On 3/1/06, Peter Mackay <peter.mackay(a)bigpond.com> wrote:
I was looking up some recent historical figure
yesterday - can't remember
who - and the second para of the article was devoted to speculation about
his homosexuality. I thought that was really weird. I'm not uncomfortable
with famous people being homosexual, but I'm just not sure that we need to
give such prominence and weight. It's almost as if such people are being
used as posthumous pin-up boys for modern day homosexual folk, when the
reality is that we are writing biographical articles about the careers and
achievements of these people, not about who poked whom. This information
should go at the bottom, maybe in a trivia section.
Yes, it's an interesting phenomenon that I've noticed at [[Freddie
Mercury]] (I always thought he was openly gay, but apparently there
are those who swear he was, and those who swear he wasn't), and at
[[Paris]]. There was at one stage the following sentence: the current
mayor of Paris is [[Bertrand Delanoƫ]] (sp), who is openly homosexual.
Intriguingly, the entire article on him didn't mention the fact. Even
more undue weight...
But then, you get similar stories with membership of religions, ethnic
descent and so on. The Freddie Mercury article had a long section on
his pride in his "Iranian" descent, the recent featured article on
[[Edward Teller]] proudly proclaimed his Jewish origins in the opening
sentence. The trouble when trying to put these things in perspective
is you get accused of either trying to deny something (if you remove
it altogether) or cover it up (if you simply reduce its prominence).
Shrug.
Steve