Difference between revisions of "The Pre-Gay Era in the USA"
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*[[Pre-Gay Era Bibliography|Bibliography]] | *[[Pre-Gay Era Bibliography|Bibliography]] | ||
*[[:Category:Movement Pioneers|Movement Pioneers]] (Biographical Profiles and Interviews) | *[[:Category:Movement Pioneers|Movement Pioneers]] (Biographical Profiles and Interviews) | ||
− | **[[Category:Paul_D._Cain_Interviews Interviews by Paul D. Cain]] | + | **[[:Category:Paul_D._Cain_Interviews|Interviews by Paul D. Cain]] |
*[[Blanche M. Baker Memorial Library]] | *[[Blanche M. Baker Memorial Library]] | ||
*Correspondence between Don Slater and Dale Jennings | *Correspondence between Don Slater and Dale Jennings |
Revision as of 20:01, 11 October 2008
This exhibit features homosexual rights organizations and publications in the U.S. from the 1950s to 1969. It will grow to provide exciting primary sources such as articles from ONE and Tangents magazines, a complete inventory of ONE’s Blanche M. Baker Library as it was in 1965, biographical profiles of key activists of the era, images of covers of pulp novels from the 1950s and ’60s, and a complete index of the contents of ONE, Mattachine Review, and The Ladder.
Content Index: The Pre-Gay Era in the USA
- Acknowledgments
- Bibliography
- Movement Pioneers (Biographical Profiles and Interviews)
- Blanche M. Baker Memorial Library
- Correspondence between Don Slater and Dale Jennings
- Historical Timelines
- History / Historical Documents
- Pulp Fiction Collection
- Pulp Nonfiction Books
- Table of Known Pseudonyms
- Other Web Resources
Overview
Every gay and lesbian organization in the country, and most across the world, can trace its origins to one night in the fall of 1950 when five men met in Silver Lake, near downtown Los Angeles, to form a clandestine organization they called Mattachine. By 1952, Mattachine was no longer a secret society but an active and dynamic social force, an ever-increasing body of men and women who demanded equal rights and fair treatment for homosexuals.
The Pre-Gay Era in the USA is the period of the homosexual/homophile movement that spans the period between World War II and the Stonewall rebellion of June 1969. The three primary organizations in the nation fighting for homosexual rights during this time were the Mattachine Society; ONE, Incorporated; and the Daughters of Bilitis.
ONE Magazine was launched in January of 1953, created by Mattachine members and other Los Angeles activists, and it rapidly became the nation’s first successful publication dedicated to homosexual issues. A few months later, in the spring of 1953, the Mattachine Foundation restructured itself to become the Mattachine Society. In 1955, four lesbian couples formed the Daughters of Bilitis, and in October of 1956 they began publishing The Ladder. In 1957, the Mattachine Society moved its headquarters to San Francisco, where, under the leadership of Hal Call, it continued to publish the Mattachine Review.
This exhibit will record the history of these three organizations and their publications in as much detail as possible and in a culturally sensitive manner.
Todd White’s Introduction
In the early 1990s, Homosexual Information Center President Don Slater conceived the idea of making the HIC’s materials available online. Unfortunately, he died before he could see the project started. C. Todd White decided to pursue Slater’s vision in 1999 when he moved to Los Angeles and began studying this history and working with many of the elders of the movement who still lived in the area. White’s goal became to preserve HIC’s material in a legitimate archives while providing online access to the public through the Internet. His vision became realized last year when HIC’s collection became part of the Vern and Bonnie Bullough Collection on Human Sexuality, curated by Oviatt Library at California State University Northridge, and now, with the creation of this website, through CLAGS.
This exhibit is the result of Dr. White’s ongoing study of the homosexual/homophile movement in the United States. Though primarily a historical endeavor, his training and experience in cultural anthropology causes him to value and use ethnographic methods involving fieldwork, focused and life-history interviews, and participant observation.
White secured his Ph.D. in anthropology at the University of Southern California in 2005 and has recently converted his dissertation into a book, titled Pre-Gay L.A.: A Social History of the Movement for Homosexual Rights, that is to be published by the University of Illinois Press in the spring of 2009.
Invitation to Participate
This exhibit will strive to be as comprehensive as possible, and to that aim we encourage comments and submissions from those knowledgeable in the field. If you would like to submit biographical profiles, transcribed interviews, book reviews, photographs, insights, or corrections, please contact Dr. White at todd@tangentroup.org. Where necessary, copyright information and rights must be provided in order for us to publish the materials.
Researched and Written by C. Todd White, Ph.D.
Copyright (©) by C. Todd White, 2008. All rights reserved.