sodomy and the pirate tradition By
Barry R. Burg (1983)
You have to love a book that begins, "The England that produced
three generations of sodomitical pirates was a land far different
from modern Britain or America." Burg, a professor of history
at Arizona State University, wrote Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition
in 1983 and updated it in 1995 (it's now in paperback). It
describes how most if not all of the pirates and buccaneers who
sailed the Caribbean from 1650 to 1700 had sex with each other.
Homosexual behavior was rarely condemned in the West Indies or
Great Britain during that century, when most of the pirates were
growing up. By the early 1800s, the party was over and sailors
were being executed for the crime of loving another man
or at least having sex with him. The first chapters trace the
history of the perception of homosexuality in modern English
society. For the most part it was tolerated if kept discreet.
Sex was sex. Even in the American colonies, sexual crimes were
condemned severely in the law but not in practice. Fornication
and adultery were usually punished with whippings or fines, even
in settlements that had been founded by families. The only person
executed for sodomy in the colonies during the middle 17th century
was a guy in conservative New Haven who admitted to having sex
with two men, encouraging boys to masturbate and, most horrifically,
being an agnostic.
Usually when people cried
"sodomy" there were other motivations, such as revenge.
Live-and-let-live set the stage in England. During the time there
were many beggars and vagabonds roaming the countryside in groups
of two to six men. Women weren't accessible (you had to have
a job and money to land a wife), so over time homosexual behavior
became more frequent among disenfranchised males. Some of them
may have been gay; others heterosexual but without a choice of
female partners. Eventually the men would end up in a coastal
city. There they might be conscripted into the Royal Navy or
hired to work on merchant ships. In either case, the journeys
would last years at a time, and the Navy wasn't about to give
shore leave to vagrants who might desert in some foreign land.
So you're at sea for four years hey, things happen. If
you're on a merchant ship sailing anywhere from South America
north to Bermuda, you risked being jumped by pirates. Disillusioned,
maybe you join them. Like everyone on your ship and back home,
the pirates were buggering each other.
Burg contrasts the pirate
lifestyle with homosexual acts you find among prison inmates
and notes many differences. In prison, men see their homosexuality
as temporary it's more about power, a way of saying "I'm
in charge." Among the pirates, it more closely expressed
their sexualities. Burg documents how many pirates, if they came
upon a ship with women aboard, wouldn't touch them. Not that
women weren't raped by pirates, but usually they were native
or black women who were seen as "inferior." European
women had never been approachable when the pirates were coming
of age, and they weren't now either (in one case, a woman was
simply tossed overboard with the rest of the loot the pirates
didn't want). The lesson Burg draws from his research is that
"aside from the production of children, homosexuals alone
can fulfill satisfactorily all human needs, wants and desires,
all the while supporting and sustaining a human community remarkable
by the very fact that it is unremarkable.... The male engaging
in homosexual activity aboard a pirate ship in the West Indies
three centuries past was simply an ordinary member of his community,
completely socialized and acculturated." Except for that
killing and looting part, sure.
also recommended
Under
the Black Flag by
David Cordingly (1997) Cordingly
separates fact from fiction about the 17th century pirates who
terrorized the seas, including challenging Burg's theory that
many pirates were gay. No one was made to walk the planks, but
these rowdies were ruthless in other ways. He examines the life
and times of famous pirates such as Blackbeard and Kidd, as well
as some you've never heard of but will be glad you never met.
visitor
feedback From Alice
Turner: Your review reminds me of a story. In 1993, I went to Seattle
to teach a fiction workshop. For some reason, I got bumped to
first class. I was delighted, partly because in those wide seats,
and with that high-toned clientele, I thought I wouldn't have
to worry about anyone looking over my shoulder to kibitz on my
copy of Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition. To my astonishment,
I was joined by a salt-'o-the-earth blue-collar Okie-type pipe
fitter, a guy somewhere in his 60s who couldn't have been chattier
or friendlier. His son was a pilot, so he always flew first class.
It is quite possible he wouldn't know what "sodomy"
meant, but I didn't want to take any chances I mean this
was a sweet, simple, old guy. I didn't want any embarrassment
on either side so I inched the book down (I'd been engrossed
in it when he sat down) till I was sitting on it all the way
to Seattle. That's all of the story, or most of it, because my
students that week, if they noticed my book, commented on the
title with invariable surprise. It's quite a good book, isn't
it? This
review first appeared in my fanzine, Chip's Closet Cleaner, Issue
13.Copyright
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