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What the Record Doesn't Show
By offering the group as a model for present-day politics, Sarah Schulman’s history of ACT UP reproduces the movement’s failures and exclusions.
by
Vicky Osterweil
via
Jewish Currents
on
September 22, 2021
The Untold Story of Queer Foster Families
In the 1970s, social workers in several states placed queer teenagers with queer foster parents, in discrete acts of quiet radicalism.
by
Michael Waters
via
The New Yorker
on
February 28, 2021
The Pioneering Psychologist Who Proved that Being Gay isn’t a Mental Illness
How a friendship between a straight psychology professor and her gay student busted the myth of homosexuality as an illness.
by
Robyn Schelenz
via
Fig. 1 (University Of California)
on
June 26, 2020
I Survived Prison During The AIDS Epidemic. Here’s What It Taught Me About Coronavirus
COVID-19 isn’t an automatic death sentence, but the fear, vilification and isolation are the same.
by
Richard Rivera
via
The Marshall Project
on
May 14, 2020
May We All Be So Brave as 19th-Century Female Husbands
Far from being a recent or 21st-century phenomenon, people have chosen, courageously, to trans gender throughout history.
by
Jen Manion
via
Aeon
on
May 7, 2020
Pop Music Has Always Been Queer
Sasha Geffen’s debut book reveals that the history of pop music is a history of gender rebellion.
by
Tal Milovina
via
The Nation
on
April 8, 2020
The Rightness of the Singular ‘They’
This year, Merriam-Webster added a new definition to the word “they”: “used to refer to a single person whose gender identity is nonbinary.”
by
Jen Manion
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
December 15, 2019
Before Stonewall
It was an important turning point, but by no means were the riots the first act of Queer resistance.
by
Hazel Newlevant
via
The Nib
on
June 19, 2019
The 19th Century Lesbian Made for 21st Century Consumption
Jeanna Kadlec considers Anne Lister, the center figure of HBO’s Gentleman Jack, and the influence of other preceding queer women.
by
Jeanne Kadlec
via
Longreads
on
June 6, 2019
Deconstructing the Stonewall Myth (Brick by Brick)
Why it's important to know that Marsha P. Johnson did not start the riots at Stonewall.
by
R. E. Fulton
via
Nursing Clio
on
June 26, 2018
partner
We're Looking at the Masterpiece Cakeshop Case All Wrong. And So Did The Supreme Court.
Why the Masterpiece Cakeshop decision was a major loss for gay rights.
by
Jim Downs
via
Made By History
on
June 6, 2018
The Military, Minorities, and Social Engineering
Trump’s transgender ban restarts the debate about the relation between military service and social policy.
by
Richard S. Slotkin
via
The Conversation
on
August 7, 2017
Texas State Rep. Gives Powerful Testimony on the History of Bathroom Laws
It was all about the parallels between a new "bathroom bill" and the Jim Crow segregation of her youth.
via
Washington Post
on
May 22, 2017
The Many Lives of Pauli Murray
She was an architect of the civil-rights struggle-and the women's movement. Why haven't you heard of her?
by
Kathryn Schulz
via
The New Yorker
on
April 17, 2017
NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project
The first initiative to document historic and cultural sites associated with the LGBT community in the five boroughs.
by
Andrew S. Dolkart
,
Ken Lustbader
,
Jay Shockley
via
NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project
on
January 1, 2016
The First Time America Went Beard Crazy
A sweeping new history explores facial hair as a proving ground for notions about gender, race, and rebellion.
by
Margaret Talbot
via
The New Yorker
on
July 21, 2025
Good Queers and Bad Queers
Myths are fed back as stereotypes and strawmen to divine some boundary for acceptability.
by
KJ Shepherd
via
Contingent
on
June 27, 2025
The Archaic Sex-Discrimination Case the Supreme Court Is Reviving
In Skrmetti, the Court turned to a decades-old decision once thought to be consigned to history.
by
Leah Litman
via
The Atlantic
on
June 24, 2025
A Truly Patriotic Education Tells Many Stories
Trump’s executive orders can’t define diversity out of history.
by
David M. Perry
via
Foreign Policy
on
March 31, 2025
Women's Sports Happened By Accident, And Could Be Taken Apart On Purpose
The long battle against Title IX.
by
Diana Moskovitz
via
Defector
on
March 6, 2025
partner
In the Ladies’ Loo
Gender-segregated bathrooms tell a story about who is and who is not welcome in public life.
by
Emily McCrary-Ruiz-Esparza
via
JSTOR Daily
on
January 22, 2025
Rise and Fall of the ‘Pansy Craze’
On Jazz Age gay culture and its backlash.
by
Margaret Vandenburg
via
Gay And Lesbian Review
on
January 2, 2025
Censorship Through Centuries
A new book examines battles over drag story hours and book bans through the lens of LGBTQ history.
by
Rebecca L. Davis
via
Literary Hub
on
September 9, 2024
Y’all Means All: Past and Present LGBTQ+ Rights in the South
Despite an unwelcoming political climate and a dearth of LGBTQ+ protections, LGBTQ+ Southerners have persisted.
by
Brittany Daniel
via
Nursing Clio
on
July 10, 2024
How Work Has Shaped the LGBTQ Community
And the ways capital took advantage of the state's policing of sexuality.
by
Ryan Reft
via
The Metropole
on
September 26, 2023
New Anti-Drag Laws Mirror Cross-Dressing Bans From The 1800s: ‘Déjà Vu’
Experts see parallels between modern restrictions on drag shows and the cross-dressing laws that led police to arrest Babe Bean over 120 years ago in California.
by
Maham Javaid
via
Retropolis
on
June 30, 2023
Feminism in the Dock
Can (and should) conservatives reclaim feminism from the radicals?
by
Brenda M. Hafera
via
Law & Liberty
on
June 26, 2023
How “Gender” Went Rogue
Debating the meaning of gender is hardly new, but the clinical origin of the word may come as a surprise.
by
Sandra Eder
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
May 24, 2023
partner
Conversion Therapy Is Harmful and Ineffective. So Why Is It Still Here?
Conversion therapies have never been about providing medical or mental care. Instead, they have been a tool to eradicate LGBTQ activism, culture and people.
by
Andrea Ens
via
Made By History
on
May 15, 2023
How Woke Bob Hope Got Canceled by the Right
The conservative comedian spoke out for gay rights and gun control, and got boycotted and ostracized by friends on the right, including Ronald Reagan.
by
Ben Schwartz
via
The Nation
on
April 14, 2023
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