AIDS, ACTIVISM, AND COMMUNITY VISIBILITY: 1981-1991
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The AIDS Epidemic’s First Visible Decade
The AIDS epidemic has perhaps had a larger impact on queer life than any other single event or phenomenon in the last quarter-century. Though a politicized issue for gay and bisexual men moreso than lesbians and trans people, those very men have often acted as the face of queer activism; for this reason, much of the coverage of queer-centric activism of the eighties and early nineties (though not the activism itself; the invisibility of lesbian and trans activism is a major point of contention for many historians) centered the AIDS crisis.
Early AIDS Awareness and Activism in Bloomington
AIDS and Community Organization in Bloomington
The AIDS Quilt Visits Bloomington
Community Life
Of course, even in the shadow of AIDS, queer life marched on. Cultural feminism began to find support in lesbian communities, demand for information spurred the creation of switchboards, and queer folk continued going to college. In this section we present an overview of queer life in '80s, beyond AIDS.
The Open Door: a Queer Community Newspaper
Gay and Lesbian College Life in the 80s: An Overview <-- expand to community life
The 1981 Gay and Lesbian Conference
The Rise of the Religious Right and the "Challenge Bigotry" Campaign
Dreams and Swords: Lesbians and Cultural Feminism in the 80
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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