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Heterosexual Histories


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of either “heterosexual” or “heterosexuality” before 1940. In 1933, however, the Afro-American published an article about a religious movement led by a man of African descent who was probably born as George Baker (1879–1965) but who was better known as “Father Divine.” And when reporting on an investigation of Father Divine’s interracial Peace Mission, the Afro-American noted that a committee concluded that Divine’s followers were “deluded into accepting certain social, biological, and economic fallacies”—including the notion that “the human race may be propagated without heterosexual relationship in marital life.” To be sure, the committee acknowledged that Divine’s Peace Mission could have a positive impact on “former criminal[s] or morally loose characters.” The committee took a dim view of the Peace Mission’s advocacy of celibacy all the same. Coincidentally—or not—some of Divine’s black female followers might have embraced “forms of desire prohibited in Divine’s theology,” namely, same-sex desire. If this article ultimately made no direct claims about such women, committee members did note what they considered to be a worrisome congregation of adults and children of the same sex in one Peace Mission dormitory. What do we make of the apparent reality that it was not until investigation of a heterodox movement that a leading black newspaper would invoke the term “heterosexual”? See “Are Father Divine’s Angels Deluded?,” Baltimore Afro-American, December 30, 1933, 12; Judith Weisenfeld, “Real True Buds: Celibacy and Same-Sex Desire across the Color Line in Father Divine’s Peace Mission Movement,” in Devotions and Desires: Histories of Sexuality and Religion in the Twentieth-Century United States, ed. Gillian Frank, Bethany Moreton, and Heather R. White (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2018), 95.