Mario Mieli (21 May 1952, Milan – 12 March 1983) was an Italian activist, writer, playwright, and gender studies theorist. He is considered one of the founders of the Italian homosexual movement, and one of the leading theoreticians in Italian homosexual activism.[1] He is best known for his essay Elementi di critica omosessuale (Homosexuality and liberation: elements of a gay critique) published in its first edition in 1977[2], and was one of the founders of FUORI! (Fronte Unitario Omosessuale Rivoluzionario Italiano, United Italian Homosexual Revolutionary Front).[3] He died by suicide at the age of 30.[4]

Mario Mieli (left)

His thoughts

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Universal transsexualism

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Mario Mieli's thinking consists of the belief that every person is potentially transsexual if he or she were not conditioned from childhood by a certain type of society which, through what Mieli called "educastration," forces one to consider heterosexuality as "normality" and everything else as perversion. By transsexuality Mieli does not mean what is understood today in the common understanding of the term, but the innate polymorphous and "perverse" tendency of man, characterized by a plurality of Eros tendencies and the original and deep hermaphroditism of every individual.

Pedophilia

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Children, according to Mieli's thought, could "free themselves" from social prejudices and find the realization of their "polyform perversity" through adults who were aware of the above assertion:

"We revolutionary queers can see in the child not so much the Oedipus, or the future Oedipus, but the potentially free human being. We, yes, can love children. We can desire them erotically by responding to their craving for Eros, we can grasp with open face and open arms the intoxicating sensuality they lavish, we can make love to them. This is why pederasty is so harshly condemned: it addresses amorous messages to the child that society instead, through the family, traumatizes, educates, denies, lowering the Oedipal grid on its eroticism. The repressive heterosexual society forces the child into the latency period; but the latency period is but the deathly introduction to the lifespan of a latent "life." Pederasty, on the other hand, 'is an arrow of lust shot toward the fetus' (Francesco Ascoli)"

(Elements of Homosexual Criticism, p. 62, 2002) Footnote 88 reads:

"By pederasty I mean the erotic desire of adults for children (of either sex) and sexual relations between adults and children. Pederasty (in the proper sense) and pedophilia are commonly used as synonyms."

(Elements of Homosexual Criticism, p. 62, 2002)

Works

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Books

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  • Mieli, Mario (1977), Elementi di critica omosessuale (in Italian), G. Einaudi, ISBN 978-88-07-10339-1, OCLC 3670522
  • Mieli, Mario (1980), Homosexuality and liberation: elements of a gay critique, Gay Men's Press, ISBN 978-0-907040-01-9
  • Mieli, Mario (1994), Il risveglio dei Faraoni (in Italian), Edito per conto dell'Associazione culturale Centro d'iniziativa Luca Rossi dalla Cooperativa Colibri, ISBN 978-88-86345-01-9, OCLC 34221019
  • Pezzana, Angelo (1976), La Politica del corpo (in Italian), Savelli, OCLC 3446167

Plays

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  • Collettivo Nostra Signora dei Fiori (1977), La Traviata Norma : ovvero, Vaffanculo ... ebbene sì! (in Italian), L'erba voglio, OCLC 4005687
  • Ciò detto, passo oltre
  • Krakatoa

Pamphlets

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  • Towards a Gay Communism [London: pirate productions, 1980]
  • Mieli, Mario; Santini, Francesco (1974), Comune futura (in Italian), OCLC 84592884

References

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  1. ^ Mieli, Paola (2022-09-26). "La femme en soi. À propos de Mario Mieli". Figures de la psychanalyse (in French). 43 (1): 131–142. doi:10.3917/fp.043.0131. ISSN 1623-3883.
  2. ^ Mario Mieli. Homosexuality & Liberation: Elements of a Gay Critique.
  3. ^ "Mario Mieli".
  4. ^ "Mario Mieli". Pluto Press. Retrieved 2023-03-26.