The
History of HIV/AIDS at The Body Politic
David S. Churchill
Department
of History,
University
of Manitoba,
Winnipeg,
Canada
During the 1970s and 1980s the
City of Toronto, Canada, had one of the most radical and politically
engaged lesbian and gay communities in North America. At the centre of
this community was the “gay liberation” newspaper The
Body Politic (TBP), which,
provided critically engaged and historically informed analysis of
same-sex sexuality and politics across North America. Arguably, the most
intellectual and leftist lesbian and gay periodical in North America, TBP operated as a non-profit collective whose members saw their
publication not simply as a newspaper, but as an extension of their
lesbian and activism. The focus on activism had its consequence,
particularly the newspapers unflinching commitment to liberationist
politics. As a result the TBP
was subject to police raids and a series of lengthy and costly legal
trials, which the newspaper eventually won. When the TBP
ceased publication in 1987 however it had less to do with these
legal battles and their aftermath and more to do with the effects of
HIV/AIDS on the Toronto’s gay community and the TBP
collective itself.
This paper will examine the
impact of HIV/AIDS on TBP, how
it was written about and covered in the pages of the newspaper, how the
collective members responded to HIV/AIDS as a political challenge, and
finally how HIV/AIDS impacted on the staff, contributors and collective
members on a personal level. I argue that it was the operation of
HIV/AIDS in the political activism, community organization and personal
lives of the collective members that made TBP
unsustainable and ultimately lead to the closure of the newspaper.