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WGS240 Final
Final for Intro to Gay and Lesbian Studies
77
Women's & Gender Studies
Undergraduate 3
12/09/2014

Additional Women's & Gender Studies Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What were “blue discharges” and what were they replaced with after WW II?
Definition
  • In the 1940s, the military began to use psychiatrists to keep homosexuals from enlisting and issued “blue discharges” (they were printed on blue paper) to military personnel identified as homosexuals

  • After the war was over, the military considered blue discharges “vague and protective” and homosexuals would receive an “undesirable discharge” instead

Term
27. Who was Joseph McCarthy and what is his connection to homosexuality
Definition
Amember of the US Senate and said that homosexuals were a threat to national security and were perhaps as dangerous as the actual communists
Term
28. What was Executive Order 10450?
Definition
In 1953, Eisenhower signed an order that made sexual perversion sufficient reason for exclusion for federal employment.
Term
29. Who was Evelyn Hooker?
Definition
In 1950, Evelyn hooker found that there were few, if any, clear psychological differences between homosexuals and heterosexuals
Term
30. What kind of thinking re: homosexuality gave rise to the homophile movement?
Definition

 

  • At the close of World War II, lesbians and gay men began to see themselves as a social minority

  • This helped create an environment in which the notion that homosexuality was a sickness or perversion could be effectively challenged not only by physicians and psychotherapist, but also by homosexuals themselves
Term
36. What’s the relationship among the following in 1969: author/activist Rita Mae Brown, the National Organization of Women (NOW), Betty Friedan, and the phrase, “the lavender menace”?
Definition
They were all in NOW and Betty was one of the founder of NOW, she believed that the lavender menace is “lesbians who might co-opt the organization for their own end and worse undermine potential public safety” Rita and two of her colleagues left the org
Term
What's the relationship between: October 1979, the first National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights?
Definition
75,000 to 10,000 people attended, Allen Ginsberg, Audre Lorde, Kate Millett, D.C. Mayor Marion Barion, San Franscico Supervisor Harry Britt,U.S. Army Sgt. Leonard Matlovich, U.S. Rep., Ted Wise were all speakers, Angela Davis denied speaking because her communist party did not support homosexual rights
Term
37. What was ACT UP? And in what context did it emerge?
Definition
ACT UP was formed because of the health concerns and political necessities that was needed for AIDS. ACT UP is an organization that was formed in 1987.
Term
38. What are zaps?
Definition
A quick and unexpected direct action designed to cause disruption or discomfort to make political point
Term
39. Who was Michael Hardwick and what is/explain the Bowers v. Hardwick decision?
Definition
Hardwick was a Georgia man who was arrested for sodomy. Bowers v Hardwick the supreme court in 1986 upheld the sodomy law by 5-4 and gave the right to outlaw sodomy. After this case many Southern states criminalized homosexual sodomy and not heterosexual
Term
40. The US Supreme Court case, “Lawrence v Texas” (2003) overturned the sodomy laws in the US
Definition
With a 6-3 ruling the sodomy law was struck down causing it to be legal in the 13 states where it was illegal, same sex sexual activity legal in all states and territory. Bowers v Hardwick case was overturned.
Term
What are sodomy laws?
Definition
Criminalizing non- procreative sexual acts, especially between same sex individuals
Term
46. Explain how the Klein Sexual Orientation Grid works and explain how the Storms Sexuality Axis works. Which one do you find more compelling in charting sexuality?
Definition

-Klein Sexual Orientation Grid (KSOG): like the Kinsey scale but more intense to make the test results more unique to the individual. You add up your numbers and divide by 21 to get your final answer.

-Storms Sexuality Axis (SSA): Includes heterosexuality, homosexuality, bisexuality, and asexuality on an x and y axis. With this one, you are not limited to the homosexual-heterosexual binary as in the other tests. Therefore, it is better in charting sexuality because it is more diverse.

Term
47. What is the lesbian continuum?
Definition
Adrienne Rich created the term lesbian continuum to lessen the conflict between heterosexual and lesbian feminists. It means a “range of woman-identified experience, not simply the fact that a woman has had or consciously desired genital sexual experience with another women”. This was aimed to help women unify.
Term
48. Be able to explain Kinsey’s view of sibling studies in relation to establishing a hereditary pattern of homosexuality
Definition
Kinsley thought if one identical twin is gay the other has a 100% chance of being gay. This was proven to be incorrect. Instead, 52% for males and 48% for females. Because it is not 100% the fact cannot be determined. Sexual orientation is PARTLY inherited. Also, there is no evidence on finding a “gay gene”.
Term
49. The use of “strategic essentialism” (i.e. biological determinism) vs liberationist politics and sexual self determination as the goal for achieving gay rights (pp. 114-115) explain.
Definition

-Proving that sexual orientation is inherited (born with) will allow more people to be ok with the matter. Rights will improve for homosexuals. However, some may still think gay-is-sick and attempt to cure LGBT people. Because it is medical/biological.

