News and Events => Opinions & Editorials => Topic started by: SandraJane on June 29, 2012, 05:30:04 AM Return to Full Version

Title: Separating trans, gay and lesbian histories
Post by: SandraJane on June 29, 2012, 05:30:04 AM
(https://www.susans.org/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fepgn.com%2Fsites%2F357%2Fassets%2Fmasthead-darkcrop.gif&hash=62a23b3577b371665058c123a4ec6b77fed1ab14)



Separating trans, gay and lesbian histories


by Cei Bell | 20 hrs ago | Retrieved from the Internet on June 29, 2012 by SJ


http://epgn.com/view/full_story/19136686/article-Separating-trans--gay-and-lesbian-histories?instance=main_page (http://epgn.com/view/full_story/19136686/article-Separating-trans--gay-and-lesbian-histories?instance=main_page)


Last week, PGN published an article about Locust Street between 12th and 13th being renamed Barbara Gittings Way ["'Gittings Way' in the works," June 22-28]. Malcolm Lazin, who proposed the renaming, referred to Gittings as the mother of the LGBT movement.

Just because something (or someone) is lesbian and gay doesn't make it LGBT.

In the '60s, when Gittings was one of the organizers of the Annual Reminders protest at Independence Hall, the point of the men dressing in suits and the women wearing dresses and carrying pocketbooks was they did not want drag queens, effeminate males and butch dykes — the homosexual stereotypes — at the protest. The reason effeminate males, drag queens and butch dykes were the stereotype is because they were the only people who were out of the closet. Rock Hudson certainly wouldn't turn from kissing Doris Day and say, "I really want to suck tonsils with Troy Donahue!" That may have been the official moment that the movement began intentionally excluding and harassing gender-variant people out of the movement.