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E-raamat: Children of Harvey Milk: How LGBTQ Politicians Changed the World

(Associate Professor of Political Science, University of North Carolina)
  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Oct-2018
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190460969
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  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Oct-2018
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190460969

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Andrew Reynolds' The Children of Harvey Milk is not only a compelling collective portrait of gay politicians around the globe; it also offers a powerful explanation of why individual politicians practicing "identity politics"have been absolutely crucial to the successes of this still-expanding global social movement.

Starting in the 1960s, the gay rights movement slowly but steadily evolved from a fringe cause to one of the most important social movements in modern history. Throughout western societies, the movement's successes have upended conventional views on sex, love, marriage, the family, and equality itself.

Most scholars who have traced the rise of the gay rights movement have tended to focus on it as a broad-based social movement. That approach is not wrong, of course, but as Andrew Reynolds argues in The Children of Harvey Milk, it tends to downplay the agency of individuals with the power to do more than ordinary citizens. Reynolds instead traces the history of global breakthroughs for gays in the past couple of decades through the lives of out lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender politicians who advanced the cause. Based on interviews with over fifty senior elected officials and high profile candidates from across the globe Reynolds tells a moving narrative of great personal highs and lows. While much of the book focuses on celebrated gay leaders in the US, UK, Ireland, and New Zealand (where successes have been pronounced), Reynolds also uses cases from other parts of the world in order to draw a more measured portrait of the movement's progress, which in the non-western world and global south has been uneven (at best). The Children of Harvey Milk includes rarely seen sketches of courageous LGBT advocates in Africa, Asia and the Caribbean.

But why focus on individual politicians? As it so happens, when open LGBT individuals have been elected to public office, the public's hostility toward and fear of gays has typically lessened. To be sure, a certain degree of societal tolerance must be pre-existent for gays to be elected in the first place, but the evidence shows that the election of figures like San Franciscan Harvey Milk and scores upon scores of LGBT politicians afterward has had salutary and measurable effects on the advancement of gay and transgender rights in those electoral regions. This is not only a compelling collective portrait of gay politicians around the globe, then; it also offers a powerful explanation of why individual politicians practicing "identity politics" have been absolutely crucial to the successes of this still-expanding global social movement.

