Title: Global Social Movements
1Global Social Movements
2Week 7A. Case Study I. Gay/Lesbian/Queer The
Politics of Sexuality.
3I. Introduction
- 1. Focus on emergence of the modern gay and
lesbian movement. - 2. An example of politics of identity/ culture/
oppression. - 3. Readings on gay/ lesbian/ queer politics
- M. Blasius S. Phelan (1997) We Are Everywhere
(Routledge) - A. Jagose, Queer Theory (1996) (Melb. UP)
4Homophile Activism 1850-1950
- 1. The limits of liberal toleration
- (i) Liberal rights as abstract/ formal
- (ii) Originally rights of male, property-owning
Protestants - (iii) No rights for women
- (iv) No rights for homosexual people
52. Homophile activism 1850-1950
- (i) against religious moralism homosexuality
not a sin - (ii) for scientific understanding not a
disease - (iii) for legal toleration not a crime
63. Some pioneering individuals campaigners,
writers, artists
J. A. Symonds
Magnus Hirschfeld
74. Campaigning organisations
- Germany Scientific-humanitarian Committee
(1897-1933) - USA Mattachine Society, (1951)
- Sisters of Bilitis (USA from 1955)
85. Conservatism of homophile politics
(increasing over time)
- (i) low profile and respectable
- (ii) discreet persuasion of the elite
- (iii) not a mass movement
- (iv) philanthropic and apologetic rather than
assertive
9III. The Politics of Gay Liberation after
Stonewall (1969)
101. Historical context and influence
- (i) Black civil rights movement from oppression
to pride - (ii) New Left and opposition to Vietnam War
liberation - (iii) counter-culture sexual openness
112. The ideology of gay liberation
- (i) radical transformation of individual and
society cf. revolutionary Marxism - (ii) homophobia as cultural oppression cf.
Black power - (iii) role of gender and patriarchy cf.
second-wave feminism - (iv) against family and marriage
- (v) liberation of polymorphous perversity cf.
Freud, Essays on Sexuality
123. Politics of identity and language
- (i) against homosexual and (then) derogatory
terms like queer - (ii) positive identity of gay, lesbian as an
aspect of pride - (iii) strategic and transitional identity, not
essentialist
134. Political practice of gay liberation
- (i) coming out openness about sexuality
- (ii) consciousness raising towards pride
- (iii) (mostly) non-violent direct action
- demonstrations, publicity, education, mutual-help
- (iv) symbolic challenge
- (v) Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras.
14IV. Emergence of Gay and Lesbian as Ethnic
Identities
151. Emergence of radical lesbianism as an
identity
- (i) gay male dominance
- (ii) feminist homophobia (1970s).
- (iii) i.e. cross-cutting forms of oppression/
doubly oppressed.
162. Shift to ethnic politics of identity
- (i) identities bisexual, transvestite,
transsexual, intermediate sex GLBTQ - (ii) permanent or essential (not strategic)
communities and identities - (iii) legal reforms rather than sexual revolution
- (iv) integration, acceptance, rights and equality
as goals
17V. Queer Theory and Politics after AIDS
181. Queer theory influenced by Foucault and
poststructuralism
- (i) critique of the subject and identity
- (ii) social construction of sexuality and
sexualities - (iii) queer as
- less an identity than a critique of identity
(Jagose, p. 131)
192. Themes of queer theory and politics
- (i) suspicion of identity as fixed or essential
category - (ii) no natural sexuality but socially
constructed - (iii) neither revolutionary transformation nor
reformism - (iv) politics of radical transgression
203. Criticisms and limitations of queer politics
- (i) false gender neutrality as renewal of male
dominance? - (ii) rocking the boat of ethnic identity
politics? - (iii) retreat from politics to discursive or
theoretical contestation?