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Bringing Lesbian and Gay Rights Into the Mainstream: Twenty Years of Progress is the spirited and provocative memoir that blows the lid off the complex machinations of state and national politics. LGBT activist Steve Endean's autobiographical chronicle, completed shortly before his death in 1993, tells insider stories that are sometimes rousing, other times infuriating, recounting the fight for lesbian and gay rights from the trenches of the Minnesota state capital to the Washington Beltway. Readers get a clear view of the political activism of building grassroots support systems, fundraising efforts, lobbying to rally support for bills, and the election/reelection of sympathetic political representatives.
Covers receipts and expenditures of appropriations and other funds.
Interrogating the Use of LGBTQ Slurs: Still Smearing the Queer? provides a critical exploration of LGBTQ slurs through its innovative focus on hetero-cis-normativity and Norm-Centered Stigma Theory (NCST), the first-ever testable theory about stigma. Based on research with more than 3,000 respondents, the ways gender/sexuality norm-violators are stigmatized and disciplined as “others” through asserting and affirming one’s own social power are highlighted alongside other unique elements of slur use (joking and bonding). Through its fresh and in-depth approach, this book is the ideal resource for those who want to learn about LGBTQ slurs more generally and for those who seek a nuanced, t...
First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.
David Edward Bruner was born 6 July 1882 in Van Buren Township, Daviess County, Indiana. His parents were William Henry Bruner and Margaret Elizabeth Riggins. He married Edna Beulah Robinson (1891-1957), daughter of William Henry Robinson (1867-1951) and Mary Magdaline Fisher (1867-1934), in 1908 in Daviess County, Indiana. They had fourteen children. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived mainly in Germany, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Indiana, Illinois and Arkansas.