[On June 12th,
1967, the Supreme Court ruled
in Loving v. Virginia to strike
down all remaining laws prohibiting interracial marriage. So this week I’ll
AmericanStudy Loving and four other
cases in which the Court helped advance social progress, leading up to a
special weekend post on the role of courts and judges in our own society!]
On two
historical contexts for a shockingly recent case, and a reminder it still
offers us.
When I teach Henry
James’s The Turn of the Screw
(1898), one of the historical contexts that we discuss is the criminality of
homosexuality in the period (as it’s implied that one of the novella’s two
villainous ghosts was a gay man). Students are generally shocked to learn that
the famous Irish artist and socialite Oscar Wilde was convicted of “sodomy”
in May 1895 and sentenced
to two years’ hard labor in prison. But while I agree that Wilde’s trial
and punishment are and should be shocking, they’re not nearly as distant from
us as that 1890s date would suggest. As of 1960, every state in America had anti-sodomy laws on
the books, meaning gay men in every state were overtly risking the same
kinds of charges that had faced Wilde. And as of the Lawrence v. Texas decision in 2003—two thousand and three—14 states
still had such anti-sodomy laws, meaning that it was literally illegal to be a
sexually active gay man (or, more accurately, a gay man at all, because of
course that was always the motivation behind these laws, not the sexual act
itself) in more than 1/4th of the United States just 15 years ago.
Moreover, just
over 30 years ago the Supreme Court both upheld the constitutionality of and
openly supported such blatantly homophobic laws. In 1986’s Bowers v. Hardwick, the Court ruled in a 5-4 decision that
Georgia’s anti-sodomy law (which in fact criminalized both oral and anal sex
performed in private between consenting adults, although of course no
heterosexual couples were ever arrested for such actions) was constitutional. Although
the majority decision attempted to ground the ruling in legal precedent and constitutional
theory, Chief Justice Warren Burger made the Court’s true rationale clear in his
concurring opinion when he quoted 18th century English jurist William
Blackstone’s 1772 descriptions of homosexual sex as an “infamous crime
against nature,” a “still deeper malignity” than rape, and “a crime not fit to
be named.” In short, the Bowers
decision didn’t simply uphold anti-sodomy laws; it (or at least the five Justices
who sided with the majority) openly agreed with them that the sexual preference
and identity of gay men in America (and by extension gay women and other LGBTQ
Americans, although these laws almost always focus overtly on sodomy and thus
men) was enough to make them criminals.
It was not until
2003’s Lawrence v. Texas that the Supreme Court overturned the Bowers ruling and ruled 6-3 that
anti-sodomy laws were unconstitutional (as intimate consensual sexual conduct
was protected by the right to substantive
due process under the 14th Amendment). In writing the majority
opinion, Justice
Anthony Kennedy did go further than simply highlighting constitutional or
legal rights, recognizing and supporting the personal and sexual identities of
the case’s gay male plaintiffs: “The petitioners are entitled to respect for
their private lives. The State cannot demean their existence or control their
destiny by making their private sexual conduct a crime.” But at the same time,
Kennedy distinguished that private sexual conduct from a range of behaviors
explicitly not protected by the decision, and among them he included not only “minors,”
“prostitution,” and “persons who might be injured or coerced,” but also “whether
the government must give formal recognition to any relationship that homosexual
persons seek to enter.” Which is to say, while Lawrence did become a stepping stone toward the Court’s recognition
of same-sex marriage as a legal right in Obergefell v. Hodges (2015),
I believe it would be just as possible for the Lawrence decision to be used in the exact opposite way. A good reminder
that progressive Court decisions can’t and shouldn’t be taken for granted.
Special weekend
post tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Supreme Court decisions or contexts you’d highlight?
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