Arvustused

In a labor of impressive scholarship, Reynolds ... demonstrates that LGBTQ individuals serving openly in the political realm have been the major instigators of this change. He makes his point in a collection of historical, exciting, and moving stories ... Highly recommended. * J. Goins, CHOICE * A unique look at how politics affect the LGBTQ community and the LGBTQ politicians that help bring about the changes needed for the community. Reynolds does an excellent job at not only looking at past politicians, but current game changes as well * The Over the Rainbow Booklist committee of the American Library Associations GLBT Round Table * In this remarkable book, Andrew Reynolds shows us the global breadth and depth of the movement for equal rights among LGBTQ people. Reynolds shows us that the movement is world-wide, producing courageous leaders in countries that we might never imagine gay people coming forth, asserting their identities, and claiming their citizenship. This is a work of extraordinary scholarship and it provides us with a bracing dose of hope at a time when democracy itself is facing world-wide threats. * Kenneth Sherrill, Professor Emeritus of Political Science, Hunter College, New York * Andrew Reynolds' stunning book shows us the struggles-and failures-of the LGBTQ political movement worldwide, from Africa to the Caribbean. This is the story of our times: begun by Harvey Milk, and now carried on around the globe. Gripping, sobering, and inspiring. * Jennifer Finney Boylan, author of Sheâs Not There and Long Black Veil * Electing LGBTQ people to office is critical to moving equality forward. In The Children of Harvey Milk, Reynolds inspires and empowers as he traces the history of LGBTQ rights through the eyes of those who dreamed big, shattered barriers, and helped advance equality in the halls of parliaments and legislatures around the world. * Chad Griffin, President, Human Rights Campaign * Andrew Reynolds captures the enormous progress LGBTQ people and candidates have made since Harvey Milkâs run for office more than four decades ago â and demonstrates that LGBTQ political power is critical to advancing equality for our community. Few can match Reynoldsâ exhaustively researched LGBTQ political knowledge, and The Children of Harvey Milk will certainly become a key reference on the history of our movement. * Mayor Annise Parker, President & CEO of LGBTQ Victory Fund * This is political biography at its best. By reviewing the careers (and self-reflections) of politicians who devoted themselves to advance LGBT rights from around the world, Reynolds illustrates the idea that the struggle for LGBT rights faces universal as well context-specific challenges. Reynolds's central claim is that gay rights don't emerge by themselves. They require the courage, astuteness, and perseverance of dedicated politicians to make them happen. * Javier Corrales, Professor of Political Science, Amherst College * A must read in an era of relativism and complacency. In The Children of Harvey Milk, Andrew Reynolds reveals the political heroes and the personal journeys who contributed and are contributing to a radical shift in public attitudes on LGBT rights in parts of the World. Reynolds sensibly paints the way LGBT leaders excel in turning their personal hardship in the precursor to beauty and triumph. More importantly, Children of Harvey Milk identifies ingredients of a recipe for a much-needed global social change starting with political participation and representation of LGBTI people. * Fabrice Houdart, Human Rights Officer at the United Nations Human Rights Office * Andrew Reynolds tells inspiring stories of peopleâsome familiar, some notâwho were courageous enough to say âthis is who I amâ and fight for a place at the table. They helped bring a community out of the shadows and into the light in ways both large and small. * Jim Obergefell, co-author of Love Wins and named plaintiff of the marriage equality decision Obergefell v. Hodges * Andrew Reynoldsâ The Children of Harvey Milk is a compelling work of LGBTQ history and at the same time a clarion call for queer people to resist, to reformâand to get involved in politics. The bookâs true heart and soul are the stories of the army of LGBTQ politicians who have transformed our world in the decadeâs since Milks' assassination. A must read for anyone interested in how social change happens. * Steven Petrow, Columnist, USA Today, and Former President, National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association * It takes many players, many methodologies, and many contributions to achieve transformative change such as our winning the freedom to marry in 25 countries so far (up from zero when we started). By collecting for the first time such a broad sweep of the emerging group of openly LGBT elected officials, Andrew Reynolds gives us their perspectives on the ways in which they make it into office, figure out how to use their voices and votes, work with activists (and sometimes butt heads with them), influence their colleagues, balance the pressures and expectations on them (both typical and singular), represent their own communities, find the courage to lead, and, sometimes, prove pivotal. * Evan Wolfson, Founder, Freedom to Marry * Andrew Reynolds tells moving stories of politicians whose openness about being LGBT is reshaping laws and policies. Some led us out of the closet, while others had to be ledâbut all have helped create a more welcoming world. Reynolds links the stories with social science research to create a convincing picture of the past and the future of change. * M.V. Lee Badgett, Prof of Economics, University of Massachusetts Amherst * Mandatory reading for all of those interested social justice movements, The Children of Harvey Milk is smart, educational, and entertaining. Reynolds draws his readers in by humanizing a movement that is all but exclusively politicized. Not only does this book fill a giant gap in the academic literature, it also manages to remain engaging and accessible to both academic and non academic readers alike. I canât recommend it any more highly. * Melody Moezzi, Author of Haldol and Hyacinths: A Bipolar Life and War on Error: Real Stories of American Muslims * Reynolds's protagonists are at the vanguard of political representation and rights for LGBT people in several established democracies. The personal narratives that drive the telling of their stories illuminates the mostly unseen experiences of these important facilitators of change-figures who have often worked within and benefited from the intense struggle of an enduring transnational movement. An inspiring read and hopeful account of the expansion of human rights, this book is helpful at a time when such new rights face heightened global resistance. * Phillip Ayoub, Professor of Diplomacy and World Affairs at Occidental College and author of When States Come Out: Europe's Sexual Minorities and the Politics of Visibility * Reynolds' work takes us on a global tour of key political battles for LGBTQ rights while reading like a novel. He skillfully weaves in moving stories-most not widely known -that brightly illustrate that persuasion in the halls of power has been often quite personal. * Ken Smith, National Co-Chair, Carolina Pride Alum Network *

