Difference between revisions of "Gay and lesbian rights"
Sherlihyabba (Talk | contribs) (New page: == Summary == == Important People == === Frank Kameny === === Reed Erickson === === Phyllis Lyon and Del Martin === == Important Events == === The Stonewall Riots === === The Picket...) |
Sherlihyabba (Talk | contribs) (→Summary) |
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== Summary == | == Summary == | ||
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+ | During the 1960s, there emerged within the United States a revolutionary movement that would change the way people thought about homosexuality. Driven by such powerful events as the Stonewall riots and Frank Kameny’s Washington, D.C. picket, and fronted by such influential leaders as Reed Erickson, Phillis Lyon and Del Martin, the gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgender movement sought to redefine social equality and pushed for equal treatment for homosexuals. Also emphasized within the G/L/B/T movement was an openness foreign to the timid “homophile” movement popular among gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender people during the 50s. Although no single person or group can accurately be said to have “lead” the massive push for change that was the G/L/B/T movement, most groups and organizations at the forefront of the movement can be said to have shared a similar set of goals and aspirations: equality, and the freedom to be openly gay. | ||
== Important People == | == Important People == |
Revision as of 07:01, 3 September 2008
Summary
During the 1960s, there emerged within the United States a revolutionary movement that would change the way people thought about homosexuality. Driven by such powerful events as the Stonewall riots and Frank Kameny’s Washington, D.C. picket, and fronted by such influential leaders as Reed Erickson, Phillis Lyon and Del Martin, the gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgender movement sought to redefine social equality and pushed for equal treatment for homosexuals. Also emphasized within the G/L/B/T movement was an openness foreign to the timid “homophile” movement popular among gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender people during the 50s. Although no single person or group can accurately be said to have “lead” the massive push for change that was the G/L/B/T movement, most groups and organizations at the forefront of the movement can be said to have shared a similar set of goals and aspirations: equality, and the freedom to be openly gay.