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A Queer History of the United States for Young People by Michael Bronski
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A Queer History of the United States for Young People

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A Queer History of the United States for Young People by Michael Bronski
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Jun 11, 2019 | ISBN 9780807056134

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    Jun 11, 2019 | ISBN 9780807056127 | Young Adult

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Product Details

Praise

“Readers will find a straightforward, documented, nonsensational celebration of the contributions of LGBTQ people in the US . . . No previous knowledge is assumed: definitions are provided, context is established, and quaint contemporary mores are explained . . . Above all, there is continuous reassurance that the definition of ‘normal’ has always been in flux, that numerous LGBTQ people have been important figures in American history, and that young LGBTQ people of today will make crucial contributions to future queer history.”
Booklist, Starred Review

“This adaptation for teens of the author’s 2012 Stonewall Award–winning A Queer History of the United States is doubly valuable; it serves well as a general read and fills a clear curricular need. Each carefully selected profile bolsters the case for queer leadership and activism as a driving force of progress.”
School Library Journal, Starred Review

“Alongside watershed moments like the 1969 Stonewall uprising and the HIV/AIDS crisis of the 1980s and 1990s, the text brings to light less well-known people, places, and events: the 1625 free love colony of Merrymount, transgender Civil War hero Albert D. J. Cashier, and the 1951 founding of the Mattachine Society, to name a few.”
Kirkus Reviews

“Readers seeking role models from the past will find an edifying resource and invitation for further exploration into untold stories.”
Publishers Weekly

“With its focus on individuals who dared to fight for their rights, A Queer History of the United States for Young People will serve as a touchstone for LGBTQ readers seeking proof of the greatness that preceded them and confidence in the success that awaits in their future.”
Shelf Awareness

“Bronski’s A Queer History of the United States for Young People is a necessary, comprehensive, and accessible primer for queer history. In a political climate that seeks to disappear LGBTQ people and our contributions to society, it’s more important than ever to cultivate a relationship with our queer past. Taking guidance from the LGBTQ forebears profiled in this book gives us permission to imagine otherwise and strive beyond the status quo.”
—Alok Vaid-Menon, gender non-conforming artist and author of Femme in Public

“It’s no easy task to craft a nuanced story of queer history for young readers, but Michael Bronski and Richie Chevat have pulled it off. Weaving together stories of diverse historical and contemporary figures, this book peoples the queer past and present, with hope for the future.”
—Leila J. Rupp, author of Understanding and Teaching U.S. Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History

“This volume is both timely and timeless: a deep, scholarly dive into our history. It should sit at the table next to Zinn’s People’s History—required, essential reading for all people.”
—Saundra Mitchell, editor of All Out and Out Now, and author of All the Things We Do in the Dark

Table Of Contents

PROLOGUE

INTRODUCTION
Before We Start, or, What Is Normal?

SECTION I
America—New Beginnings, New Identities: 1500–1860


CHAPTER ONE
Native Peoples: Different Genders, Different Sexualities

CHAPTER TWO
Thomas Morton: Free Love Among the Puritans?

CHAPTER THREE
Jemima Wilkinson: The Surprising Life of Publick Universal Friend

CHAPTER FOUR
Deborah Sampson: Patriot, Soldier, Gender Rebel

CHAPTER FIVE
Nineteenth-Century Romantic Friendships: BFFs or Friends with Benefits?

CHAPTER SIX
The Mystery of Emily Dickinson: Passionate Attachments and Independent Women

CHAPTER SEVEN
Julia Ward Howe, Samuel Gridley Howe, and Charles Sumner: Complicated Relationships and Radical Social Change in Very Proper Nineteenth-Century Boston

SECTION II
American Freedom Begins to Bloom—Change and the Civil War: 1860–1875


CHAPTER EIGHT
The Amazing Life of Albert D. J. Cashier: Transgender War Hero

CHAPTER NINE
Charlotte Cushman: American Idol, Lover of Women

CHAPTER TEN
Walt Whitman: Poet of the People

CHAPTER ELEVEN
Rebecca Primus and Addie Brown: A Nineteenth-Century Love Story

SECTION III
New Americans—Boldly Challenging Society: 1875–1900


CHAPTER TWELVE
The Radical Victoria Woodhull: First Woman to Run for President

CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Jane Addams: The Mother of Social Work

CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Julian Eltinge: The Most Famous Cross-Dresser in America

SECTION IV
A New Century of Freedom—Radical Visions, Revolutionary Actions: 1900–1960


CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Marie Equi: Fighting for Women, Workers, Peace, and Justice for All

CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Gladys Bentley: Blues-Singing Bulldagger

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
World War II: The War That Started LGBTQ Politics

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Harry Hay: How His Society of Fools Started a Revolution

CHAPTER NINETEEN
Phyllis Lyon and Del Martin: Climbing the Ladder of Freedom and Justice

SECTION V
Revolutionary Changes—The Seeds of Protest Begin to Bloom: 1960–1977


CHAPTER TWENTY
Pauli Murray: “You must remember that truth is our only sword”

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Bayard Rustin: A Life of Activism

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Carl Wittman: Radical Movements, Political Organizing, and Country Dance

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Rita Mae Brown: The Lavender Menace Writes Her Way to Freedom

CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
Gloria Anzaldúa: A Life Between Borders

SECTION VI
Backlash—Years of Struggle and Resistance: 1977–1990


CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
Sylvester and Anita Bryant: Marching to Two Very Different Drummers

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
Robert Hillsborough and Harvey Milk: Struggle and Violence, Grief and Rage

CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
Essex Hemphill: The Power of Blackness

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
Kiyoshi Kuromiya: Man of Many Movements

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Art in the Face of Death

SECTION VII
Moving Closer to Liberation—The Future Is in Sight: 1990–Present


CHAPTER THIRTY
Jamie Nabozny: Gay Teen Hero

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
Jack Baker and Michael McConnell: It Started in a Barber Shop

CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
Sylvia Rivera: A Life in the Streets and a Guiding STAR

CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
Coming Out or Staying In: New Queer Ways of Living in the World

CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
Young People Today: The Future of Queer History

Glossary
Bibliography
Photo Credits
Index

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