<P>Japan¿s first professionally produced, commercially marketed and nationally distributed gay lifestyle magazine, <EM>Barazoku</EM> (¿The Rose Tribes¿), was launched in 1971. Publicly declaring the beauty and normality of homosexual desire, <EM>Barazoku</EM> electrified the male homosexual world whilst scandalising mainstream society, and sparked a vibrant period of activity that saw the establishment of an enduring Japanese media form, the homo magazine. Using a detailed account of the formative years of the homo magazine genre in the 1970s as the basis for a wider history of men, this book examines the relationship between male homosexuality and conceptions of manliness in postwar Japan. The book charts the development of notions of masculinity and homosexual identity across the postwar period, analysing key issues including public/private homosexualities, inter-racial desire, male-male sex, love and friendship; the masculine body; and manly identity. The book investigates the pheno