ABSTRACT

In 1791, during the French Revolution, France became the first European country to decriminalize sodomy. In 2013, France legalized homosexual marriage. These two events alone support France’s reputation as a country tolerant of queer desires. And yet from the Ancien Régime through the present, people who engage in same-sex activity in France have been the target of persecution and prejudice. This chapter examines the tension between emancipation and repression that has marked the history of queer sexualities in France since the Belle Époque. It argues that while LGBTQ populations now exercise greater freedoms in France than ever before, these advances have come at a cost. That cost is revelatory of the intransigence of patriarchal and republican universalist attitudes toward the family, gender, and national identity in modern French society.