed the recently deceased
Malcolm Forbes in March 1990. His column "Gossip Watch"
became a hot spot for outing the rich and famous. Both praised and lambasted for his behavior, he garnered responses to his
actions as wide ranging as "one of the greater contemporary gay heroes," to "revolting, infantile, cheap name-calling."
(Johansson & Percy, p.183)
Other people who have been outed include Fannie Flagg, Pete Williams, Chastity Bono, and Richard Chamberlain.
In 2004, gay rights activist Michael Rogers outed Edward Schrock, a Republican Congressman from
Virginia. Rogers posted a story on his website revealing that Schrock used an interactive
phone sex service to meet other men for sex. Schrock did not deny the claim and announced on
August 30, 2004 that he would not seek re-election. Rogers said that he outed Schrock to punish him for his hypocrisy in voting
for the Marriage Protection Act and signing on as a co-sponsor of the
Federal Marriage Amendment.
New Jersey Governor Jim McGreevey announced that he
was a "gay American" in August 2004. McGreevey had become aware that he was about to be named in a
sexual harassment suit by Golan Cipel, his former
security advisor, with whom it was alleged McGreevey had a sexual relationship. McGreevey resigned, but unlike Schrock, McGreevey
decided not step out of public life.
Motives
Gabriel Rotello, once editor of OutWeek, called outing "equalizing", explaining, "what we have called 'outing' is a
primarily journalistic movement to treat homosexuality as equal to heterosexuality in the media...In 1990, many of us in the gay media announced that henceforth we would simply treat homosexuality and heterosexuality
as equals. We were not going to wait for the perfect, utopian future to arrive before equalizing the two: We were going to do it
now. That's what outing really is: equalizing homosexuality and heterosexuality in the media." ("Why I Oppose Outing", OutWeek, May 29, 1991)
Their aim is not only to reveal the hypocrisy of those in what Branch termed the "closets of power" but also a gay person
awareness of the presence of gay people and political issues, thus showing that being gay and
lesbian is not "so utterly grotesque that it should never be discussed." (Signorile, p.78)
Richard Mohr noted, "some people have compared outing to McCarthyism...And vindictive outing
is like McCarthyism: such outing feeds gays to the wolves, who thereby are made stronger....But the sort of outing I have
advocated does not invoke, mobilize, or ritualistically confirm anti-gay values; rather it cuts against them, works to undo them.
The point of outing, as I have defended it, is not to wreak vengeance, not to punish, and not to deflect attention from one's own
debased state. Its point is to avoid degrading oneself." Thus outing is "both permissible and an expected consequence of living
morally." (Mohr, Richard. Gay Ideas: Outing and Other Controversies, Boston: Beacon
Press, 1992.)
Further, outing is not the airing of private details. As Signorile asked, "How can being gay be private when being straight
isn't? Sex is private. But by outing we do not discuss anyone's sex life. We only say they're gay."
(Signorile, p.80) "Average people have been outed for decades. People have always outed the mailman and the milkman and the spinster
who lives down the block. If anything, the goal behind outing is to show just how many gay people there are among the most
visible people in our society so that when someone outs the milkman or the spinster, everyone will say, 'So what?'" (Signorile,
p.82)
Virtually all who take a position on outing have qualified the limits to which it is permissible for one to go. The extremes
are to out no one or to out everyone. In between, four intermediate positions can be discerned (Johansson & Percy,
p.228):
1) Hypocrites only, and only when they actively oppose gay rights and
interests;
2) Outing passive accomplices who help run homophobic institutions;
3) Prominent individuals whose outing would shatter stereotypes and compel the public
to reconsider its attitude on homosexuality;
4) Only the dead.
Assessing to which degree the outer goes allows insight into the goal striven towards. Most outers target those who support
decisions and further policy, both religious and secular, which discriminate against gay people while they themselves live a clandestine gay existence. A "truism to people active in the gay movement [is] that the greatest
impediments to homosexuals' progress often [are] not heterosexuals, but closeted homosexuals," said San Francisco journalist Randy Shilts. (Johansson &
Percy, p.226)
Outing in the clergy
The recent wave of Roman Catholic sex abuse cases has outed many
members of the Roman Catholic clergy. The most recent outing scandal to
hit the church flared up in New York, where New Jersey
priest Bob Hoatson accused Cardinal Egan, the archbishop
of the New York Archdiocese of not only covering up rampant
sexual abuse amongst his clergy but of also being a practicing homosexual, of which Hoatson
claimed he had personal proof. As of 6th March, 2006, the matter was unresolved.
Outing in the military
See articles Don't Ask, Don't Tell and Sexual orientation and military service
Impact and effectiveness
The effectiveness of outing as a political tactic depends on the willingness of the media to report that a person has been
outed. The advent of the internet has made outing public figures much easier. Twenty years ago Michael Rogers would have had to
persuade a newspaper or other media outlet to risk legal action by reporting his allegations about Schrock. Today he can publish
them himself on his website and other media will then report that he has done so.
