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Films about Queer History

 

Pearl M. Hart (? - 1975)

Online Resources
Texts:  Pearl M. Hart
Texts:  Queer Histories
Texts:  Authors Index
Films:  Queer History
Used Books:  LGBT Studies
      

      

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Rainbow Rights: The Role of Lawyers and Courts in the Lesbian and Gay Civil Rights Movement

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

Sappho Goes to Law School (Between Men~Between Women: Lesbian and Gay Studies)Sappho Goes to Law School (Between Men~Between Women: Lesbian and Gay Studies) by Ruthann Robson

Ruthann Robson's canny, well-written essays on lesbian legal theory and pedagogy, rooted in her experience as a lesbian professor at a progressive law school, offer a sparkling application of poststructural analysis, queer theory, and cautious, common-sense feminism to a wide range of legal problems and possibilities. She begins by imagining Sappho as a modern-day law student, with the hope of uncovering Sapphic rather than Socratic methodologies in legal theory: "How could [invoking Sappho] change the ways in which we understand, practice, and apply law? What if we adopted the Sapphic lyric as a mode of communication and understanding rather than Socratic argumentation?"

Included are essays on lesbians and criminal justice, same-sex marriage, child custody cases, and the role of personal experience in postmodern theorizing. In her provocative closing essay, "Lesbian Sex in a Law School Classroom," Robson describes the difficulties of teaching a course entitled "Sexuality and the Law" to a diverse group of students, some of whom object to the word "sex" appearing on their law school transcript, while others cannot help but unburden their private lives to her during her office hours. With its multitude of stories and its playful ambivalence toward personal narrative, even the theory-weary will find Sappho Goes to Law School stimulating and unusual. --Regina Marler

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Gerber / Hart Library

Gerber/Hart Library was brought into existence in January, 1981 as a joint project of the Gay Academic Union-Chicago Chapter, Gay Horizons, and the Chicago Gay and Lesbian History Project. Spearheaded by Gregory Sprague, who headed the History Project, the organization achieved independent status on November 20, 1981 when it was incorporated by the state of Illinois as a not-for-profit corporation. Although now known as "Gerber/Hart Library," the organization was first christened "The Midwest Gay and Lesbian Archive and Library." In April, 1981, to honor 1920's Chicago activist Henry Gerber and attorney Pearl Hart, the organization changed its name to "The Henry Gerber-Pearl M. Hart Library: The Midwest Lesbian & Gay Resource Center."

 

The Women of One

By Jim Kepner

Excerpt:

Too many writers have claimed that, before the Daughters of Bilitis started (San Francisco 1955) the homophile movement, as it was then known, was almost entirely white-male, and the rare women participants were expected to make coffee or keep minutes. Of course a few male chauvinists in the Mattachine Society did suggest such duties, "now that we have some girls here," but some Mattachine women, from early 1953 on, played pivotal roles (the most outstanding being Marilyn "Boopsie" Reiger, who took a leading conservative role in the pivotal 1953 Conventions, as well as the woman who headed the Oakland chapter, and attorney Pearl Hart, a founder and long-time leader of Chicago Mattachine...)

  

Frontiers in American Labor History

From Chicago Metro History Education Center (and Illinois Labor History Society)

Excerpt:

Founded in Los Angeles in 1951, the Mattachine Society strove to to educate homosexuals and heterosexuals about homosexual culture and to unify homosexuals around the political fight against oppressive laws of the time. Chicago’s chapter of the Mattachine Society was established in the early 1950s and is noted for putting together a vital handbook of gay and lesbian’ legal rights. Pearl Hart, a Chicago lawyer, was instrumental in advising the Chicago chapter on this handbook. She was also one of a handful of lawyers who would take on lesbian and gay rights cases in the 1950s. Along with Henry Gerber, she is remembered and honored today in the organizational name of the Gerber Hart Gay and Lesbian Library...

  

We need resources on Pearl Hart
Click here for Resource Query Click HERE for Sources for the Biographies

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