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Theology and Sexuality, Vol. 7, No. 13, 35-54 (2000)
DOI: 10.1177/135583580000701304

Of Gin and Lace: Sexuality, Liturgy and Identity among Anglo-Catholics in the Mid-Twentieth Century

Martin Stringer

Martin Stringer begins by asking questions about the different ways in which we can talk about the 'sexual body' in worship. He proposes that a study of Anglo-Catholic worship in the middle years of the twentieth century might provide a way of doing this. The paper uses material on 'drag' and 'camp' in order to understand the ambiguous sexual roles and currents at play within Anglo-Catholic liturgy. He suggests that much of Anglo-Catholic worship can be read as 'camp'. This is then linked into the parallel histories of Anglo-Catholicism and 'drag' through the twentieth century, highlighting their common origins in a working class environment. Martin Stringer aims to show that, while not being inevitable, the presence of gay men within Anglo-Catholicism, and hence the camp nature of the worship, is understandable and can be used to give us a greater insight into the worship itself.


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