Southern Perspectives on the Queer Movement: LGBTQ+ Rights and Home Commitment | Explore Queer Literature for Academic Research & Social Justice Discussions
Southern Perspectives on the Queer Movement: LGBTQ+ Rights and Home Commitment | Explore Queer Literature for Academic Research & Social Justice Discussions

Southern Perspectives on the Queer Movement: LGBTQ+ Rights and Home Commitment | Explore Queer Literature for Academic Research & Social Justice Discussions

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Description

A collection of essays by South Carolina activists on the development of the LGBTQ movementIn Southern Perspectives on the Queer Movement: Committed to Home, Sheila R. Morris has collected essays by South Carolinians who explore their gay identities and activism from the emergence of the HIV-AIDS pandemic to the realization of marriage equality in the state thirty years later. Each of the volume's nineteen essays addresses an aspect of gay life, from hesitant coming-out acts in earlier decades to the creation of grassroots organizations. All the contributors have taken public roles in the gay rights movement.The diverse voices include a banker, a drag queen from a family of prominent Spartanburg Democrats, a marching minister who grew up along the Edisto River, a former Catholic priest and his tugboat dispatcher husband from Long Island, the owner of a feminist bookstore, a Hispanic American who interned for Republican strategist Lee Atwater, a philanthropist politician from Faith, North Carolina, and a straight attorney recognized as the "Mother of Pride" who became active in 1980, when she learned her son was gay.Southern Perspectives on the Queer Movement challenges the conventional understanding of the LGBTQ movement in the United States in both place and time. Typically associated with pride marches and anti-AIDS activism on both the east and west coasts and rooted in the counterculture of the 1960s and "Stonewall Rebellion" in New York City, Southern variants of the queer liberation movement have found little room in public or scholarly memory. Confronting an aggressively hostile environment in the South, queer political organization was a late-comer to the region. But it was the very unfriendliness of Southern political soil that allowed a unique and, at times, progressive LGBTQ political community to form in South Carolina. The compelling Southern voices collected here for the first time add a missing piece to the complex puzzle of postwar queer activism in the United States.Harlan Greene, author of the novels Why We Never Danced the Charleston, What the Dead Remember, and The German Officer's Boy, provides a foreword.Contributors: Jim BlantonCandace Chellew-HodgeMatt ChislingMichael HaiglerHarriet HancockDeborah HawkinsDick HubbardLinda KetnerEd Madden and Bert EasterAlvin McEwenSheila MorrisPat PattersonJim and Warren Redman-GressNekki ShuttTony Snell-RodriquezCarole StonekingThomas A. SummersMatt TischlerTeresa Williams

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
I purchased this book at a book signing by the editor. Southern Perspectives on the Queer Movement provides an excellent overview of the queer movement in South Carolina. Each chapter is written by an individual or couple directly involved with this historical process. As a founder of a local SC PFLAG chapter, I was familiar with some of the history but found so much to increase my understanding of the LGBT experience. It's a very readable, well-written, compelling book that I couldn't put down. While the book chronicles SC history, the personal stories will resonate with many and could have happened anywhere in the South. My copy is in circulation among friends here and each reader has appreciated this book and exclaimed over its personal impact. Yesterday, I heard a quote from one of the chapters which will prompt me to read the book again. I heartily recommend this book to LGBT people, parents, friends and allies, therapists, social workers, and to anyone who would like to expand their knowledge of LGBT people and their work towards inclusiveness, protections, and equality.