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Sexuality of James Buchanan
In 1818, Buchanan met Anne Caroline Coleman at a grand ball at Lancaster's White Swan Inn, and the two began courting. Anne was the daughter of the wealthy iron manufacturing businessman (and protective father -
Pangender
Pangender is a term for people who feel that they cannot be labeled as male or female in gender. As such it has a great deal of overlap with genderqueer. Pangendered people feel that they -
John Epperson
in movies and song. John Epperson was born April 24, 1955 in Hazlehurst, Mississippi. He took lessons in classical piano from an early age. After high school he enrolled at Belhaven College in Jackson, Mississippi -
Oscar Martinez
Template:Infobox character Oscar Martinez is a fictional character from the US television series The Office. He is played by Oscar Nuñez. -
Marilyn (singer)
known as Marilyn, is a cross-dressing singer who reached fame with his song "Calling Your Name" in the 1980s. Marilyn was born in Kingston, Jamaica. He grew up in Hertfordshire, England as part of -
Rites (magazine)
Template:Sections Rites was a Canadian magazine, published for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender communities in Canada from 1984 to 1992. -
Queer nationalism
are not a group of humans with deviant sexual practices but a folk due to their specific culture and customs. The first notions towards the creation of a gay identity were made by the German -
Gay Police Association
The Gay Police Association (GPA) is a British police staff association with members in all 52 UK police forces. The GPA was founded in 1990 as LAGPA (Lesbian And Gay Police Association), and represents the -
Tyler Oakley
prevention of suicide among LGBT youth. Oakley regularly posts material on various topics, including queer politics, pop culture and humor. Oakley began making videos in 2007; his first video Raindrops has received over 420,000 -
On Our Backs
in-chief for the next six years. "On Our Backs" defined the look and politics of lesbian culture for the 80s, as well as playing a definitive role in the feminist sex wars of the -
BLUF (fetishism)
and nationalities above the age of consent in members' home countries. BLUF began as an Internet site in 1997 but has evolved to a series of in-person meets and events regularly scheduled in European -
Miguel Vale de Almeida
Studies’ Center, University of Chicago in the spring of 2006. As a LGBT activist, he is known in Portugal for participating in LGBT rights events, including several appearances on LGBT debates in television. Research interests -
Sissyphobia: Gay Men and Effeminate Behavior
now a common term in Western gay newspapers. This is in marked contrast to much American lesbian culture, in which drag kings, female-to-male transsexuals and butch women are often "in demand." In fact -
Edwin Morgan
In 2004, he was named as the first Scottish national poet: The Scots Makar. Morgan was born in Glasgow and grew up in Rutherglen. He entered the University of Glasgow in 1937 and, after interrupting -
G&Y
G&Y or Gay& young is the name of a youth group and magazine aimed at young LGBT people. It is based in Stoke-on-Trent and releases a few editions each year. It is -
Eroticism
impulse, desire, or pattern of thoughts. As French novelist Honoré de Balzac stated, eroticism is dependent not just upon an individual's sexual morality, but also the culture and time in which an individual resides. -
Anji Xtravaganza
as Angie Xtravaganza, was a transgendered performer and member of the Ball culture House of Xtravaganza featured in the 1990 documentary Paris Is Burning. Her drag daughter Venus Xtravaganza was murdered in 1989. Anji Xtravaganza -
Andy Lippincott
Andy Lippincott was a character in the comic strip Doonesbury. The character first appeared in January 1976, in a law library. Joanie Caucus fell in love with him while working before Lippincott confessed he was -
Anthem (film)
Anthem is a nine-minute music video released in 1991. The film was produced and directed by Marlon T. Riggs. The film displays mixes images of mainstream African-American pride, such as traditional African tribal -
Strawberry and Chocolate (film)
the New Man" (in Spanish, El Lobo, el bosque y el hombre nuevo) written by Senel Paz in 1990. Senel Paz also wrote the screenplay for the film. The story takes place in Havana, Cuba -
Aputheatre
Aputheatre ("APU" or "APUT") began life as the Aids Positive Underground Theatre Company. Founded in 1989 at the Sussex Aids Centre in Brighton, England, the objective was to provide a cultural response to HIV and -
Dance of the Forty-One
Montes), the site of a dance attended by a group of men, of whom 19 were dressed in women's clothing. The press was keen to report the incident, in spite of the government's -
Disclosure: Trans Lives on Screen
Disclosure: Trans Lives on Screen is a 2020 American documentary film, directed and produced by Sam Feder. The film follows an in-depth look at Hollywood's depiction of transgender people and the impact of -
Anne Aasheim
was born in Porsgrunn and started her journalist career in the neighboring city's largest newspaper Varden in the late 1970s. She worked in Dagen and Bergens Arbeiderblad before being hired in NRK Hordaland in -
In re Marriage Cases
of the California Constitution, thereby holding unconstitutional the previously existing statutory ban on same-sex marriage embodied in two statutes, one enacted by the Legislature in 1977, and the other through the initiative process in
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