Fiction Pick of the Week: "For the Love of Dior"
A gay Costa Rican shopowner navigates family turmoil and political upheaval.
A gay Costa Rican shopowner navigates family turmoil and political upheaval.
John Manuel Arias Barren Magazine Jan 2020 15min Permalink
Seventeen years before the Stonewall Riots, Dale Jennings proclaimed to a California court that he was a homosexual. It was the first glimmer of a civil rights revolution. This is the story of an unsung, and reluctant, hero.
Peyton Thomas The Atavist Jul 2018 45min Permalink
North Carolina’s Alexander County is a Southern Baptist stronghold. It’s also home to Mitchell Gold, an outspoken gay rights activist and the CEO of one of the region’s largest employers.
Tiffany Stanley Washington Post Apr 2018 35min Permalink
How Edith Windsor fell in love, got married, and won a landmark case for gay marriage.
Ariel Levy New Yorker Sep 2013 30min Permalink
Why didn’t gay rights cure gay loneliness?
Michael Hobbes Huffington Post Mar 2017 25min Permalink
Visiting a semi-secret LGBTQ commune in the middle of Tennessee.
Alex Halberstadt New York Times Magazine Aug 2015 20min Permalink
Sex, the Constitution, and the Supreme Court.
Jill Lepore New Yorker May 2015 20min Permalink
The coordinated government attack on queer Russia.
Jeff Sharlet GQ Feb 2014 30min Permalink
He was the poster boy for the movement to repeal “don’t ask, don’t tell.” Now Dan Choi is sleeping on a couch, smoking too much weed, watching TED talks and wondering what he’ll do with the rest of his life.
Gabriel Arana The American Prospect Dec 2013 30min Permalink
The activists, politicians, and social trends that led to 2012’s gay marriage victories.
Molly Ball The Atlantic Dec 2012 10min Permalink
Meet Faygele ben Miriam, the radical activist “beyond the leading edge” of the same-sex marriage fight.
Eli Sanders Tablet Jun 2012 Permalink
On being gay in the military, three years before Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell:
A vast majority of those interviewed had been interrogated at least once, and what they described was nearly the same. They said those under suspicion of homosexuality suffer bright lights in their eyes and sometimes handcuffs on their wrists, warnings that their parents will be informed or their hometown newspapers called, threats that their stripes will be torn off and they will pushed through the gates of the base before a jeering crowd.
Jane Gross New York Times Apr 1990 10min Permalink
For years, homosexuals have, for the most part, been politically apathetic. Rarely did a candidate stir their enthusiasm; when homosexuals did vote, many of the more affluent ones tended to go Republican. But now the gay and lesbian community appears to be united for the first time in a Presidential race behind a single candidate -- Bill Clinton. And the money is pouring into the Clinton campaign -- $2 million so far from identifiably gay sources, according to Democratic Party estimates. "The gay community is the new Jewish community," says Rahm Emanuel, the Clinton campaign's national finance director. "It's highly politicized, with fundamental health and civil rights concerns. And it contributes money. All that makes for a potent political force, indeed."
Jeffrey Schmalz New York Times Magazine Oct 1992 25min Permalink
The rise and fall of NAMBLA (North American Man Boy Love Association), from its 1970s founding as a splinter group within the gay rights movement to its current incarnation as the most reviled organization in America.
Benoit Denizet-Lewis Boston Magazine May 2006 25min Permalink
In 1920, Harvard University officials suspected that some students were gay. So they kicked them all out.
Benoit Denizet-Lewis The Good Men Project Jun 2010 10min Permalink