Difference between revisions of "Celebrate! Samois and The Gay Day Parade"

From OutHistory
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 15: Line 15:
  
 
In 1980, the group marched again, this time with a contigent  of 21, including one child.  However, that year, they did not sponsor a booth as part of The Women’s Outreach Committee’s boycott which had been organized to highlight the economic challenges of the parade.<ref name="Samois Newsletter 4">Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” April-July, 1980, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA.</ref>
 
In 1980, the group marched again, this time with a contigent  of 21, including one child.  However, that year, they did not sponsor a booth as part of The Women’s Outreach Committee’s boycott which had been organized to highlight the economic challenges of the parade.<ref name="Samois Newsletter 4">Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” April-July, 1980, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA.</ref>
 +
  
 
Again in 1981, the group marched but did not sponsor an information booth,  and there is no historical record as to whether or not the group was still in existence by and if so if they participated in the 1982 parade.<ref name="Samois Newsletter Reference 6">Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” June 1981, p. 1, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA.</ref>
 
Again in 1981, the group marched but did not sponsor an information booth,  and there is no historical record as to whether or not the group was still in existence by and if so if they participated in the 1982 parade.<ref name="Samois Newsletter Reference 6">Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” June 1981, p. 1, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA.</ref>

Revision as of 23:22, 30 April 2010

OutHistory-6-web.jpg

[1]

Having formed the same month as the 1978 Gay Day parade[2], it was a full year before Samois was able to march together in the 1979 Gay Day Parade, which occurred under the spectre of the White Night riots. After helping to quash an attempt to regulate parade dress and ban leather, Samois not only marched in the parade, but also sponsored an information booth, where they sold their newly minted booklet, What Color is Your Handkerchief.[3]


Though there is no coverage of Samois in these clips, for a taste of the 1979 Gay Day Parade, check out some media coverage of the event: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUEcljVX7Zg AND http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nmqSHi29bus


In 1980, the group marched again, this time with a contigent of 21, including one child. However, that year, they did not sponsor a booth as part of The Women’s Outreach Committee’s boycott which had been organized to highlight the economic challenges of the parade.[4]


Again in 1981, the group marched but did not sponsor an information booth, and there is no historical record as to whether or not the group was still in existence by and if so if they participated in the 1982 parade.[5]




Key-words: Samois, lesbian, feminism, lesbian-feminism, SM, sado-masochism, BDSM, kink, Gay Day parade, Gay Pride, White Night Riots, Dan White, What Color is Your Handkerchief, Women’s Outreach Committee


  1. Pat Califia, “A Personal View of the History of the Lesbian S/M Community and Movement in San Francisco,” in Samois, Coming to Power (Boston: Alyson Publications, 1987), 250.
  2. Califia in Coming to Power, 261-4; Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” April-July, 1979, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA.
  3. Original Artwork by Katie Diamond; Samois Vest, Leathers Collection, Leather Archives and Museum, Chicago, IL.
  4. Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” April-July, 1980, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA.
  5. Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” June 1981, p. 1, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA. <comments />
  1. Samois Vest, Leathers Collection, Leather Archives and Museum, Chicago, IL.
  2. Pat Califia, “A Personal View of the History of the Lesbian S/M Community and Movement in San Francisco,” in Samois, Coming to Power (Boston: Alyson Publications, 1987), 260.
  3. Califia in Coming to Power, 261-4; Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” April-July, 1979, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA.
  4. Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” April-July, 1980, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA.
  5. Samois, “Samois Newsletter,” June 1981, p. 1, Samois Archive, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco, CA.