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Watch the online lecture, “LGBTQ+ Terminology and Issues.” This is a primer on LGBTQ terminology and issues to help orient you to the content this week.
Queer History Lecture, part 1:
Queer History Lecture, part 2:
Click here to download part 2 of the video lecture(YouTube was having issues with copyright infringement and wouldn’t let me upload the video the usual way).
Read chapter 3 of Transgender History by Susan Stryker.
Watch this short inspiring video about the group STAR (Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries), and Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, activists for transgender liberation:
Again, note that these questions are here to help guide you through the main themes and ideas. These are not your discussion questions. When you participate in the discussion forum, make sure to respond to the discussion questions I post.
LECTURE
READING
This is about the Stonewall Riots of 1969, often referred to as the spark for gay liberation. Every year Pride parades are held at the end of June specifically to commemorate the riots at the Stonewall Inn. This is the entire documentary. You can get extra credit for watching this or reading or watching any of what follows.
This is a documentary made by Susan Stryker about the Compton Cafeteria riots in San Francisco in 1966, which she spends some time discussing in your reading.
This documentary chronicles LGBTQ history before the Stonewall riots of 1969. Here’s the entire documentary on YouTube. A much better quality version can be found on Kanopy through the ARC Library website.
This discusses some key moments in queer history after the Stonewall riots. This is the trailer — watch the whole thing on Kanopy through the ARC library website.
This documentary is about Marsha Johnson, a key figure in transgender history.
This short interview was aired on Latina USA, an NPR show. Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P. Johnson were good friends as activists for the rights of trans* people in New York City in the 1960s and 1970s. (This one is too short for extra credit).
Here’s a song I remember liking several years ago but was just reminded of. Thought I’d share something different.
This is a new TV series on HBO! It’s a fictionalized account about the life of Anne Lister, an out, masculine-of-center lesbian in 19th century England, who kept a very detailed–and explicit–diary. I saw the first episode recently, and thought it was excellent.
There are many more documentaries I could list here!
Like Brother Outsider: The Life and Times of Bayard Rustin about the Civil Rights Movement leader; The Celluloid Closet about queerness in Hollywood; Howto Survive a Plague about the AIDS epidemic; Paris is Burning about the queer black ball scene in New York City in the 1980s; The State of Marriage about the struggle for marriage equality in Vermont; We’ve Been Around, a series of documentary short films celebrating the lives of trans* pioneers; Forbidden: Undocumented and Queer in Rural America; and on and on.
If you have recommendations for documentaries or books, let me know (or post them in the discussion forum).
Don’t forget that you should be integrating a discussion of both the lecture AND the reading in your discussion post. And be specific in your references, the way a historian would. Bring in evidence to support your points. Always include in-text MLA citations and a Works Cited section to clearly indicate which sources you cited. And include your word count at the end of your post.
Remember also that you need to cite all required content (lectures and reading), and that without references to the reading you may not receive higher than a ‘C’ on your discussion post.
There are two questions this week:
Cite all of the required course content in your post. Include in-text MLA citations, a works cited section, and a word count for your post and replies.
Your initial discussion post should be at least 250 words, you should answer all questions, and your responses to the discussion should be thoughtful and not too brief — i.e. “me too” and “I agree” do not suffice as adequate responses. Your responses should be at minimum 50 words. Make sure to advance the conversation, most typically by adding something new (personal reference point, critique, something from the lecture or reading, etc.).
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