-Liberationist politics supports sexual freedom- the right to choose how, when, who, and why to engage in sexual activities. Some LGBT people prefer this side.

Term
50. Heteronormativity at work in scientific inquiry (p. 116) explain
Definition
Heterosexuality is the normal or default. Nonnormative= queers. We look for a “gay gene” but we don’t care about finding a “straight gene”. When did you know you were gay? When did you know you were straight?
Term
56. What was Andy Warhol’s film, Blow Job
Definition
A silent film, directed by Andy Warhol, that was filmed in January 1964. It depicts the face of an uncredited DeVeren Bookwalter as he apparently receives fellatio from an unseen partner. It’s notable because the fellatio is implied, making it very sexual (bc of the guy’s orgasm faces), but not sexually explicit (bc we never see the blow job happening). Also must consider the beauty in the homoerotic.
Term
57. Beginning in the 1980s, the AIDS epidemic led to a rush of new political art. The powerful image “Silence = Death” was the most widely recognized
Definition
Most widely recognized slogan of the AIDS awareness movement to protest the government’s silence regarding the many people dying from AIDS.
Term
58. Cleve Jones
Definition
Activist who thought of the NAMES Project Quilt, the huge-ass quilt with all the names that they display on the mall in D.C. for World AIDS Day. Largest gay art project in history.
Term
59. A clearly discernible, public and even somewhat queer transgressive aesthetic in American culture became apparent in the writings of those who identify with Beat culture in the 1950s (p. 260) who were they? Beat culture (p. 377)
Definition
Beat culture describes writers who considered themselves beaten by conservativism and also who marched to the beat of their own drum. These writers include Jack Kerouac, Gregory Corso, and Diane DiPrima.
Term
60. A founding figure of the Beat movement and a lifelong proponent of sexual freedom was the gay poet Allen Ginsberg (pp. 260-261) anything else thats special about him?
Definition
He wrote Howl which resulted in a censorship trial and also he made a lot of connections between repression of queerness/other nonnormative behaviors & a consumerist culture that enforces conformity.
Term
17. German psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing generally believed that homosexuality was congenital. What does congenital mean?
Definition
Cogenital: a condition with which an individual was unfortunately born
Term
18. How did Richard von Krafft-Ebing use the term heterosexual?
Definition
According to Krafft-Ebing...homosexuals had feelings that represented an ‘abnormal cogenital manifestation’, and ‘the essential feature of this strange manifestation of the sexual life is the want of sexual sensibility for the opposite sex, even to the extent of horror, while sexual inclination and impulse toward the same sex are present’
Term
19. Who was Karl Heinrich Ulrichs?/ Define “Urning”
Definition
Karl Heinrich Ulrichs was a German student of law and theology, believed that homosexuals comprised a “third sex” which he called urnings. Urnings were the product of heredity and displayed visible, physical differences from heterosexuals.
Term
20. Havelock Ellis (pp. 35-38) Ellis wanted to portray inverts and homosexuality in a positive light. Ellis subscribed to three principal causes of homoerotic sexual attraction what were they?
Definition

 

  1. the absence of more “natural” objects of affection

  2. significant disappointment in romantic relationships with the opposite sex

  3. seduction by a member of the same sex
Term
1. Judith Halberstam’s notion of perverse presentism
Definition

 

  • Halberstam warns that anyone writing about the past needs to consider carefully how contemporary notions and constructions of desire and identity can easily be imposed on past persons, incidents, or issues

  • She argues that instead for a “perversely prescentist model of historical analysis, a model that avoids the trap of simply projecting contemporary understandings back in time, but one that can apply insights from the present conundrums of the past”
  • Perverse presentism highlights the need to avoid imposing current ideas about and constructions of sexualty on the past at the same time that it acknowledges the historical expression of sexual intimacies and practices that seem connected to current LGBT identifications and practices
Term
2. The ancient Greeks developed ways of recognizing and even honoring same-sex desires. Probably the principal source for ancient Greek paiderastia (or pederasty: love between a man and a boy) is Homer’s Iliad” (p. 4). Be able to briefly summarize the plot and be able to explain why it is viewed as an example of or inspiration for pederasty.
Definition

