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3 - The Hymning of Heterosexuality: Katharine Burdekin and the Popular Front

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 April 2021

Glyn Salton-Cox
Affiliation:
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Summary

Katharine Burdekin's dystopian novel, Swastika Night (1937), is set 700 hundred years after total Axis victory. The Jews have been extirpated, Nazis and Japanese fascists rule supreme over the entire world, and women have become reproductive chattel: forced to shave their heads, held in prison camps, they are no longer the objects of male sexual or romantic interest, which is turned in on itself in a violently masculinist homoeroticism. The novel opens with a speculative identification of Nazi triumphalism with queer male desire:

The Knight turned towards the Holy Hitler chapel which in the orientation of this church lay in the western arm of the Swastika, and with the customary loud impressive chords on the organ and a long roll on the sacred drums, the Creed began. Hermann was sitting in the Goebbels chapel in the northern arm, whence he could conveniently watch the handsome boy with the long fair silky hair, who had been singing the solos. He had to turn towards the west when the Knight turned. He could no longer see the boy except with a sidelong glance, and though gazing at lovely youths in church was not even conventionally condemned, any position during the singing of the Creed except that of attention-eyes-front was sacrilegious.

This passage – and Burdekin's project in the novel as a whole – may initially appear strange in its intertwining of a notoriously homophobic regime with the queer male gaze. However, it is in fact paradigmatic of mid- to late 1930s British dystopian visions of fascism, and of the sexual politics of Popular Front literature more broadly. From the fantastic dystopias of Rex Warner and Ruthven Todd to more sober critiques of fascism by Winifred Holtby or Storm Jameson, Popular Front literary production incessantly deployed a vigilant homophobia as a key weapon in the antifascist struggle.

That the dystopian novel should prove a particularly important genre for the development of this heteronormative sexual politics is perhaps unsurprising. For the shock of the antifascist dystopia is, at core, the shock of the aberrant, the pathological that relies upon an implicit sense of social and sexual normality.

Type
Chapter
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Queer Communism and The Ministry of Love
Sexual Revolution in British Writing of the 1930s
, pp. 113 - 139
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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