730 likes | 997 Views
FROM THE STONEWALL RIOTS TO CIVIL RIGHTS: A HISTORY OF LGBTQ RIGHTS IN AMERICA. COMMON CORE ALIGNMENT. RH.9-10.2. Determine the central ideas or information of a primary or secondary source; provide an accurate summary of how key events or ideas develop over the course of the text.
E N D
FROM THE STONEWALL RIOTS TO CIVIL RIGHTS: A HISTORY OF LGBTQ RIGHTS IN AMERICA
COMMON CORE ALIGNMENT • RH.9-10.2. Determine the central ideas or information of a primary or secondary source; provide an accurate summary of how key events or ideas develop over the course of the text. • RH.9-10.9. Compare and contrast treatments of the same topic in several primary and secondary sources. • RH.9-10.10. By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9–10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. • WHST.9-10.9. Draw evidence from informational texts to support analysis, reflection, and research.
OBJECTIVE • Students will be able to: • Identify key terms related to the events of the Stonewall Riots of 1969 and the struggle for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer/questioning rights in the United States. • Describe the events that sparked the LGBTQ rights movement in the United States. • Compare and contrast the movement for LGBTQ rights in the United States with other civil rights struggles in American History. • Evaluate the likelihood that the LGBTQ rights movement will achieve its objectives based on primary source evidence and the student’s prior knowledge of civil rights struggles in United States history.
AGENDA • Video Activity: The Stonewall Inn, Birth of the Gay Rights Movement (10) • Defining Our Terms: LGBTQ Alphabet Soup (20) • Introduction to New Material: Timeline Activity, LGBTQ Rights from 1940 to the Present (20) • Test Your Knowledge: Quick Review Quiz (10) • Video Activity: Combating Hate and Homophobia (15) • Guided Practice: Compare and Contrast, Civil Rights Struggles in American history (30) • Video Activity: LGBTQ Rights in A Modern Context (15) • Independent Practice: Document Based Question (60) • Closing (5)
INTRODUCTORY VIDEO • Directions: You will now watch a short introductory video clip designed to familiarize you with the start of the gay rights movement. • This video describes the events that took place on June 26, 1969 at the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar and lounge located in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of New York City. • The riots that took place in the days that followed are known as the Stonewall Riots and are considered by many experts to be the start of the LGBTQ rights movement in the United States.
VIDEO Gay Rights Introduction
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Directions: The next few slides are designed to acquaint you with common terms related to the struggle for gay or LGBTQ rights. As you read each slide be sure to take note of the key definitions. There will be a brief quiz over these terms before you begin the next activity. • LGBTQ: Refers to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered, and queer/questioning individuals or groups.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Ally: A person who identifies as heterosexual or straight but supports the rights of homosexuals.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Bisexual: A term for men or women who identify themselves as being attracted to both other men and other women.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Civil Union: A form of partnership granted by a local, state, or national government that recognizes the relationship between two individuals. This may or may not be similar to a marriage and the rights of individuals in a civil union may be the same or less than those in a state-sponsored marriage. In the United States there are several states where civil unions are available to same-sex couples but these unions do not provide the same benefits of marriage because of existing federal law.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Closeted: Refers to individuals who are not open about their sexuality.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • “Coming Out” (of the Closet): the time when a person chooses to reveal their sexual orientation to other people. This is often done in stages; for example people may tell their family and friends of their orientation but not their employers or may choose to withhold information from people whom they do not view as accepting.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Defense of Marriage Act: A law signed by President Bill Clinton in 1996 that says that the federal government will not recognize any marriage other than those between one man and one woman for the purposes of federal benefits. This means that LGBTQ people do not have access to 1049 federal programs and supports that heterosexual married people automatically enjoy including such benefits as: social security survivor benefits, visa benefits and access to veterans’ pensions.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Domestic Partnership: A registered form of cohabitation that may be similar to or different from a civil union. Individuals, both straight and gay, who enter into domestic partnerships are not married but have indicated that they have a partner. In some states this allows straight and gay couples who are not married to enjoy some of the benefits of marriage such as sharing health insurance or transferring property from one person to another without tax penalties.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell: A law signed by President Bill Clinton in 1993 and repealed by President Barack Obama in 2010 that barred LGBTQ from openly serving in the United States military. When the law was in effect, a commanding officer or fellow officer was not allowed to ask a person in the military if he or she was gay, lesbian, or bisexual (don’t ask). LGBTQ people were not allowed to openly discuss their sexuality or reveal to anyone that they were gay (don’t tell). In practice thousands of people were discharged from the military under the policy if it was found that they had communicated their sexuality in any way to anyone such as emailing, calling, or social networking with a partner or attending events or places frequented by LGBTQ individuals. Under the new policy lesbian, gay, and bisexual men and women will be allowed to serve openly. Transgendered individuals are still not legally allowed to serve in the military.