Homosexual Behavior & Pedophilia

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Homosexual Behavior & Pedophilia Homosexual Behavior & Pedophilia By Frank V. York and Robert H. Knight TABLE OF CONTENTS Homosexual Activists Work To Normalize Sex With Boys 2 Sexual ‘Liberation’ 3 Going After Children 3 Sexual Ageism and ‘Age of Consent’ Laws 4 Homosexual/Pedophile Efforts in Canada 6 Efforts to Normalize Pedophilia in the United States 7 David Thorstad Connects Pedophilia to ‘Gay Rights’ 8 Using Psychiatry/Psychology 9 Child Abuse ‘Experts’ Provide Cover for Pedophiles 12 The Kinsey Pedophilia Agenda 14 Judith Reisman’s Research 15 Academics Work to Normalize Pedophilia 16 Public Schools Are Recruiting Grounds 17 Entertainment Industry Popularizes Adult/Child Sex 18 Conclusion 18 Appendix 20 Correspondence from the American Psychological Association 21 Correspondence from the American Psychiatric Association 27 Endnotes 28 Homosexual Activists Work To Normalize Sex With Boys Frank V.York and Robert H. Knight I N T R O D U C T I O N Although most homosexual activists publ i cly deny that they want access to boy s , m a ny h o m o s exual groups around the wo rld are wo rking aggre s s ive ly to lower the age of sexual consent. Th e i r cause is being aided by the pro fessional psych i at ric and psych o l ogical associat i o n s , wh i ch have move d in recent ye a rs towa rd normalizing pedophilia, mu ch as they did with homosexuality in the early 1970s. Kevin Bishop, an admitted pederast (pedophile), is promoting the wo rk of the North A m e ri c a n M a n - B oy Love A s s o c i ation (NAMBLA) in South A f rica. Bishop, who was molested at the age of six, i s also an admitted homosexual who is blunt about the re l ationship between homosexuality and pedophil- ia. “ S c rat ch the ave rage homosexual and you will find a pedophile,” said Bishop in an interv i ew with the E l e c t ronic Mail & Guard i a n ( June 30, 1 9 9 7 ) .1 This pedophile/homosexual activist began studying pedophilia while a student at Rhodes U n ive rs i t y. He also discove red Karl Marx there, as well as other literat u re that helped fo rm his wo rl d- v i ew. His views are being echoed around the wo rld by homosexual activists who are seeking wh at they call “ s exual fre e d o m ” for ch i l d re n . Bishop is on a crusade in South A f rica to have “ age of sexual consent law s ” ab o l i s h e d, and he is looking for help from NAMBLA to accomplish his goal. He says ch i l d ren must be empowe red “ by t e a ching them about loving re l ationships at an early age, and giving them the opportunity to make an i n fo rmed decision about having [sex ] .” He also ap p roves of incest, n o t i n g, “ Two women psych o l ogi s t s in A m e rica say the healthiest introduction to sex for a child should be with their [sic] pare n t s , b e c a u s e it is less thre atening and the emotional intimacy more comfo rt abl e.”2 Bishop agrees with NAMBLA that the next social movement in We s t e rn politics will be an at t a ck on “ s exual age i s m ,” wh i ch prohibits sexual contact based on age diffe rences. The movement alre a dy is well under way in Europe and Canada. 2 SEXUAL ‘LIBERATION’ on demand without parental consent or knowledge.4 Jim Hanes, administrative director of Americans for Truth about Homosexuality, visited Amsterdam in Homosexual activist groups around the world the Netherlands in November 1998. After contacting are working to lower or abolish age of consent laws in various homosexual bookstores and the Homosexual order to “liberate” children from the constraints of a Studies department of the University of Amsterdam p at ri a rchal society. regarding pedophile material, he was referred to the Kate Millett, a radi- Intermale Bookstore, which featured a wide selection cal feminist and “The Incest of pedophilia in a section called “Padeo.”The store Marxist theoretician, taboo has always m a n ager directed him to seve ral back issues of d e s c ribed this phi- been one of the Paidika, the journal of pedophilia, in addition to losophy in an inter- cornerstones of Anatomy of a Media Attack (published by NAMBLA), view first published patriarchal Varieties of Man/Boy Love from Wallace Hamilton in “Loving Boys” in thought,” says Press, Crime Without Victims by Preben Hertoft, The 1980. It was later Millett. “We Sexual Life of Children by Floyd M. Martinson and reprinted in The Age have to have an many fictional books about child sexual acts with Taboo, published by emancipation adults. The material was prominently displayed and Alyson Publishers, a