2012 Retrospective 5: Polari’s Credo
2012 Retrospective
The Editor looks back at the year 2012 in Polari and how it has explored the LGBT subculture. Part 5: Credo.
Permalink2012 Retrospective
The Editor looks back at the year 2012 in Polari and how it has explored the LGBT subculture. Part 5: Credo.
Permalink2012 Retrospective
The Editor looks back at the year 2012 in Polari and how it has explored the LGBT subculture. Part 4: Real People.
Permalink2012 Retrospective
The Editor looks back at the year 2012 in Polari and how it has explored the LGBT subculture. Part 3: Music.
Permalink2012 Retrospective
The Editor looks back at the year 2012 in Polari and how it has explored the LGBT subculture. Part 2: Queer Year.
Permalink2012 Retrospective
The Editor looks back at the year 2012 in Polari and how it has explored the LGBT subculture. Part 1: Arts and Culture.
PermalinkReinvention.
Polari turns 4 today. It’s about to turn yet another corner, writes the editor, and reinvent its mission to explore the LGBT subculture.
Permalink“For the last 4 years, Polari has been run as a voluntary community project built from love and a lot of hard work. We are now a Community Interest Company.”
Peter Wildeblood
Award-winning author Jonathan Kemp selects Peter Wildeblood for Polari Magazine’s list of LGBT Heroes. For UK LGBT History Month 2012.
PermalinkWe owe a great deal to Wildeblood and men like him. With their courage & fight, their refusal to shut up & hide, they helped us move out of the dark ages and into the freedoms gay men enjoy today.
Paul Baker
Polari Magazine’s editor selects Paul Baker for its list of LGBT Heroes. For UK LGBT History Month 2012.
PermalinkIt is always a great pleasure to read his work because it is so well thought out, so very reasonable and so very human. He is one of the LGBT community’s greatest assets, and one of its greatest spokesmen.
Polari Magazine is an LGBT arts and culture magazine that explores the subculture by looking at what is important to the people who are in it. It’s about the lives we lead, not the lifestyles we’re supposed to lead.
Its content is informed & insightful, and features a diverse range of writers from every section of the community. Its intent is to help LGBT readers learn about their own heritage and to sustain a link between the present and the past.
Polari is designed to nurture the idea of community, whether that be social and political, or artistic and creative. It is your magazine, whether you want to read it, or whether you want to get involved in it, if you're gay, lesbian, bisexual, trans, or queer.
Polari Magazine is all these: it's a gay online magazine; it's a gay and lesbian online magazine; it's an LGBT arts and culture magazine. Ultimately, it is a queer magazine.