Articles that didn't make it into The Gay Rights Movement

1. From Chapter 3: The Struggle for Survival     --

Tate, Richard. “The Battle to be a Parent: Recognizing the Rights of Gay and Lesbian Parents is the Latest Frontier for Equality.The Advocate 830 (30 Jan. 2001): 35+.

 

2. From Chapter 4: The Gay Counterculture: Confronting Conservatism in the Movement          --

Gallagher, John. “The Transgender Revolution.The Advocate 722 (10 Dec. 1996): 49+.

 

3. From Chapter 4: The Gay Counterculture: Confronting Conservatism in the Movement          --

Queer Nasty. “Cattle Queers.” Queer Nasty 6 (1996?). Ed. Dan-E Boy (aka Dan-Patrick Evarts). 9 Aug. 2002 <http://www.tripnet.com/q-nasty/best-of/cttlqrs.html>.


1.  Tate, Richard. “The Battle to be a Parent: Recognizing the Rights of Gay and Lesbian Parents is the Latest Frontier for Equality.The Advocate 830 (30 Jan. 2001): 35+.

 

Introduction:

Gaining recognition for the rights of gay and lesbian parents is a current priority for the mainstream gay rights movement.  Richard Tate examines both the financial and societal obstacles to adoption as well as its risks and rewards.  As Kate Kendell, executive director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, concludes, “[I]n the last 10 years there has been a significant decrease in these kinds of cases [gays and lesbians denied custody rights of the children they helped raise].  Not only have the parents who’ve fought these custody battles helped effect change, but also the sheer number of children affected and the growing level of public awareness have all combined to assure that, in most cases, sexual orientation is not an issue.”  As Tate points out, however, not all outcomes are positive, and Kendell adds that not legalizing gay marriages is tantamount to assigning gay families and relationships to second-class status.

Tate is a freelance writer in Los Angeles and a former editor for RadioSpy.com.

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2. Gallagher, John. “The Transgender Revolution.The Advocate 722 (10 Dec. 1996): 49+.

 

Introduction:

According to Vanessa Edwards-Foster of the National Transgender Advocacy Coalition, the term transgender includes people who identify themselves as Drag Queens, Drag Kings, Crossdressers, Butches, She-Males, and Transsexuals.  In other words, they are labeled by the gender that they identify with not that they were born with.

The transgender community like the bisexual community has gained recognition at the national level, yet unlike bisexuals, transgenders have yet to secure equal protection under the law.  Riki Wilchins, founder of Transexual Menace (a direct action group) and executive director of GenderPAC (public advocacy coalition), also laments the exclusion of gender identity from the political platforms of the mainstream gay rights movement and its Democratic allies.

John Gallagher is a writer and frequent contributor to The Advocate, a mainstream magazine for the gay and lesbian community.

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3. Queer Nasty. “Cattle Queers.Queer Nasty 6 (1996?). Ed. Dan-E Boy (aka Dan-Patrick Evarts). 9 Aug. 2002 <http://www.tripnet.com/q-nasty/best-of/cttlqrs.html>.

 

Introduction:

Queer Nasty is an e-zine (electronic magazine) that provides a voice for those in the gay community who identify themselves as “queer” and are seen by conservative gays as too outlandish or evocative of gay stereotypes: “We are tired of being forced to conform to an image of how others think we should be.  This includes religious freaks and breeders, as well as those in the ‘lesbigay’ community who think that we are ‘harming’ them by our actions.”

The following editorial laments this conservatism within the mainstream gay rights movement and calls for a resurgence of Queer activism.

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This page last updated on 3/21/03.