proclamation for can be ordered from the Intermale Bookstore website homosexual publish- children.” at http://www.intermale.nl, which features a section ing house in Boston. called “Boys and Teenagers.” Millett cl a i m s , “[O]ne of children’s essential rights is to express them- selves sexually, probably primarily with each other but GOING AFTER CHILDREN with adults as well. So the sexual freedom of children is an important part of a sexual revolution.” Millett says the sexual revolution begins with the emancipa- Pat Califia is an American advocate of total sex- tion of women and also includes ending homosexual ual “freedom.” She is a self-proclaimed lesbian sexu- oppression. al radical who has written extensively on the impor- She views the incest taboo as an instrument of tance of “liberating” children from sexual oppression. oppression. “The incest taboo has always been one of Her book, Public Sex, contains two essays on age of the cornerstones of patriarchal thought,” says Millett. consent laws, “The Age of Consent: The Great Kiddy- “We have to have an emancipation proclamation for Porn Panic of ’77” and “The Aftermath of the Great children. What is really at issue is children’s rights and Kiddy-Porn Panic of ’77.” Califia argues that all age not, as it has been formulated up to now, merely the of consent laws should be abolished and supports right of sexual access to children.”3 Millett believes NAMBLA’s efforts to legalize adult/child sex. Califia sexual access to children is only one part of a larger is a columnist for The Advocate, a "mainstream" goal of liberating children from all forms of parental homosexual magazine.5 oppression. Gaining access to children has been a long-term This theme of sexual liberation re c e n t ly goal of the homosexual movement. In 1972, the appeared at a 1999 U.N. Population Conference in the National Coalition of Gay Organizations adopted a Netherlands, where teenage delegates lobbied for the “Gay Rights Platform” that included the following right of teens and children as young as 10 to have sex- demand: “Repeal of all laws governing the age of sex- ual pleasure and sexual freedom. Approximately 130 ual consent.” David Thorstad, a spokesman for the youths from 111 countries signed the sexual rights homosexual rights movement and NAMBLA, clearly document. They also demanded the right to abortion states the objectives: “The ultimate goal of the gay lib- 3 eration movement is the achievement of sexual free- Surrounded by pious moralists with dead- dom for all – not just equal rights for ‘lesbians and gay ening anti-sexual rules, we must be shame- men,’ but also freedom of sexual expression for young less rule-breakers, demonstrating our alle- giance to a higher concept of love. We must people and children.”This goal has not changed since do it for the children’s sake.9 it was articulated in 1972.6 In 1982, the International Homophilics Institute, The late Jim Kep n e r, founder of the a homosexual orga n i z ation producing homosex u a l I n t e rn ational Gay and Lesbian A rch ives in Los biographies and homosexual historical materials, voted A n ge l e s , once ex p ressed his close affinity to to support a worldwide age of consent for sexual acts pedophiles. His views we re posted on a at first menses for females and first ejaculation for homosexual website. Kepner wrote, males. According to Gary A. McIntyre, a member of the IHI’s “ethics committee,” the organization still Many of the men who picked me up so lov- maintained this position as of 1997.7 ingly would today be stigmatized as In 1985, the Second International Gay Youth pedophiles. They were all kind and respect- Congress met in Dublin and issued a declaration that ful and were very important to me. … I am not a pedophile, but I feel they are often stated in part: “As young people, we must be free to more victims of harm than the perpetrators choose our own identities and lifestyles. We oppose of it. … Too many in our movement, vic- ages of consent and all laws which restrict consensual tims themselves of prejudice and discrimi- sexual activity because, as young people, they limit our nation, pass those hatreds and fears to drag sexual freedom and deny us the right to choose who we queens, pedophiles, bisexuals, leather men relate to sexually.”8 and women, transsexuals, and many other minorities in our community.10 As part of the effort to normalize sex with chil- dren, some homosexual activists are promoting the idea that keeping children from sexual activity is actu- SEXUAL AGEISM AND “AGE OF ally a form of child abuse.
