Gay Men's Press (GMP)

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Gay Men's Press (GMP) was a publisher of books based in London, United Kingdom. Founded in 1979, the imprint was run until 2000 by its founders Aubrey Walter, David Fernbach, and Richard Dipple. GMP was a pioneer publisher for the gay community, releasing at least 300 titles. Many of their publications have themes of pederasty / boy-love, including The Age Taboo (1981) which featured contributions by one of NAMBLA's founders Tom Reeves, the 1st openly self-identified British "paedophile" Roger Moody, and Queer theorist Gayle Rubin. GMP also published Joseph Geraci's homosexual pedophilia novel "Loving Sander" (1997), the Paidika compilation book he edited Dares to Speak: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives on Boy-love (1997), the infamous For a Lost Soldier (Rudi van Dantzig) and The World, The Flesh and Myself (Michael Davidson), the fiction of open pedophile Tony Duvert, and classic defenses of same-sex attraction to all ages (i.e. homosexuality) like Nobel Prize winner Andre Gide's Corydon.

In 1983 Gay Men's Press published the children's book Jenny Lives with Eric and Martin. This prompted the introduction of the Section 28 of the Local Government Act 1988, which forbade the "promotion of homosexuality" by local government, after the Daily Mail, a tabloid newspaper, reported that a copy of the book was provided in the library of a school run by the left-wing, Labour-controlled Inner London Education Authority. This could be viewed as a past example of "save the children" / moral panics around LGBTQ+ books in schools, which received popular media attention in the 2010's and 2020's.

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