Acknowledgments Prologue xv
Gilbert And Harvey, San Francisco 1978 xv
1 The Milk Principle
1(20)
A Maori Love Song
1(4)
Australia Joins The Duet
5(2)
You Can't Hate Us If You Know Us
7(14)
2 The Ballad Of Peter And Simon
21(20)
The Infamous Bermondsey Bi-Election
26(5)
Simon In The House, Peter In The Streets
31(5)
Torn Labels
36(5)
3 I Have Quite A Powerful And Carrying Voice
41(22)
David And Patrice, Leopoldville, The Belgian Congo
41(4)
Katherine And Ann Louise: Surprised By Love
45(6)
The Importance Of Being Earnest
51(5)
Are You Coming Home For Christmas? S3 The Power Of Panti
56(7)
4 I Have Never Come Across A Homo In This House
63(751)
Lord Peter Pan
68(5)
The Only Gay In The Village
73(741)
5 From Mississippi To Marriage
81(1)
Barney Frank, Mississippi, Summer Of 1964
81(8)
I Do
89(14)
6 Being First
103(1)
Coos Huijsen: The Unknown Soldier
103(3)
They're Here, They're There, They're (Almost) Everywhere
106(3)
The March Of Women
109(3)
Making A Difference, Not Making History
112(5)
7 St. Christopher
117(16)
I'M Chris Smith
117(5)
The Last Taboo
122(11)
8 More Like Hell Than Heaven
133(16)
The Dangerous Places In Between
133(4)
The Spear Of The Nation: The First African
137(6)
Shiraanditzak, 2015
143(1)
Black, Brown, And Gay
144(5)
9 Cinders Goes To The Ball
149(20)
Sarah Mcbride And The Future Of Transgender Politics
149(20)
10 Mel And The Bees
169(12)
Round One
169(6)
Round Two
175(6)
11 Southern Queers
181(20)
What the fuck Mountain, North Carolina
181(10)
The Mother's Name Is Harriet
191(5)
Ken Sherrill And The Expression Of Affection
196(5)
12 The Washington 43rd
201(22)
The Protegee: Ed Murray
205(3)
So It Continues
208(5)
Time For A Woman In The 43Rd?
213(10)
13 The Right Gays
223(20)
Crispin Blunt; The Chameleon
223(5)
Hiding In Plain Sight
228(10)
What's Wrong With The Grand Old Party?
238(5)
14 Britain Goes Gay At The Polls
243(16)
Scotland The Gay
253(6)
15 You Win Some, You Lose Some
259(38)
Peterand Simon: The Party's Over
259(7)
The Irish General Election Of 2016
266(11)
Conclusion
277(1)
Be Gay, Just Not Queer
277(3)
Something Gained, Something Lost
280(5)
The Heisenberg Principle
285(3)
The Voice Was Quite Young: It Was From Altoona, Pennsylvania
288(3)
Where Are They Now?
291(3)
They Shall Grow Not Old
294(3)
Appendix A Interviews Conducted 297(4)
Appendix B Out LGBTQ parliamentarians 1976-2017 301(22)
Bibliography 323(20)
Index 343
Andrew Reynolds, Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Founded and directs the UNC LGBTQ Representation and Rights Research Initiative, the leading global think tank focused on LGBTQ politics. His work has been featured in the New York Times, Washington Post, Guardian, New Statesman, and widely online. His twelve non-fiction books range from African politics to the Arab Spring, elections to the future of democracy. For twenty-five years he has been an advisor on democratic design in the worldâs most dangerous places. From South Africa to Somalia, Afghanistan to Libya, Burma to Ukraine, and many others.