Recommended publications
  • LGBT: a Dissection
    LGBT: A Dissection By David Thorstad “LGBT” is everywhere these days. But is it here to stay, or is it a passing fad? Where did it come from? Why was it promoted? By whom? And to what end? How did it acquire its seemingly endless variants? The acronym, in its many permutations, designates a movement very different from the gay liberation movement it evolved from. Some might see it as progress, expansion, and greater inclusivity, others as a tombstone for what was once a radical sexual liberation movement. It did not result from any democratic discussion or consensus among gay and lesbian activists. Not since the early 1980s has the gay movement held national conferences open to all groups and factions where issues could be debated and decided democratically. The acronym appeared as if out of the ether without input from the very people it is supposed to represent. One can only speculate as to the reasons for this. This article will attempt to do that. Looking Back I joined New York’s iconic Gay Activists Alliance in 1974. GAA was formed as a single-issue alternative to the Gay Liberation Front a year after the 1969 Stonewall Riots. GLF soon left the stage, but GAA went on to incubate a number of other gay and lesbian groups, among them Lesbian Feminist Liberation, Gay Teachers Association, an SM group, gay academics, and gay religious groups. At its height it included most gay subcategories, including transvestites, drag, leftists, Democrats, academics. It followed Roberts Rules of Order, so meetings were long and cantankerous.
    [Show full text]
  • Punishing Queer Sexuality in the Age of LGBT Rights by Scott De Orio A
    Punishing Queer Sexuality in the Age of LGBT Rights by Scott De Orio A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (History and Women’s Studies) in The University of Michigan 2017 Doctoral Committee: Professor Matthew D. Lassiter, Chair Professor David M. Halperin Professor William J. Novak Associate Professor Gayle S. Rubin Scott De Orio [email protected] ORCID iD: 0000-0002-4631-6241 © Scott De Orio 2017 To my parents ii Acknowledgments Support from several institutions and fellowships made it possible for me to complete this project. At the University of Michigan, the Department of History, the Department of Women’s Studies, the Rackham Graduate School, and the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies funded the research and writing of my dissertation and provided me with the ideal intellectual culture in which to do that work. Elizabeth Wingrove got me thinking about gender as a category of analysis in the Community of Scholars seminar that she directed at the Institute for Research on Women and Gender. Fellowships from Cornell University’s Human Sexuality Collection, Princeton University’s Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, the William Nelson Cromwell Foundation, and the U-M Department of History funded archival research for the project. While I was in the revision stage, Mitra Shirafi and the Hurst Summer Institute in Legal History exploded my thinking about the law and politics in ways that I’m just beginning to process. When I was in high school, my favorite English teacher Deanna Johnson introduced me to the art of analyzing pop culture, and I’ve been hooked ever since.
