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Klappentext Tracing the movement's rhetoric from the late 1800s to the present, this anthology includes Ingersoll's "Address at the Funeral of Walt Whitman," Milk's "Hope Speech," and Kameny's "Civil Liberties: A Progress Report." Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Robert G. Ingersoll: "Address at the Funeral of Walt Whitman" 18922. August Bebel: "Address at the Reichstag" 1898 translated by John Lauritsen 3. Anna Rueling: "What interest does the women's movement have in solving the homosexual problem?" 1904 translated by Michael Lombardi-Nash Kurt Hiller: 4. "Appeal on Behalf of an Oppressed Human Variety." 1928, translated by John Lauritsen 5. Franklin Kameny: "Civil Liberties: A Progress Report" 1964 6. Jack Nichols: "Why I Joined the Movement" 1967 7. Sally Gearhart: "The Lesbian and God-the-Father" 19728. Harvey Milk: "The Hope Speech" 1978 9. Harry Hay: "Unity and More in '84" 1984 10. Sue Hyde: "We Gather in Dubuque" 1988 11. Urvashi Vaid: "Speech at the March on Washington" 1991 12. Jim Kepner: "Why Can't We All Get Together, and What Do We Have in Common?" 1997 13. Eric Rofes: "The Emerging Sex Panic Targeting Gay Men" 1997 14. Elizabeth Toledo: "Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness: The GLBT Movement at a Crossroads" 2000 15. Elizabeth Birch: "1st Convention Speech by a Gay Organization's Leader" 2000 16. Evan Wolfson: "Marriage Equality and Lessons for the Scary Work of Winning" 2004 17. Paul Martin: "The Civil Marriage Act" 2005 18. Ian Hunter: "A Matter of Interest" 2009 [3pp]**