Gaie France
Gaie France, or Gaie France Magazine, was a French monthly magazine for gay readers founded in 1986 by Michel Caignet and closed in 1993.
Historical
[edit]Sold on newsstands, Gaie France reflected cultural and political ambitions close to the New Right. The director of publication, Michel Caignet, believed that the gay community had a role to play in the perspective of a cultural, political, and artistic renewal within Europe.[citation needed]
The magazine was considered[by whom?] one of the main expressions of far-right sensibility within French gay media.
Paul Raisant led Association of Friends of Gaie France, which published a bulletin called Sparte, homosexualité et tradition in 1987.
Gaie France was prohibited for sale to minors by ministerial decree on May 27, 1992, due to "incitement to pedophilia". Gaie France ceased publication in 1993.[1]
Collaborators
[edit]- Claude Courouve
- Guillaume Faye[2]
- Pierre Gripari
- Philippe Randa
References
[edit]- ^ "Arrêté du 27 mai 1992 portant interdiction de vente d'une revue aux mineurs". legifrance.gouv.fr (in French). June 7, 1992..
- ^ Verdrager, Pierre (2013). "Comment la pédophilie est devenue scandaleuse". In Armand Colin (ed.). L'enfant interdit. Armand Colin. ISBN 978-2-200-28710-8..
- Neo-fascism in France
- New Right (Europe)
- Banned magazines
- Pedophile advocacy
- Child sexual abuse in France
- Magazines established in 1986
- Magazines disestablished in 1993
- 1986 establishments in France
- 1993 disestablishments in France
- Defunct political magazines published in France
- LGBTQ conservatism
- LGBTQ-related magazines published in France