Difference between revisions of "QUEER BLOOMINGTON: 1992-2001"
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− | + | The early 1990s witnessed an important shift in the tone and tactics LGBT politics. After a decade of malignant neglect of the AIDS crisis by the highest levels of the Federal Government, activists stepped up their protests. Their new militancy, signaled by their appropriation of the old insult "queer" and its transformation in their hands into a badge of pride and anger, was intensified by the U.S. invasion of Iraq in the Gulf War. Rather than conceiving of gay and lesbian issues merely as the concern of a minority group that suffered discrimination, the new queer sensibility drew connections between sexuality, the state, and mainstream institutions. It imagined a new kind of community among different kinds of marginalized groups, which led to sometimes fierce debates about the relationship between homosexual, bisexual, transgender, and intersex identities. It critiqued homophobia and the military, heterosexism and marriage. It tried to locate particular, concrete opportunities for social transformation. As a consequence of early 90's queer activism, an unprecedented wave of institutional change rippled through the university and some parts of local government, winning victories that gay and lesbian activists has been seeking since the early 1970s. | |
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− | [[ | + | [[ROTC Protests]] |
− | [[ | + | [[Act OUT, the Lesbian Avengers, and the New Queer]] |
− | [[ | + | [[Queer and Post-Queer AIDS Activism]] |
− | [[ | + | [[Establishing the GLBT Student Support Services Center]] |
− | + | ---- | |
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− | [[ | + | <div style="text-align: center;"> |
+ | '''Navigation''' | [[The Midwest's "Queer Mecca": 40 Years of GLBTQ History in Bloomington, Indiana (1969-2009) | '''Home''']] | [[BEFORE STONEWALL: WHAT MADE BLOOMINGTON A GAY OASIS? | '''Before Stonewall''']] | [[FROM STONEWALL TO THE AIDS EPIDEMIC: 1969-1981 | '''Stonewall to AIDS: the 70s''']] | | ||
− | [[ | + | [[AIDS, ACTIVISM, AND COMMUNITY VISIBILITY: 1981-1991 | '''AIDS and Community Life: the 80s''']] | [[QUEER BLOOMINGTON: 1992-2001 | '''The Queer Decade: the 90s''']] | [[QUEER HERE AND NOW: CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN THE 21st CENTURY | '''Queer Here and Now: 2001-Present''']] |
− | + | </div> | |
− | [[Category:Stryker]] | + | [[Category:Stryker]] <comments /> |
Latest revision as of 10:30, 1 May 2010
The early 1990s witnessed an important shift in the tone and tactics LGBT politics. After a decade of malignant neglect of the AIDS crisis by the highest levels of the Federal Government, activists stepped up their protests. Their new militancy, signaled by their appropriation of the old insult "queer" and its transformation in their hands into a badge of pride and anger, was intensified by the U.S. invasion of Iraq in the Gulf War. Rather than conceiving of gay and lesbian issues merely as the concern of a minority group that suffered discrimination, the new queer sensibility drew connections between sexuality, the state, and mainstream institutions. It imagined a new kind of community among different kinds of marginalized groups, which led to sometimes fierce debates about the relationship between homosexual, bisexual, transgender, and intersex identities. It critiqued homophobia and the military, heterosexism and marriage. It tried to locate particular, concrete opportunities for social transformation. As a consequence of early 90's queer activism, an unprecedented wave of institutional change rippled through the university and some parts of local government, winning victories that gay and lesbian activists has been seeking since the early 1970s.
Act OUT, the Lesbian Avengers, and the New Queer
Queer and Post-Queer AIDS Activism
Establishing the GLBT Student Support Services Center
Navigation | Home | Before Stonewall | Stonewall to AIDS: the 70s |
AIDS and Community Life: the 80s | The Queer Decade: the 90s | Queer Here and Now: 2001-Present
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