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Carmen
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 272

Carmen

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1988
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Carmen
  • Language: en

Carmen

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2009
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

In this autobiography Carmen, a woman who was once a man, spares no details of her amazing life from schoolboy to glamorous entertainer.

Revolutionary Women
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 227

Revolutionary Women

Revolutionary Women celebrates the amazing stories of 50 women of color who pushed boundaries, rewrote the rules, and inspired women everywhere to follow in their footsteps. Discover the remarkable true stories of a diverse group of women who were trailblazers and leaders in their field, becoming visible icons of excellence in their communities and beyond. From making their mark on the big screen and in the halls of NASA to ruling on the courts of the US Open and the Supreme Court, their incredible stories will inspire you to embrace your authentic self and live your life in full color. For fans of Ann Shen's beloved Bad Girls Throughout History, this spiritual successor celebrates the accom...

Trans People in Love
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 306

Trans People in Love

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2010-07
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Trans People in Love provides insight into the beauty and complexity that trans identity brings to relationships, the skills needed to forge positive relationships, and demonstrates the reality that trans people in all stages of transition can create loving relationships that are both physically and emotionally fulfilling.

Carmen elegiacum in laudem electionis ac demum inauctorationis ... Wilhelmi Ecclesiæ Monasterien. Antistitis
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 16
30 Queer Lives
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 386

30 Queer Lives

Identity, understanding and celebration through the stories of thirty remarkable New Zealanders.Soldiers, politicians, Olympians, doctors, musicians, academics, businesspeople, farmers, writers and fa&‘afafine . . . the thirty LGBTQIA+ New Zealanders in this book are remarkable individuals. They each speak with candour and honesty about their challenges and successes, and together they show how LGBTQIA+ people strengthen the rich culture of Aotearoa.From the famous — Grant Robertson, Gareth Farr, Chl&öe Swarbrick — to the less well known, these stories encourage empathy and understanding, challenge stereotypes, and offer courage and hope.

Star Observer Magazine March 2015
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 72

Star Observer Magazine March 2015

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Along for the Ride
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 442

Along for the Ride

Tony Simpson's memoir as a unionist and public servant of New Zealand life and society from the 1970s through to the new millennium. One of New Zealand’s best known social historians, Tony is the author of many published books, including the award-winning Sugarbag Years. But through his working life he has also been a witness to and participant in major events shaping current New Zealand society: irritating Muldoon, watching Thatcher’s rise during his OE, seeing off the Lange government and its Rogernomics, and ultimately serving as senior advisor to Alliance and Progressive Party leader and Deputy Prime Minister Jim Anderton. With dollops of wry wit, Along for the Ride offers us a politically committed kiwi insider’s probing insights into some of recent history’s most momentous changes, traversing employment in public broadcasting and customs, public service union work, and his life as a writer, an international foodie, and a gay man.

I Have Loved Me a Man
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 440

I Have Loved Me a Man

The story of a queer brown boy in a big white world. From the Old Mill Disco in Timaru to San Francisco’s ACT UP protests, through Jazzercise and drag, AIDS and homosexual law reform, I Have Loved Me a Man takes readers inside the LGBTQI social revolution that has moved New Zealand and much of the world from the 1960s to the present day through the story of the one, the only, queer Māori performance artist: Mika Haka. Mika grew up in Timaru, was adopted into a white family, and learnt Maori culture from the back of a cereal box. He discovered disco in the 1970s, worked with Carmen, Dalvanius Prime, Merata Mita and others to develop outrageous stage shows that toured the world, acted in local television shows and came out on screen with Harvey Keitel, playing a takatāpui role in Jane Campion’s Academy Award-winning film The Piano. Mika has never been in the closet: his life has been an ongoing production of both the fabulous and the revolutionary. This highly visual book interweaves archival and historical research with images hand-picked from Mika’s extensive archive to reveal the life and times of a queer brown boy from Aotearoa who took on the big white world.