    [Show full text]
  • Capitalism & Homophobia
    1 Marxism and the Struggle for Gay/Lesbian Rights Capitalism & Homophobia Revolutionists must seek to understand the gay ques- democratic rights and the oppressed was integral to tion for both scientific and programmatic reasons. Marx- Bolshevism. Lenin explicitly disagreed with the notion ists have always sought to understand society as a that as a Marxist, you should ‘‘concern yourself only whole, and to develop a historical materialist analysis of with your own class,’’ and rejected the Menshevik’s all social phenomena----from the relations of production advice to ‘‘abandon ‘Blanquist dreams’ of leading all the to religion, the family and so on. As Lenin noted in What revolutionary elements of the people....’’ (Collected Is To Be Done?, it is not sufficient to give attention only Works, v. 16). to questions immediately affecting the proletariat: The classical case in which the issue of the Marxist ‘‘The consciousness of the working masses cannot be vanguard as tribune of the people was posed was the genuine class-consciousness, unless the workers learn, Dreyfus case. In 1894, Captain Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish from concrete, and above all from topical, political facts officer of the French general staff, was court-martialed and events to observe every other social class in all the for treason, degraded, and sent to prison. When it sub- manifestations of its intellectual, ethical, and political life; unless they learn to apply in practice the materialist analy- sequently became clear that he was innocent, the right- sis and the materialist estimate of all aspects of the life and wing, clericalist, anti-Semitic general staff did their best activity of all classes, strata, and groups of the popula- to suppress the truth.
    [Show full text]
  • Supreme Court of the United States
    No. 02-102 44444444444444444444444444 IN THE Supreme Court of the United States ))))))))Ë))))))))) JOHN GEDDES LAWRENCE, ET AL., Petitioners. v. STATE OF TEXAS, Respondent. ))))))))Ë))))))))) On Writ of Certiorari to the Court of Appeals of Texas Fourteenth District ))))))))Ë))))))))) BRIEF OF LIBERTY COUNSEL AS AMICUS CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF RESPONDENT Mathew D. Staver (Counsel of Record) Florida Bar No. 0701092 Erik W. Stanley Florida Bar No. 0183504 Joel L. Oster Kansas Bar No. 18547 Anita Staver Florida Bar No. 061131 Rena M. Lindevaldsen New York Bar LIBERTY COUNSEL 210 East Palmetto Avenue Longwood, FL 32750 (407) 875-2100-Phone -i- TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE TABLE OF CONTENTS .........................-i- TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ...................... -iii- INTEREST OF AMICUS CURIAE ..................1 SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT ......................1 ARGUMENT ...................................2 I. CERTIORARI WAS IMPROVIDENTLY GRANTED ...............................2 II. STATES HAVE THE RIGHT TO REGULATE HUMAN SEXUAL RELATIONS .............................4 A. States Have the Right to Promote the Institution of Heterosexual Marriage .....................5 B. States Have the Right to Regulate Consensual Sexual Conduct ............................7 -ii- III. DEREGULATING HUMAN SEXUAL RELATIONS WILL ERODE THE INSTITUTION OF MARRIAGE .............16 A. The Abolition of Marriage as the Union of One Man and One Woman ......................17 B. Current Strategies to Redefine Sexuality and Marriage ................................24 1. Our Youth ............................24 2. The legislature and judiciary ................26 3. Sexual preference is a non-existent class ......27 CONCLUSION ................................30 -iii- TABLE OF AUTHORITIES FEDERAL CASES Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc., 501 U.S. 560 (1991) ........................8 Bowers v. Hardwick, 478 U.S. 186 (1986) .................3, 5, 7, 10 Carey v. Population Servs. Int’l, 431 U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • A Rhetorical History of Gay Liberation and Socialist Feminism in the New American Movement Between 1970 and 1980
    Syracuse University SURFACE Theses - ALL May 2019 “A growing excitement that ‘something was happening’”: A Rhetorical History of Gay Liberation and Socialist Feminism in the New American Movement between 1970 and 1980 Chris DiCesare Syracuse University Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/thesis Part of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons Recommended Citation DiCesare, Chris, "“A growing excitement that ‘something was happening’”: A Rhetorical History of Gay Liberation and Socialist Feminism in the New American Movement between 1970 and 1980" (2019). Theses - ALL. 319. https://surface.syr.edu/thesis/319 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses - ALL by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Abstract This project charts a rhetorical history of the New American Movement’s (NAM) organizational debates on gay liberation and socialist feminism between 1970 and 1980. NAM was a socialist feminist organization active across the 1970s in the United States that sought to create a mass movement through a conception of a particularly “American Socialism.” Through a periodization of NAM’s archival history, I highlight how NAM members were able to work in coalition with a wide range of individuals and groups both within and outside of the organization to build a socialist feminist conception of gay liberation. Drawing on original archival research performed at four archives in the United States in collections of speeches, internal memos, personal and organizational correspondence, newsletters, and discussion notes, I argue that NAM’s adoption of a socialist feminist approach to gay liberation augments “siloed” rhetorical approaches to social movements in the 1970s in as much as NAM members, as well as their theories and practice, worked out of, within, and with autonomous liberation movements.
