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| |-+  Gay, Bi, Whatever (Gay-Friendly Always Welcome) (Moderators: jim ..., estefue)
| | |-+  Gay History -- How We Got Here
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Poll
Question: What period of gay history would you like to discuss first?  (Voting closed: February 24, 2007, 01:58:45 AM)
The fifties and sixties - before Stonewall - 9 (50%)
Early Gay Liberation 1969 - 1975 - 2 (11.1%)
Political awakening 1975 - 1981 - 0 (0%)
The onset of AIDS 1981 - 1996 - 6 (33.3%)
Post Protease Inhibitors 1996 - Present - 1 (5.6%)
Total Voters: 15

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Author Topic: Gay History -- How We Got Here  (Read 159085 times)
tfferg
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« Reply #1380 on: September 08, 2012, 06:07:39 PM »

A great article which is available online

'A History of Same-Sex Marriage' by William N Eskridge Jnr in Virginia Law Review Vol 79 (7) October 1993.

The author was professor of law at Georgetown University and visiting professor of law at New York University.

He covers not just the developments over the last several decades, but refers to evidence of various forms of same-sex marriage going back to Ancient Egypt and Ancient Mesopotamian legal codes and all over the world - Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas, Australia and the Pacific.
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Lyle (Mooska)
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« Reply #1381 on: May 07, 2013, 12:29:54 PM »

Actually, Jason Collins Isn't the First Openly Gay Man in a Major Pro Sport
Major-league baseball player Glenn Burke was comfortably out to his teammates and friends
in 1976—but back then, it was the press that wasn't ready for a gay male athlete.

by Allen Barra / May 2 2013
 


[...] This week's coming out by NBA player Jason Collins is momentous, but the Jackie Robinson of gay rights was Glenn Burke, who played for the Los Angeles Dodgers and Oakland A's from 1976 to 1979. He tried to change sports culture three decades ago—but back then, unlike now, sports culture wasn't ready for a change.

Burke made no secret of his sexual orientation to the Dodgers front office, his teammates, or friends in either league. He also talked freely with sportswriters, though all of them ended up shaking their heads and telling him they couldn't write that in their papers. Burke was so open about his sexuality that the Dodgers tried to talk him into participating in a sham marriage. (He wrote in his autobiography that the team offered him $75,000 to go along with the ruse.) He refused.

ANOTHER SECTION:

An outstanding documentary, Out: The Glenn Burke Story by Bay Area filmmakers Doug Harris and Sean Maddison, was released in 2010 but remains little seen. If the film had been shown on ESPN, Burke might have finally gotten the credit he deserved. Jamie Lee Curtis, who bought the film rights to Burke's book years ago, now hopes, in the wake of Collins's revelations, to get a feature film on Burke into production.

Article here:

http://www.theatlantic.com/275523/
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