The World Turned
Autor John D'Emilioen Limba Engleză Paperback – 8 oct 2002
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822330233
ISBN-10: 0822330237
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 150 x 231 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Duke University Press
ISBN-10: 0822330237
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 150 x 231 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Duke University Press
Recenzii
"An impressive return to form from the founding father of queer historical studies . . . "--GAYTIMES, June 2003A rabble-rousing college student in the 1960s, a gay liberation activist from the 1970s on, and a former director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Forces Public Policy Institute in the 1990s, University of Illinois history professor John DEmilio witnessed first-hand the flowering of gay rights and gay acceptance in American culture, as well as the political backlash. He records these in The World Turned.Publishers WeeklyLeading gay activist DEmilio is one of the great pioneers of gay history. . . . The 16 pieces collected here . . . blend together into a vivid portrait of gay thought in the past 15 years. . . . All academic libraries will want this title, and many public libraries need to consider it as well because the essays are not only inherently interesting but also clearly and accessibly written.Library JournalProwling through the dense, exotic terrain of American pop culture, John D'Emilio returns with a detailed map that charts the migration of gays to the center of our national consciousness during the last decade. The scapegoating of gays by the Christian Right, the controversy simmering around the gay-gene theory, and the influence of the great AIDS activist Larry Kramer, are just a few of the topics surveyed in this collection of essays, all of which read like savvy coffeehouse banter rather than jargon-cluttered academics. . . . D'Emilio shows us that the world has indeed 'turned,' that instead of looking the other way, it faces us head-on, acknowledging our presence in ways it never has before.Tony Peregrin, New City ChicagoJohn DEmilios writing should be required for every gay, lesbian, bi or trans person. . . . The World Turned is a profound work that provides historical context for a decade that was truly transforming.Scott Blaine Swenson, Lambda Book ReportThe World Turned takes the supposed tension between activism and academia and kicks it to the curb. . . . DEmilio makes a stirring case for moving beyond fragmented identity politics based on ethnicity or sexual orientation, and for an approach that turns outward. . . . DEmilio sees the 1990s as a decade of enormous social transformation in the political power of lesbians and gay men, a time when indeed the world turned. Others have made this claim, but DEmilio has enough historical perspective to make the case effectively.Christopher Capozzola, Gay and Lesbian Review/Worldwide[A] valuable exposure to a mind and heart constantly turned toward understanding, communicating and synthesizing for us the problems and triumphs that fighting for our rights entails.H.E.B., FrontiersAn impressive return to form from the founding father of queer historical studies. . . .Gay TimesThere is much to nourish the curious queer mind in The World Turned, D'Emilio's academic but nicely accessible collection of a decade's musings on assorted queer concerns. . . .Each of the 16 pieces is thoughtful and engagingeven one as slight as a eulogy for a friendand though there is no particular theme connecting the selections, they share the common thread of D'Emilio's friendly intelligence and inclusive take on the queer community.Richard Labonte, Bookmarks (syndicated newsletter)[T]he volume will be of interest to a wide audience. Not surprisingly, activists, organizers, and students of gay liberation will find it invaluable for putting in proper historical context what they may already be familiar with or indeed have participated in. It will undoubtedly inform future thinking on strategy and goals. In addition, scholars of social movements, both sociologists and historians, will find rich narratives that will reefing concepts and rework theories.Steve Valocchi, Journal of the History of Sexuality[A]ll queer historians should celebrate the publication of John D'Emilio's The World Turned. . . . [A] fascinating and important book that will likely help to define research into the queer history of the United States as much as D'Emilio's earlier work has done.-- Committee on Lesbian and Gay History NewsletterD'Emilio is at his best when he writes history that is also his story, and the first part of the book . . . is most palpitating when the subject touches him directly. . . .Louis Godbout, Labour/Le TravailListed in Journal of the History of Sexuality and Library Journal. Interviewed in Front Page (Raleigh, NC) and Windy City Times. Mentioned in Indianapolis Star, Columbia College Today, NYRB article on gay gene, Chicago Tribune article on Supreme Court sodomy decision. Lambda award was mentioned in many gay pubs, online venues. . . .
Notă biografică
John D'Emilio is Professor of History and Gender and Women's Studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is the author of "Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities: The Making of a Homosexual Minority in the United States, 1940-1970" and "Intimate Matters: A History of Sexuality in America" (with Estelle B. Freedman). He was the first director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force's Policy Institute.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
"This insightful and absorbing collection confirms John D'Emilio's stature as the gay and lesbian movement's premier chronicler and analyst. D'Emilio is a rare scholar and activist whose writing is clear and direct. Each essay tells vivid stories, shares wisdom earned through participation and observation--all in an engaging and inclusive voice. This is one of the most interesting collections on contemporary gay and lesbian history yet to be published."--Urvashi Vaid, columnist for "The Advocate" and long-time activist
Descriere
In this collection of essays, D'Emilio brings his historian's eye to bear on profound changes in American society, culture, and politics as gay issues moved from the margins to the center of national consciousness in the 1990s.