    [Show full text]
  • The Construction of the Lesbian Herstory Archives
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Publications and Research CUNY Graduate Center 1998 Building “A Home of Our Own:” The Construction of the Lesbian Herstory Archives Polly Thistlethwaite CUNY Graduate Center How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_pubs/34 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] −1− Building “A Home of Our Own:” The Construction of the Lesbian Herstory Archives A Presence in Our Own Land April 1975 Dear Sisters, We are a group of women who met initially at the first conference of the Gay Academic Union in the fall of 1973. Some of us formed a C-R group, and as we grew closer to each other we began to focus on our need to collect and preserve our own voices, the voices of our Lesbian Community. As our contribution to our community, we decided to undertake the collecting, preserving, and making available to our sisters all the prints of our existence. We undertook the Archives, not as a short-term project, but as a commitment to rediscover our past, control our present, and speak to our future...Sahli Cavallaro, Deborah Edel, Joan Nestle, Pamela Oline, Julia Stanley1 So began the first newsletter of the Lesbian Herstory Archives (LHA). The First Gay Academic Union (GAU) conference was held during the 1973 Thanksgiving weekend at John Jay College in New York City, attended by independent scholars, activists, college faculty, and graduate students.
    [Show full text]
  • Brochure-Queer-Liberation-NYC-DSA
    1 2 one States, this symbolic victory has limited police violence. The persistence of these important social benefits to married indi- problems points to the inhumanity of cap- viduals who are citizens. As socialists, we italism and to its particularly devastating fight to extend these benefits to all kinds effects on LGBTQ people of all colors. of “families” and domestic arrangements, including those that are not recognized and sanctioned by the state. 4 Our Leaders Have Failed Us 3 The self-appointed “leaders” of the LGBTQ Socialists Provide A Queer movement in the United States, mean- Working-Class Perspective while, have pushed an agenda that does little to nothing for working class people of all backgrounds. They have prioritized The fact is that the overwhelming majority a politics of representation that simply of LGBTQ people are working class, and elevates a few prominent figures into the that our struggle is the struggle to cre- ruling class. They have adhered to a politics ate a sustainable and just economy that of respectability that upholds a right-wing is organized on a democratic basis. So- idea of “family values” and de-sexualizes cialists recognize that LGBTQ issues are, LGBTQ individuals. They have engaged to a great extent, the same as those of all in “pinkwashing” - that is, enabling the working class people - inadequate hous- American military state to manipulate ing, the unavailability of good-paying jobs, and utilize “gay issues” in the service of meager social insurance and welfare pro- Islamophobic foreign policy discourse, re- vision, unaffordable healthcare, crushing gime-change adventurism, and armaments debt, substandard education, a punitive production.
