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Book cover of Dangerous Liaisons: Blacks, Gays, and the Struggle for Equality
United States History - African American History, African American History, Ethnic & Race Relations, United States History - 20th Century - 1945 to 2000, Gay & Lesbian Studies, U.S. Politics - General & Miscellaneous, Discrimination & Prejudice

Dangerous Liaisons: Blacks, Gays, and the Struggle for Equality

by Eric Brandt, Kendall Thomas
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Overview

Dangerous Liaisons provides a platform for the leading minds of both communities - including thinkers who straddle both worlds - to debate the volatile subject of the relationship between African Americans and homosexuals. It includes writing on minority relations by well-known historians, political analysts, activists, writers, and philosophers. They address such timely issues as recent high-profile hate crimes against blacks and gays: racism in gay and lesbian rights organizations; homophobia in the black church; the shift in highest rate-of-infection of HIV from the gay community to the black community; and stereotypes in books and films.

Synopsis

Dangerous Liaisons provides a platform for the leading minds of both communities - including thinkers who straddle both worlds - to debate the volatile subject of the relationship between African Americans and homosexuals. It includes writing on minority relations by well-known historians, political analysts, activists, writers, and philosophers. They address such timely issues as recent high-profile hate crimes against blacks and gays: racism in gay and lesbian rights organizations; homophobia in the black church; the shift in highest rate-of-infection of HIV from the gay community to the black community; and stereotypes in books and films.

Publishers Weekly

In 17 new and classic essays, historians, political analysts and artists assess why blacks and gays have such a volatile relationship, despite their shared experiences of discrimination in education and on the job, of police harassment and the devastating impact of AIDS. Author and activist Barbara Smith gets right to the heart of the matter: "the most maddening question anyone can ask me is, `Which do you put first: being black, a woman or gay?'" The assumption that identities must be "prioritized" may be at the root of persistent conflict among black and gay rights organizations. Rutgers professor and poet Cheryl Clarke's groundbreaking 1983 essay "The Failure to Transform," in which she confronts homophobia within the black left, appears with a contemporary response, "Fighting Homophobia versus Challenging Heterosexism," from Yale professor Cathy Cohen and doctoral candidate Tamara Jones, who believe that the positive "shift in political and academic rhetoric fails to reflect a deep understanding of heterosexism as a normative system." In an interview with Rev. Edwin Sanders of Nashville's Metropolitan Interdenominational Church, Gary David Comstock discusses the role of the black church in facilitating understanding between the two communities, while Jewelle Gomez's analysis of the history of "passing" among blacks reveals black lesbians as the "tragic mulattas" of contemporary society. Overall, this is a stirring collection that doesn't shy away from the prickly questions that vex the relationship between the two communities. (June) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In 17 new and classic essays, historians, political analysts and artists assess why blacks and gays have such a volatile relationship, despite their shared experiences of discrimination in education and on the job, of police harassment and the devastating impact of AIDS. Author and activist Barbara Smith gets right to the heart of the matter: "the most maddening question anyone can ask me is, `Which do you put first: being black, a woman or gay?'" The assumption that identities must be "prioritized" may be at the root of persistent conflict among black and gay rights organizations. Rutgers professor and poet Cheryl Clarke's groundbreaking 1983 essay "The Failure to Transform," in which she confronts homophobia within the black left, appears with a contemporary response, "Fighting Homophobia versus Challenging Heterosexism," from Yale professor Cathy Cohen and doctoral candidate Tamara Jones, who believe that the positive "shift in political and academic rhetoric fails to reflect a deep understanding of heterosexism as a normative system." In an interview with Rev. Edwin Sanders of Nashville's Metropolitan Interdenominational Church, Gary David Comstock discusses the role of the black church in facilitating understanding between the two communities, while Jewelle Gomez's analysis of the history of "passing" among blacks reveals black lesbians as the "tragic mulattas" of contemporary society. Overall, this is a stirring collection that doesn't shy away from the prickly questions that vex the relationship between the two communities. (June) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Booknews

Brandt (University of California-Berkeley's New Berkeley Seminar) provides a platform for leading minds of gay and black rights communities, including thinkers who straddle both worlds, to debate the volatile subject of the relationship between African Americans and gays. This collection includes writing on minority relations by historians, political analysts, activists, and philosophers who address hate crimes against gays and blacks, racism in gay and lesbian organizations, and homophobia in the black church. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1999
Publisher
New Press, The
Pages
312
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781565844551

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