Gay Liberation

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    the mid-60s, and tensions increase even more as the Gay Liberation Movement blooms into full effect throughout the 60s and 70s. With all the chaos, women saw themselves as secondary and decided to spark social movements as a way to gain equality. Gloria Steinem became the face of the movement stating, “The truth will set you free. But first, it will piss you off.” The main focus of the second-wave of feminism was to gain women’s power and liberation. They sought to expose domestic violence against women

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    first gay rights demonstration which led to the gay liberation movement in the 70’s. Being such an impactful commemoration it inspired more liberating groups in the growing gay and lesbian world such as: feminist movements, record labels, music festivals and the National Organization for Women. This quickly evolved into acceptance in a place of worship when the first gay minister was ordained in ’72. Soon after, several large political groups formed in support of the growing “outing” of a gay society

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    On June 28, 1969, the Gay Liberation Movement was sparked due to the Stonewall Riot in Manhattan, New York City, (History.com Staff). The Stonewall was a gay club located in New York City. It was often regulated and harassed by police officers but one day the LGBT decided to stand up for themselves and fight back. Although the police were legally justified in raiding the club, which was serving liquor without a license among other violations, New York’s gay community had grown weary of the police

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    though you can render no reason”(). This quote is a great representation of how the Gay Liberation Movement swept across the nation spreading change everywhere it went. This movement was a major milestone for the United States, this was the first step towards acceptance. The movement did not pick up speed until the 1960’s but many years before that in 1920’s individuals started to speak up about their rights in the gay and lesbian community. December 10, 1924 the first Society for Human Rights started

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    the Gay Community and Women’s Liberation Movement The gay community and women’s liberation movement were both formed through collective identities and political/oppositional consciousness. Moreover, both groups were discriminated against by external social structures and yet, succeeded due to internal factors. Whittier and Taylor describe collective identity as “the shared definition of a group that derives from member’s common interests, experiences, and solidarity” (Whittier 105). The gay community

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    When the liberation of gays and lesbians movements started, they began to talk about what heterosexuality was. They set up sex and gender as a system based on biological factors such as genitalia. In this system there could only be two genders a man and a women, lesbians went against what had been stated to define what it meant to be a women based on the natural sex organs. Lesbian experience, what they go through in their life is different from the experiences and the life of heterosexual women

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    Although the gay liberation movement had very little impact at that time, it set the stage for bigger and better changes in the future. Since the 1960’s America has added, removed, and adjusted laws against homosexuals. On May 17, 2004, Massachusetts becomes the first state in the United State to legalize same–sex marriage. The Massachusetts Chief Justice concluded, “to deny the protections, benefits, and obligations conferred by civil marriage to gay couples was unconstitutional because it denied

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    The start of the Gay Rights Movement During the 1960s and 1970s lesbians began to speak up and fight for equal rights. The New York City’s Stonewall riot in June of 1969 is understood as the dawn of the gay rights movement. The 1960’s is when lesbian mothers argued in court for the right to raise children and when they joined other political movements like the civil rights movement; a movement that includes people of color, women and the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer community. The

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    struggle to obtain gay and civil rights has been directly influenced by religion, either in a positive or negative way. More specifically, religion has served as a disadvantage to achieving gay rights and an advantage to those that participated in the civil rights movement. Contrary to the recent successes of the gay rights movement, there have been a lot of obstacles along the way and most of them have been due to religious beliefs and practices. Religion opposes gay rights, especially gay marriage on

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    night she died at 34 from cancer. After her death Nemiroff finished and produced her final work, Les Blancs, a play about African liberation. Hansberry had begun to claim her identity as a lesbian in a 1957 letter to a lesbian periodical, The Ladder. This information and her 1964 divorce from Nemiroff was not widely known at the time of her death. In 1965 the Gay Liberation Movement did not exist and a woman could not claim such an identity without major reprisals. It was not until the 1980s that feminist

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