    [Show full text]
  • Ed 328 271 Ir 053 429
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 328 271 IR 053 429 AUTHOR Walker, Walt Cat TITLE Gay and Lesbian Studies. A Research Guide for the UCLA Libraries. PUB DATE Apr 90 NOTE 145p. PUB TYPE Reference Materials - Bibliographies (131) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC06 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Annotated Bibliographies; Higher Education; *Homosexuality; Information Needs; Information Seeking; *Information Sources; *Lesbianism; Life Style; *Reference Materials; *Search Strategies IDENTIFIERS University of California Los Angeles ABSTRACT Designed to aid students and other researchers in finding information about gays, lesbians, and homosexuality, this guide contains a collection of annotated bibliographies, or pathfinders, of both gay and general reference sources in each of 14 disciplines and lists of some major gay and lesbian works in each area. The materials listed are based upon the University of California, Los Angeles library collections, and they include gay and lesbian interdisciplinary reference sources, gender studies reference sources, popular/general interest reference sources, other interdisciplinary reference sources, autobiographies and biographies, essay collections, interdisciplinary periodicals, and nonfiction prose. Materials listed for each of the disciplines may include indexes, encyclopedias and handbooks, bibliographies, directories, and dictionaries. The disciplines covered are the arts, literature, philosophy, religion, history, social sciences, anthropology, education, sociology, psychology, sexuality, health science, business, and law. Introductory materials provide a brief overview of the current status of gay and lesbian studies programs and the availability of information in this area, as well as explanations of how to use this guide and how to search for information ingay and lesbiaa studies. The pathfinders are followed by a list of other resources for research, a guide to the use of gay-related terms in several online databases, and a title index to the reference works.
    [Show full text]
  • By Gayle Rubin
    62 GSeAxYuLaEl TRrUaBffIiNc WITH JUDITH BUTLER GAYLE RUBIN WITH JUDITH BUTLER Interview Sexual Traffic Gayle Rubin is an anthropologist who has written a number of highly influential articles, including “The Traffic in Women: Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” “Thinking Sex,” “The Leather Menace,” and “Mis- guided, Dangerous and Wrong: An Analysis of Anti-Pornography Politics.” A collection of her essays will soon be published by the University of California Press. She is currently working on a book based on ethnographic and histori- cal research on the gay male leather community in San Francisco. Rubin has been a feminist activist and writer since the late 1960s, and has been active in gay and lesbian politics for over two decades. She has been an ardent critic of the anti-pornography movement and of the mistreat- ment of sexual minorities. Her work has offered a series of methodological suggestions for feminism and queer studies which have significantly shaped the emergence of both fields of study. JB: The reason I wanted to do this interview is that some people would say that you set the methodology for feminist theory, then the method- ology for lesbian and gay studies. And I think it would be interesting as a way d – i – f – f – e – r – e – n – c – e – s : A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies 6.2+3 (1994) d i f f e r e n c e s 63 to understand the relation between these two fields for people to understand how you moved from your position in “The Traffic in Women” to your position in “Thinking Sex.” But then also it would be interesting to hear a bit about the kind of work you are doing now.
    [Show full text]
  • Gay Activists Alliance Firehouse (Former Engine Company No
    DESIGNATION REPORT Gay Activists Alliance Firehouse (former Engine Company No. 13) Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 513 Commission GAA Firehouse LP-2632 June 18, 2019 DESIGNATION REPORT Gay Activists Alliance Firehouse (former Engine Company No. 13) LOCATION Borough of Manhattan 99 Wooster Street LANDMARK TYPE Individual SIGNIFICANCE A major activist force in New York City and across the United States, the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA) was founded in December 1969 “to secure basic human rights, dignity, and freedom for all gay people.” It was most prominent in 1971-74, when 99 Wooster Street, a former firehouse, served as the organization’s headquarters. Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 513 Commission GAA Firehouse LP-2632 June 18, 2019 99 Wooster Street LPC, 1973 LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION COMMISSIONERS Sarah Carroll, Chair Lisa Kersavage, Executive Director Frederick Bland, Vice Chair Mark Silberman, Counsel Diana Chapin Kate Lemos McHale, Director of Research Wellington Chen Jared Knowles, Director of Preservation Michael Devonshire Michael Goldblum REPORT BY John Gustafsson Matthew A. Postal, Research Department Anne Holford-Smith Jeanne Lutfy EDITED BY Adi Shamir-Baron Kate Lemos McHale PHOTOGRAPHS BY Sarah M. Moses, Research Department Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 513 Commission GAA Firehouse LP-2632 June 18, 2019 3 of 18 Gay Activists Alliance Firehouse Initiative, and two individuals. No one spoke in 99 Wooster Street, Manhattan opposition. The Commission received correspondence from the owner opposing designation. The commission received 261 written submissions in favor of designation, including from Bronx Borough Designation List 513 President Reuben Diaz, Councilmember Adrienne LP-2632 Adams, the Preservation League of New York State, the Generations Project, and 257 individuals.
