Making Gay History - The Podcast (Posts tagged socialjustice)

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Wishing all our listeners happy holidays whether you’re spending it with your biological or chosen families! Here’s a photo from the first Mattachine Christmas party, December 1951. If you missed the episode from Season 1, Chuck Rowland recounts how the #LGBTQ civil rights movement got its start 67 years ago with the founding of the #MattachineSociety. To listen, visit http://bit.ly/mgh-rowland
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Photo: From left to right, Konrad Stevens (back of head), Dale Jennings (in profile), Harry Hay, Rudi Gernreich, Stan Witt, Bob Hull, Chuck Rowland (in glasses) and Paul Bernhard. © John Gruber.

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Just as we did for our first two seasons, we’re taking a deep dive into my decades-old audio archive to bring you the voices of LGBTQ history. For the start of this new season, we’re bringing you the second part of a conversation that host Eric Marcus had with Sylvia Rivera back in 1989.

Listen at this link: http://bit.ly/mgh-rivera-part2
Or subscribe here: http://bit.ly/mgh-subscribe

Sylvia Rivera would have loved knowing that in the years since her death in 2002 she’s become an icon—a symbol of LGBTQ people fighting back against police repression and fighting for respect and equal rights. But she’d also want you to know that she was a human being, born in the Bronx in 1951. Eleven years later the self-described effeminate child found himself homeless and hustling on 42nd Street to scratch out enough money to get by. Sylvia was all of seventeen when she crossed paths with history at the Stonewall Inn on the night of June 28, 1969. She died at 51, having struggled with addiction and homelessness for much of her life, even as she continued to fight for trans rights and LGBTQ equality.

Photo: Sylvia Rivera posing in front of fountain, 1970
Credit: Photo by Kay Tobin courtesy of Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library

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In the first episode of our third season, we visit Sylvia Riveras’s kitchen, for the second part of a never-before-heard interview from 1989. Pull up a chair for a conversation with the Stonewall veteran and trans rights pioneer who reflects on a...

In the first episode of our third season, we visit Sylvia Riveras’s kitchen, for the second part of a never-before-heard interview from 1989. Pull up a chair for a conversation with the Stonewall veteran and trans rights pioneer who reflects on a life of activism while she cooks a pot of chili. Listen via your podcatcher (see link in bio) or retype this link in your web browser: http://bit.ly/mgh-rivera-part2

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First episode of Season 3! Welcome back to Sylvia Rivera’s kitchen, for the second part of a never-before-heard interview from 1989. Pull up a chair for a conversation with the Stonewall veteran and trans rights pioneer who reflects on a life of activism while she cooks a pot of chili. Listen via your podcatcher or at this link : http://bit.ly/mgh-rivera-part2

STAR stands for the “Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries.”

Photo credit: Photo by Harvey Wang from Holding On: Dreamer’s, Visionaries, Eccentrics and other American Heroes (W.W. Norton & Co 1995).

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We’re back with more stories from queer history as told by the people who lived it. Drawing on decades-old archival audio tape, you’ll hear intimate, personal interviews with LGBTQ civil rights pioneers.
• Sylvia Rivera at a gay rights demonstration...

We’re back with more stories from queer history as told by the people who lived it. Drawing on decades-old archival audio tape, you’ll hear intimate, personal interviews with LGBTQ civil rights pioneers.
• Sylvia Rivera at a gay rights demonstration in Albany, New York, 1971. Photo by Diana Davies courtesy of the New York Public Library’s Manuscripts and Archives Division. .
• Phyllis Lyon (left) and Del Martin in an undated photo (as seen in the 2003 documentary “No Secret Anymore: The Times Of Del Martin & Phyllis Lyon”). Photo courtesy of A.F. Archive/Alamy.
• Block (left) and J. J. Belanger cheek-to-cheek in a photo booth at the PGE Exhibition, Hastings Park, Vancouver, Canada, 1953. Photo courtesy of ONE Archives at the USC Libraries.
• Sgt. Perry Watkins near his home in Tacoma, Washington, 1983. Photo by Steve Stewart from his book: Positive Image: A Portrait of Gay America, published in 1985 by William Morrow & Company.
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Making Gay History mines Eric Marcus’s 30-year-old audio archive of rare interviews to create intimate, personal portraits of both known and long-forgotten champions, heroes, and witnesses to LGBTQ history. In this preview we offer a taste of what’s to come in Season Three, featuring the extraordinary voices of J.J. Belanger, Phyllis Lyon and Del Martin, Morris Kight, Sylvia Rivera, Perry Watkins, Deborah Johnson and Zandra Rolón Amato, and Ellen DeGeneres. Listen via your podcatcher or at MakingGayHistory.com
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We’re back with more stories from queer history as told by the people who lived it. Drawing on decades-old archival audio tape, you’ll hear intimate, personal interviews with LGBTQ civil rights pioneers. Listen to more via your podcatcher or this link: http://bit.ly/mgh3

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Have you listened to our bonus episode: Edythe Eyde’s Gay Gal’s Mixtape? Listen to the full episode via your podcatcher, link in our bio or by retyping this link in your browser: http://bit.ly/mgh-mixtape
To learn more about #EdytheEyde (aka, Lisa Ben) and Vice Versa, her 1947 pioneering ‘zine for lesbians, have a listen to her Making Gay History season one episode. That’s where you’ll also find additional information about Edythe Eyde’s life, writings, and music. Image: Eyde in the 1950s. Credit: Courtesy of ONE Archives at the USC Libraries.

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For #NationalComingOutDay, Bonus Episode — Edythe Eyde’s Gay Gal’s Mixtape. Listen to full episode via your podcatcher or here: http://bit.ly/mgh-mixtape To learn more about #EdytheEyde (aka, Lisa Ben) and Vice Versa, her 1947 pioneering ‘zine for lesbians, have a listen to her Making Gay History season one episode: http://bit.ly/mgh-eyde1 . That’s where you’ll also find additional information about Edythe Eyde’s life, writings, and music. Image: Eyde in the 1950s. Credit: Courtesy of ONE Archives at the USC Libraries.

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