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4: U.S. LGBTQ+ History

  • Page ID
    240430
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    Learning Objectives

    Upon completion of this chapter, students will be able to do the following:

    • Explain the social construction of sex, gender, and sexuality.
      • Summarize the history of nonnormative genders and sexualities, including homosexuality, bisexuality, and transgender identity, as well as queer identity and activism.
    • Describe intersectionality from an LGBTQ+ perspective.
      • Analyze how key social institutions shape, define, and enforce structures of inequality.
    • Describe how people struggle for social justice within historical contexts of inequality.
      • Describe several examples of LGBTQ+ activism, particularly in relation to other struggles for civil rights.
    • Identify key approaches used in LGBTQ+ studies, including the study of LGBTQ+ history.
      • Define key terms relevant to particular methods of interpreting LGBTQ+ people and issues, such as history and primary sources.
    • Describe the relationship between LGBTQ+ history, political activism, and LGBTQ+ studies.
      • Summarize the personal, theoretical, and political differences of the homophile, gay liberation, radical feminism, LGBTQ+ rights, and queer movements.

    • 4.1: U.S. LGBTQ+ History - Overview
      This section discusses Political organizing in the 1970s established LGBTQ+ history as a scholarly field. Historians traced struggles for rights through four stages—compensation, contributions, revision, and social construction—recovering marginalized voices, revising narratives, and questioning identity categories. Archives, scholarship, and indigenous perspectives revealed diverse gender systems, challenging Eurocentric norms and institutional discrimination.
    • 4.2: From Homophile Movement to Gay Liberation
      This section discusses LGBTQ+ civil rights organizing from the '50s to the '70s, which evolved from the Mattachine Society and Daughters of Bilitis into broader, more militant movements. Inspired by African American civil rights, activists challenged repression, built journals, and created networks nationwide. The 1969 Stonewall rebellion ignited gay liberation, spawning groups like the Gay Liberation Front and Gay Activists Alliance.
    • 4.3: Mainstream and Queer Goals
      In the 1990s–2000s, LGBTQ+ activism shifted toward mainstream legal protections, including military inclusion, antidiscrimination laws, and marriage equality. Clinton’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy ironically increased discharges until Obama’s repeal. Grassroots organizing, cultural visibility, and state battles over marriage culminated in the 2015 Supreme Court ruling affirming same‑sex marriage. Parallel histories of sexology reveal enduring struggles over sexuality and identity.
    • 4.4: Magnus Hirschfeld, Havelock Ellis, and the Birth of Sexual Science
      This section explores how sexologists in Germany and England connected sexuality to eugenics, using scientific claims to shape rights debates while reinforcing social hierarchies. Figures such as Magnus Hirschfeld, Havelock Ellis and others challenged stigma, advanced activism, and distinguished gender from sexuality. Together, their theories created enduring frameworks that continue to influence modern understandings of sexuality and gender.
    • 4.5: Research Resources
    • 4.6: Glossary
    • 4.7: Footnotes

    Thumbnail attribution: James Steakley, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Participants at the March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation in 1993.


    This page titled 4: U.S. LGBTQ+ History is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Clark A. Pomerleau.