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Drag Queen: A person who dresses in the clothing style of the opposite sex for the purposes of entertainment. This is different than a transgendered person who dresses permanently and attempts to live as the opposite gender. Drag queens typically perform in “drag” but live their lives as their identified gender.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Employment Non-Discrimination Act: A proposed law that would prevent discrimination based on one’s sexual orientation or gender identity. Some states already offer this protection but many do not. In states where the protection does not currently exist and employee can be fired simply for being gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgendered.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Ex-Gay Movement: A movement among certain individuals and organizations, largely based on religious ideas, that suggests that being gay is simply a “phase” or a “sickness” that can be cured through therapy. This movement is highly controversial and the American Psychiatric Association has said, along with numerous other medical organizations that being gay is not a “disease”, that homosexuality occurs among humans and many animal species, and that there is no “cure” for being gay.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Gay: A term for men who identify themselves as being attracted to other men. This term may sometimes be applied more broadly to refer to anything related to the LGBTQ community.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Gay Rights Organization: An organization that works to promote the rights of LGBTQ individuals and combat hate and homophobia through programming aimed at many communities in the United States and around the world. Some prominent past and present LGBTQ organizations include: The Human Rights Campaign, GLAAD (The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation), GLSEN (The Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network), PFLAG (Parents Friends, and Families of Lesbians and Gays), and ACT UP.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Gender Reassignment Surgery: The process whereby a transgendered person surgically changes his or her sex to fit his or her gender identity.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • GSA: A Gay-Straight Alliance is an organization based in a school, typically in a college or university setting or in a high school, to support tolerance and acceptance of LGBTQ individuals and to combat homophobia and bullying.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • HIV/AIDS: Human Immunodeficiency Virus or Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, a disease that has impacted over 40 million people globally. First called “gay cancer” or “gay disease” it was originally thought to only affect gay people. This was later disproven, HIV/AIDS can be transmitted to people of any sexual orientation. HIV/AIDS destroys a body’s immune system often leaving a person susceptible to other diseases and, without medical treatment, can lead to severe medical problems and, in some cases, death.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Homophobia: An irrational fear by individuals, organizations, or governments of people who are or are suspected to be gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, or questioning that is sometimes typified by intolerance or negative views of LGBTQ people and the desire to limit the rights of these individuals.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Homosexuality: A term that broadly applies to individuals who are attracted either in whole or in part to people of the same sex or gender and choose to identify themselves this way.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Lesbian: A term for women who identify themselves as being attracted to other women.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Mattachine Society: An early LGBTQ rights organization based in New York City that sought to provide a meeting place for LGBTQ people in order to organize for basic rights and protect against police brutality.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Pride: Refers to the movement that developed after the Stonewall Riots to encourage gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered people to live openly.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Queer: A term used by individuals who see themselves as not exclusively heterosexual but do not wish to label themselves as either gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgendered.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Questioning: A term used by individuals who feel that they may possibly be homosexual but are not certain that this is the case, thus they are in the process of questioning their sexuality.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Same-Sex Attraction: A derogatory term often used by organizations such as the “ex-gay movement” and individuals who believe that homosexuality is either a phase or can be cured to suggest that this “attraction” can be overcome either through therapy or prayer.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Stonewall: Refers to riots that took place near the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village, New York City, a bar for LGBTQ people, on June 28, 1969 after local police raided the bar and repeatedly harassed its patrons leaving many wounded and arrested and one person dead.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Transgendered: A person who identifies themselves as the opposite gender from their physical body. These individuals may live as transgendered people or may choose to use gender reassignment surgery to become a transsexual and match their outward body to their gender identities.
LBTQ ALPHABET SOUP:DEFINING OUR TERMS • Transsexual: A person who seeks to actively change their physical sex to match their gender identity.
TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGELGBTQ ALPHABET SOUP QUIZ • What year did the events at the Stonewall Inn take place? A: 1969 • What is an ally? A: A person who supports LGBTQ rights / someone who is against homophobia • What is one LGBTQ organization in schools? A:GSA / Gay-Straight Alliance • What is the Defense of Marriage Act? A: A law that prevents the federal government from recognizing gay marriage. • What does the “Q” in LGBTQ stand for? A: queer or questioning
INTRODUCTION TO NEW MATERIAL: TIMELINE NOTES DIRECTIONS • Directions: The timeline of LGBTQ rights is divided into 3 eras: • Pre-Stonewall (1600-1969) • The Stonewall Riots (1969-70) • Post-Stonewall (1971-Present) • As you read the timeline of events in the LGBTQ rights movement pay close attention to how the events of the Stonewall Riots led to the creation of new organizations and new ways of thinking about lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and transgendered people. • There will be a short quiz following this activity.
PRE-STONEWALL (1600-1969) • 1920 - “Gay” first used to refer to homosexuals in the publication Underground • 1933 - Hitler bans gay and lesbian groups, burns the Institute of Sexual Science library • 1935 - “Successful” electric shock therapy treatment of homosexuality reported at American Psychological Association meeting • 1941 - “Transsexuality” first used in reference to homosexuality and bisexuality • 1942 - Switzerland decriminalizes adult homosexuality • 1943 - U.S. military bars gays and lesbians from serving in the Armed Forces • 1945 - Revealed that Holocaust victims include LGBTs • 1945 - The Quaker Emergency Committee of New York City opens the first social welfare agency for gay people
PRE-STONEWALL (1600-1969) • 1945 - First known female-to-male sex reassignment surgery, on Michael Dillon in Britain • 1948 - The Kinsey Report says homosexual behavior among men is widespread • 1948 - Hollywood begins blacklisting suspected homosexuals • 1951 - The Mattachine Society is founded to give a voice to LGBTQ people in New York politics • 1952 - Immigrants banned from U.S. if they have “psychopathic personality,” including homosexuality • 1953 - President Dwight D. Eisenhower orders dismissal of all federal employees guilty of “sexual perversion”
PRE-STONEWALL (1600-1969) • 1954 - Dr. Evelyn Hooker presents a study showing gay men are as well adjusted as straight men, at an American Psychological Association meeting • 1961 - First openly gay person runs for U.S. public office (drag queen Jose Sarria, running for San Francisco city supervisor) • 1962 - Illinois becomes first state to make consensual same-sex acts legal • 1963 - American Civil Liberties Union opposes government interference in the private sex lives of consenting adults • 1966 - First U.S. gay community center opens, in San Francisco, led by The Society for Individual Rights • 1969 - National Institute of Mental Health study chaired by Dr. Evelyn Hooker urges decriminalization of private sex acts between consenting adults
THE STONEWALL RIOTS (JUNE 28, 1969) • 1:20am - In the morning on Saturday, June 28, 1969, four plainclothes policemen in dark suits, two patrol officers in uniform, and Detective Charles Smythe and Deputy Inspector Seymour Pine raid the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Greenwich Village, New York City • 1:45am - Police begin sending bar patrons outside and within minutes there are hundreds of people on the street waiting for arrest • 2:00am - An officer shoved a transsexual who reacted by hitting him in the head • 2:05am - Bar patrons began throwing bottles and rocks at the police shouting “Gay Power” and singing “We Shall Overcome” • 4:00am - Rioters disperse after pushing the police out of the neighborhood
THE STONEWALL RIOTS (1969 - 1970) • Thousands of people crowded into the Stonewall Inn and onto Christopher Street in front of the bar the night after the riot • People began mass chanting with gay power slogans and wrote graffiti such as “Support Gay Power” and “Legalize Gay Bars” • The riots continued for several more days with differing crowds each evening • Protesters began to organize in local homes to campaign for recognition of gay rights • Within a year the Gay Liberation Front and the Gay Activists Alliance were formed to demonstrate for the rights of LGBTQ people • On June 28, 1970 on the one year anniversary of the riots the first Gay Pride Parade was held on Christopher Street in front of the Stonewall Inn sparking the birth of the modern LGBTQ rights movement
POST-STONEWALL (1970-PRESENT) • 1970 - First Gay Liberation Day March held in New York City, First Gay Freedom Day March held in Los Angeles, first Gay-in held in San Francisco • 1972 - Sweden becomes first country in the world to allow transgendered people to legally change their sex, and provides free hormone therapy. Norway decriminalizes homosexuality • 1972 - Ann Arbor, Michigan becomes first city in United States to pass gay rights ordinance • 1973 - The American Psychiatric Association removes homosexuality from its DSM-II Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, based largely on the research and advocacy of Evelyn Hooker
POST-STONEWALL (1971-PRESENT) • 1977 - Harvey Milk is elected city-county supervisor in San Francisco, becoming the third out American elected to public office • 1977 - Dade County, Florida enacts a Human Rights Ordinance; it is repealed the same year after a militant anti-gay-rights campaign led by Anita Bryant • 1978 - The first Gay Pride Flag is flown in San Francisco • 1978 - San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone are assassinated by former San Francisco Supervisor Dan White. • 1979 - First national gay rights march on Washington, DC • 1980 - The Democratic National Convention becomes the first major political party in America to endorse a gay rights platform plank.
