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LGBTQ literature in Australia

LGBTIQ+ literature in Australia, or queer literature, refers to Australian literature that is written by, portrays or reflects the experiences of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer people. The definition of what constitutes queer literature in Australia is evolving and open to debate.

20th century
For the greater part of the 20th century, literature that discussed or represented homosexuality was tightly restricted by censorship in Australia. Before a national censorship authority was established, Australian Customs officers used their own discretion to confiscate books they deemed to contain obscenity, blasphemy or sedition. After the establishment of the Book Censorship Board in 1933, No End to the Way, which was written by G. M. Glaskin under the pseudonym Neville Jackson, and banned from 1965 to 1966, is generally regarded to be the first openly homosexual Australian novel. bookshop in the LGBT community of Australia. The Darlinghurst Bookshop became a central point for meeting and providing support for those who wanted to come out of the closet. During the HIV/AIDS crisis, the bookstore became an important source of information about the topic. Also, collaborating with relevant events and easing the journey for other LGBT businesses in a time of discrimination and hostility. In 1994, ''The Monkey's Mask by Dorothy Porter was published. It is a crime novel in verse that tells the story of a queer detective who enters the dangerous streets of Sydney. This work has been adapted for radio, television, and film, and has been published in multiple languages. Also, the author has won awards with the first The Age'' Book of the Year and the National Book Council Award for this narrative poetry. The featured Loaded by Christos Tsiolkas, published in 1995 and the autobiography Holding the Man by Timothy Conigrave from the same year, which tell the history of love and loss of two gay men in the middle of the AIDS crisis in 1980. == 21st Century ==
21st Century
Australian LGBT literature has experienced a flowering in the 21st century, with a greater inclusion of LGBT characters and themes in diverse literary forms. Much of the literature, both fiction and non-fiction, has been fundamental to give a voice to the experiences and struggles of the LGBT community. In 2015, some children's literature also took on queer and diverse topics, with numerous novels exploring the interseccionality between sexual identity, race, disability, and mental health like Becoming Kirrali Lewis, Cloudwish, The Flywheel and The Foretelling of Georgie Spider. Notable works of sapphic literature include poetry like Heat and Light by Ellen van Neerven in 2014 and Lemons in the Chicken Wire by Alison Whittaker in 2016; and in novels like Too Much Lip by Melissa Lucashenko in 2018. In non-fiction literature, notable works include Growing Up Queer in Australia from 2019, an anthology made by the journalist Benjamin Law. In 2022, notable masculine gay novels include Son of Sin by Omar Sakr, Losing Face by George Haddad and My Heart Is A Little Wild Thing by Nigel Featherstone. == References ==
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