    [Show full text]
  • Gender & Social Movements
    GENDER & SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Department of Women's and Gender Studies Department of Sociology Sonoma State University This syllabus is for a 3-semester-unit course, taught in a three-hour class once a week for 15 weeks. Course Description: Social movements organized around gender issues and identities are significant sources of social change in modern societies. This course analyzes the structure and dynamics of social movements based on gender, as well as the participation of women in other social movements. We pay close attention to the roles of organizations, resources, leadership, recruitment, commitment, values, ideology, political culture, and counter-movements. Case studies will emphasize the woman suffrage movement, the new feminist movement that began in the 1960s as well as its offshoots and counter-movements, the gay and lesbian rights movement, and the recent men's movements. Required Texts: Janet Zollinger Giele, Two Paths to Women's Equality: Temperance, Suffrage, and the Origins of Modern Feminism (Twayne, 1995). Eleanor Flexner, Century of Struggle: The Woman's Rights Movement in the United States, revised edition, introduction by Ellen Fitzpatrick (1959; Harvard Univ. Press/Belknap, 1996). Ruth Rosen, The World Split Open: How the Modern Women’s Movement Changed America (Viking, 2000). Barry D. Adam, The Rise of a Gay and Lesbian Movement, revised edition (1987; Twayne, 1995). Quote: "The struggle of humanity against oppression is the struggle of memory against forgetting." -- Milan Kundera Course Requirements: 1. Attendance, preparation, and participation are essential. Attendance will be verified each class period. Participation in class discussions will count 15% of your grade. Unexcused absences will lower this score.
    [Show full text]
  • The New Sexual Revolution
    Socialist Feminist Questions About Queer Activism The New Sexual Radicalism by Peter Drucker A Solidarity Pamphlet Fifty cents FROM ITS BEGINNING in the 1990s in the United States, and those who are can be influenced by other approaches. a “queer” activist current has gradually spread to other Queer theory is itself a complex, contradictory, evolving countries, including in recent years in Western Europe. In body of thought, on which I don’t have any claim to be an decades when the prevailing trend in LGBT movements expert. I do think there are criticisms to be made of queer has been to orient to legal reforms by parliamentary means, theory,2 but I don’t think they all necessarily apply to queer queer activism has constituted a third wave of sexual radi- activism. calism,1 emphasizing visibility, difference, direct action, re- fusal to assimilate to the dominant culture, and the fluidity lthough queer activism has emerged only recent- and diversity of sexual desire. ly in the Netherlands, internationally it is about What are the social origins of queer? Does this current 25 years old. The first queer group, Queer Nation, A 3 have a vision — whether implicit or explicit — of sexual was founded in New York in 1990. In fact the first wave of liberation, and if so, what is it? What is its relationship to Queer Nation groups in the United States rose and reced- such emancipatory projects as feminism, antiracism, global ed within a few years. Only a few groups, like OutRage! in justice and socialism? London (founded only a month after Queer Nation in New I come to these questions as a socialist, whose own so- York) around its controversial leader Peter Tatchell, have cialist activism and LGBT activism have been linked for 30 managed more or less to survive through the intervening years.
    [Show full text]