POST-STONEWALL (1971-PRESENT) • 1980 - Ronald Reagan is elected President • 1980 - Moral Majority starts anti-gay crusade nationwide • 1981 - The first cases of AIDS (then called GRID) are confirmed in the United States • 1983 - Massachusetts Representative Gerry Studds reveals he is a homosexual on the floor of the House, becoming the first openly gay member of Congress • 1985 - President Reagan mentions AIDS publicly for the first time, by then 25,000 Americans have died from the disease • 1987 - ACT UP stages its first major demonstration against the government for failing to stop the spread of HIV/AIDS • 1987 - U.S. Congressman Barney Frank comes out as gay • 1989 - Denmark is first country in the world to enact registered partnership laws (like a civil union) for same-sex couples, with most of the same rights as marriage
POST-STONEWALL (1971-PRESENT) • 1992 - The World Health Organization removes homosexuality from its list of disorders • 1994 - American Medical Association denounces the ex-gay movement and supposed cures for homosexuality saying it is not a disease • 1998 - Matthew Shepard is beaten and left for dead on a fence in Laramie, Wyoming for being gay • 2000 - Vermont becomes the first US state to allow civil unions • 2001 - Maryland passes an employment non-discrimination act and outlaws discrimination against LGBTQ people in employment
POST-STONEWALL (1971-PRESENT) • 2003 - In Lawrence v. Texas (2003) the US Supreme Court outlaws anti-sodomy laws and says relations between two consenting adults are legal • 2003 - Massachusetts becomes the first state to legalize same-sex marriage while 11 other states pass bans on such marriages later in the year (today 39 states have bans) • 2005 - Iran begins widespread execution of gays • 2008 - Gay marriage legalized in California and Connecticut • 2008 - Proposition 8 makes gay marriage illegal in California again on the same day Barack Obama is elected
POST-STONEWALL (1971-PRESENT) • 2009 - Gay marriage legalized in Iowa and Vermont • 2010 - Gay marriage in New Hampshire and Washington DC • 2010 - Illinois legalizes civil unions • 2010 - A judge rules that Arkansas’ ban on adoption by same-sex couples is unconstitutional • 2010 – President Barack Obama signs a repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell which will allow LGB people to serve openly in the military, transgendered people are still not allowed to serve in the military • 2011 - Hawaii and Delaware legalize civil unions • 2011 - New York legalizes same-sex marriage
TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE:A QUICK REVIEW QUIZ • What was the major cause of the Stonewall Riots? • What LGBTQ organization existed before the Riots? • Name 3 states that currently allow same-sex marriage. • What is the significance of the Supreme Court case Lawrence v. Texas (2003)? • When was HIV/AIDS first confirmed in the US? • What was the focus of Dr. Evelyn Hooker’s research? • What San Francisco politician was assassinated because of his homosexuality in 1978? • Which country first decriminalized homosexuality in 1942? • Who opened the first social welfare agency for gay people? • What did activists do to commemorate the first anniversary of the Stonewall Riots?
“IT GETS BETTER” COMBATING HATE AND HOMOPHOBIA • Directions: You will watch a short video clip that addresses the issue of homophobia and bullying in our nation’s schools. This is a serious issue and the Baltimore City Public Schools is working to combat bullying and create a safe space for all of our students. • After you watch the video answer the 6 guiding questions that accompany this clip in order to frame your thinking about respect in our schools.
Video “It Gets Better”