Signorile argues that the outing of Pete Williams "and its aftermath did indeed make a big dent in the military's policy
against gays. The publicity generated put the policy on the front burner in 1992, thrusting the issue into the presidential
campaign," with every Democratic candidate and independent Ross Perot publicly promising to end the ban. (ibid, p.161)
Support for outing
Many gay rights activists defend outing as a tactic. The British activist
Peter Tatchell says "The lesbian and gay community has a right to defend itself against
public figures who abuse their power and influence to support policies which inflict suffering on homosexuals." In 1994
Tatchell's activist group OutRage! named fourteen bishops of the Church of England as homosexual or bisexual, accusing them of hypocrisy for upholding the Church's
policy of regarding homosexual acts as sinful while not observing this prohibition
in their personal lives. "Outing is queer self-defense," Tatchell says. "Lesbians and gay men have
a right, and a duty, to expose hypocrites and homophobes. By not outing gay Bishops who support policies which harm homosexuals,
we would be protecting those Bishops and thereby allowing them to continue to inflict suffering on members of our community.
Collusion with hypocrisy and homophobia is not ethically defensible for Christians, or for anyone else."
President of Finland Tarja Halonen
released a book for the reelection campaign in 2006, where she mentions the her legal work in promoting sexual equality in the effect of the president of SETA, a LGBT rights
organization. She criticizes the people in the closet for "not daring to do anything
themselves, but being happy when we [SETA] did their work for them".
Criticism
Some gay activists, however, continue to disapprove of outing as a political tactic, arguing that even anti-gay conservatives
have a right to personal privacy which should be respected. Steven Fisher, a spokesman for the Human Rights Campaign, the largest advocacy group for gay and lesbian issues in the United States,
commenting on the Schrock outing, said he opposed using "sexual orientation as a weapon." Christopher Barron, political director
of the Log Cabin Republicans, a group representing gay and lesbian Republicans
said: "We disagree strongly with the outing campaign, but we also strongly disagree with President Bush's sponsorship of the
anti-family Federal Marriage Amendment."
Roger Rosenblatt argued in his January 1993 New York Times Magazine essay
"Who Killed Privacy?" that, "The practice of 'outing' homosexuals [sic] implies contradictorily that homosexuals have a right to
private choice but not to private lives." (Signorile, p.80)
Other criticism concerning outing centers upon the harm that outing individuals as homosexual, transgender, or transsexual
does to them personally and professionally and upon the fact that some individuals have been erroneously outed or have been outed
when there is no proof to substantiate the 'allegation' that they are gay, transgendered, or transsexual.
Christine Jorgensen, Beth Elliott, Dr.
Renee Richards, Sandy Stone, Billy Tipton, Alan Hart, April
Ashley, Caroline Cossey ("Tula") , Jahna
Steele, and Nancy Jean Burkholder were outed as transsexuals by European or American media
or, in the case of Billy Tipton, by his coroner. In many cases, being outed had an adverse
effect on their personal lives and their careers.
In some cases, individuals have been outed as transsexual or intesex when, in fact,
there is no proof that they were ever members of the opposite sex. Two examples are actress Jamie Lee Curtis, beauty contestant winner Elodie Gossuin (Miss
France 2001).
The rumors that Curtis was intersexed seems to be based on the facts that her name,
Jamie Lee, is androgynous, and that she has opted to adopt rather than to bear children. However, there is no proof of the claims
that she was born male or intersexed [1].
Days after winning the Miss France crown Gossuin became the victim of a malicious rumor posted on January 8, 2001 on a French
language internet website that claimed the 20-year-old Gossuin was in fact a 27-year-old male transvestite named Nicolas
Levanneur. Although the story provided no proof, it evolved to state that she might be a post-operative transsexual. While she at
first dismissed it as nonsense, the news article made its way to other websites around the world and Gossuin became the butt of
numerous jokes, cartoons, and wildly enhanced fabrications to the original story.
See also
Sources
- Cory, Donald Webster. The Homosexual in America: A Subjective Approach. New York: Greenfield, 1951.
- Gross, Larry. Contested Closets: The Politics and Ethics of Outing. University of Minnesota Press, 1993 ISBN
0816621799
- Johansson, Warren & Percy, William A. Outing: Shattering the Conspiracy of Silence. Harrington Park Press, 1994.
- Signorile, Michelango (1993). Queer In America: Sex, Media, and the Closets of Power. ISBN 0-299-19374-8.
External links
References
- ^ Brand, Adolph. Political Criminals: A Word About the Röhm Case
(1931) Reprinted in Homosexuality and Male Bonding in Pre-Nazi Germany, edited by Harry Oosterhuis, 235-240. New York,
Haworth, 1991.
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