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1970s

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Journal Article
GLQ (2010) 16 (3): 389–427.
Published: 01 June 2010
...Brian J. Distelberg An analysis of gay male reviewers' responses to major commercial publishers' expanded offerings of fiction by and about gay people during the 1970s reveals how reviewers constructed a machinery of gay-identified criticism, negotiated new definitions of gay identity, and forged...
Journal Article
GLQ (2025) 31 (1): 1–27.
Published: 01 January 2025
...André Prado Fernandes During its military dictatorship's toughest years, Brazil witnessed the emergence and meteoric rise to (inter)national fame of the theater and dance group/family Dzi Croquettes in the 1970s. Their queer performances were so contagious that an increasingly visible entourage...
FIGURES
Journal Article
GLQ (2006) 12 (3): 441–464.
Published: 01 June 2006
...Richard Meyer Duke University Press 2006 Gay Power circa 1970 Visual Strategies for Sexual Revolution Richard Meyer You know, the guys there were so beautiful — they’ve lost that wounded look that fags all had 10 years ago.  — Allen Ginsberg, cited in “Gay Power Comes to Sheridan...
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Published: 01 June 2021
Figure 1. In September 1970, Come Out! , the periodical published by the Gay Liberation Front, lent five pages of its fifth issue to Third World Gay Revolution. There, the group introduced itself publicly for the first time, alongside an excerpt from the Young Lords’ Program and a letter penned More
Image
Published: 01 June 2021
Figure 2. In its seventh issue (November 14, 1970), Gay Flames magazine—published by GLF member Allen Young—reproduced an early version of TWGR's Platform, modeled after the BPP's and YL's programs. Courtesy of Archivos Desviados. Reproduced with permission of Allen Young. More
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Published: 01 June 2021
Figure 3. Cover of the Gay Flames pamphlet (issue 7, September 5, 1970). Courtesy of the Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender periodical collection, in the Manuscripts and Archives Division of the New York Public Library—Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations. Reproduced with permission More
Journal Article
GLQ (2021) 27 (3): 379–406.
Published: 01 June 2021
...Figure 1. In September 1970, Come Out! , the periodical published by the Gay Liberation Front, lent five pages of its fifth issue to Third World Gay Revolution. There, the group introduced itself publicly for the first time, alongside an excerpt from the Young Lords’ Program and a letter penned...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Journal Article
GLQ (2014) 20 (1-2): 95–113.
Published: 01 April 2014
... at regional drive-ins across the US Midwest. I next analyze one paradigmatic film — Bloody Mama (1970) — to substantiate its cultural operations for a largely white, working-class viewership, and then consider what hixploitation tells us about the intimate relationships between nascent conservative...
Journal Article
GLQ (2017) 23 (3): 359–390.
Published: 01 June 2017
...Whitney Strub As a gay man directing straight hardcore pornographic films in the 1970s, Zebedy Colt smuggled a certain queer eros into the visual culture of heterosexuality. Indeed, he belonged to a queer cohort of hetero-pornographers whose subversive flourishes have gone largely unrecognized...
Journal Article
GLQ (2019) 25 (2): 223–255.
Published: 01 April 2019
... 1970s Italian feminism to Daoist philosophy to early psychoanalytic theories of the anus, we take a step back from the post-structural logic that has animated queer studies since its inception, developing a structuralist methodology that insists on the ontological and ethical significance...
Journal Article
GLQ (2021) 27 (2): 253–279.
Published: 01 April 2021
...Lindsay Zafir This article examines the gay French author Jean Genet’s 1970 tour of the United States with the Black Panther Party, using Genet’s unusual relationship with the Panthers as a lens for analyzing the possibilities and pitfalls of radical coalition politics in the long sixties. I rely...
Journal Article
GLQ (2011) 17 (1): 15–48.
Published: 01 January 2011
...Gayle Rubin This article reflects on the intellectual and political circumstances of the publication of Gayle Rubin's 1984 essay “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality.” In particular, the article considers the context of the feminist “sex wars” of the late 1970s...
Journal Article
GLQ (2012) 18 (1): 1–18.
Published: 01 January 2012
... of these forms of exploitation. Turning our attention to the set of crises defining the period we understand as neoliberal capitalism—the long wave of recessions and dispossessions stretching from the 1970s to the present—we explore the shared queer and Marxist commitment to concepts of utopia and theories...
Journal Article
GLQ (2012) 18 (1): 87–106.
Published: 01 January 2012
... of the 1960s and 1970s, a new mode of power emerged that constitutes surplus as both surplus labor—produced out of the conditions of exploitation—and surplus existence—produced out of conditions of devaluation. In this new capitalist configuration, Moraga's very inconsistency can be read as a condition...
Journal Article
GLQ (2018) 24 (2-3): 169–187.
Published: 01 June 2018
..., “Queers Read This! LGBTQ Literature Now” takes seriously how, why, and what queers read. Looking to both Eve Sedgwick’s foundational 1996 special issue of Studies in the Novel , as well as the work of Audre Lorde, James Baldwin, Gloria Anzuldua, and other queer writers of color in the 1970s and 1980s...
Journal Article
GLQ (2018) 24 (4): 445–466.
Published: 01 October 2018
...Beth Capper; Arlen Austin Abstract In the mid-1970s, two autonomous groups within the International Wages for Housework movement formed to address black (and) lesbian struggles over social reproduction: Black Women for Wages for Housework (BWfWfH) and Wages Due Lesbians (WDL). These groups...
Journal Article
GLQ (2005) 11 (1): 23–64.
Published: 01 January 2005
...- tan ghetto that both texts offer, The Lure and Cruising can be located as popular culture examples of a group of texts, proliferating by the end of the 1970s, that responded imaginatively to, and thereby complemented, the vibrant and compar- atively visible gay world fashioned in the major cities...
Journal Article
GLQ (2020) 26 (4): 726–728.
Published: 01 October 2020
... that make inevitable the Israeli state and ongoing BOOKS IN BRIEF 727 settler colonial violence. Building conversations and connections among seemingly distinct Yiddish, Hebrew, and English poetry from the late nineteenth century, the interwar period, and the 1970s early 1980s, Queer Expectations closely...
Journal Article
GLQ (2024) 30 (2): 248–251.
Published: 01 April 2024
... liberationist and feminist cultural production from the 1970s on, and the latter for both the practice of crafting queer forms and a method to identify and interpret them. For Fawaz, artists and activists in the 1970s “offered up queer and feminist forms as provisional shapes, or constructs, for picturing...
Journal Article
GLQ (2006) 12 (3): 405–423.
Published: 01 June 2006
... positions and constituted an idealized lesbian sensibility: that lesbians were women ungoverned by patriarchal conventions and that lesbians reflected their sexuality in all of their material expressions. Sensibility, in the context of 1970s feminism in the United States, was a naive formulation...