 

  • In Greece, the social and sexual relationship between an older man and a youth represented the ideal form of love

  • In the epic, the Greek hero Achilles, feeling slighted by the king, withdraws from the fighting outside Tory

  • His youthful lover Patroclus, fearing that Achilles is losing honor, puts on Achilles’s armor and goes out to fight in his place

  • The less powerful Patroclus is killed, his death spurs Achilles to return to the battlefield and defeat the Trojan Hector
Term
3. A Greek same-sex pair included the erastes and the eromenos. Be able to define these two terms and be able to explain what the erastes-eromenos pairing was designed to provide each person in the pair (e.g. protection, training, etc)
Definition

 

  • Erastes- older man

  • Eromenos (youth)- typically a postadolescent between the ages of about 12 and 18

    • Once a young man’s beard sprouted, he was considered past the age of eromenos
Term
4. The Greeks did not favor same-sex relationships between men of similar age
Definition

 

  • the erastes-eromenos pairing was designed to provide pleasure and friendship for the older erastes in exchange for protection, training, and social advantage for the younger eromenos

  • Same-sex attachments did not preclude heterosexual marriage, but the pederastic (love between man and a boy) combination of spiritual and physical connection represented a higher kind of love, more conductive to the military, political, and educational responsibilities of the male citizen of the Greek state

Term
5. Who's Sappho tho?
Definition

 

  • Poet who lived in the seventh century BCE on the island of Lesbos

  • Little of her work has survived and that which has is mostly in fragments, yet she is still known for her sensuous and personal poetic voice

  • Many young, wealthy Greek women were sent to Lesbos to study the arts with Sappho and her lyrics describe her love for these women
Term
6. Define two-spirit
Definition

 

  • In many native american tribes, a person who possessed characteristics of both genders; one who understands a male and a female

  • carried spiritual and physical power; two-spirit individuals could function as healers and could be valued in some tribal groups accordingly
Term
7. European explorers brought with them the term berdache, now often used to describe Native American postcontact gender nonconformists. A berdache typically switched gender entirely (explain)
Definition

 

  • they were born of a certain gender, but dressed as the opposite sex and took on the opposite sex’s daily routines and roles within the society

  • while there were some born females who took on male roles, it was much more rare than a born male taking on female roles.
Term
8. Who was We-wha?
Definition
We-wha dressed as a woman and did women’s work exclusively. she was skilled in weaving and making pottery and was also a central figure in spiritual life. She had a white friend, an anthropologist, who she accompanied to Washington DC. Her white friend had no idea she was born a male
Term
9. Explain the “Constantinian change” in relation to changes in the law and punishment for same-sex sexual behavior
Definition

 

  • this is when emperor Constantine christianized the roman empire in the fourth century CE

  • made punishment for same sex sexual behavior punishable by death, whereas before this change it was just considered a “crime against nature”
Term
10. Why is Antonio Rocco’s, Alcibiades the Schoolboy, considered the first “gay” novel?
Definition

 

  • the book is the story of the attempted (and finally successful) seduction of a youth boy by his teacher Filotimo

  • it is considered the first gay novel because Filotimo describes himself as a man who loves other men rather than women. He does more than perform homosexual acts; he identifies himself as a homosexual
Term
23. Essentialism means what?
Definition
The notion that homosexuality results from biological factors out of the control of individuals
Term
31. What was the primary goal of homophile organizations?
Definition

-primary goal: gain acceptance for gay men and lesbians by hetersexuals

 

  • challenge the idea that homosexuality was a sickness or perversion

  • the movement was spearheaded by homosexuals; the idea was that homosexuals themselves could challenge these notions, not just physicians and psychologists
Term
32. Who was Harry Hay?
Definition

 

  • founder of the Mattachine Society (early 1950s), a homophile organization

  • founded Mattachine Society in response to McCarthy’s anti-communism/anti-homosexuality

  • Mattachine Society worked toward assimilation of gays and lesbians
Term
33. What’s the relationship among the following: Harvey Milk, Dan White, and the “White Night Riots”?
Definition

Harvey Milk and Dan White served on San Francisco Board of Supervisors together

-Harvey Milk was first openly gay member of SF Board of Supervisors

-White was the only actively antigay board supervisor; said he wanted to rid city of “radicals, social deviates, and incorigibles”

-White shot and killed Milk (and SF mayor George Moscone) Nov. 27, 1978

-jury (mostly white, working class conservatives) found White guilty of voluntary manslaughter, NOT first-degree murder… was only sentenced to 7 years in prison

-public reacted with fury at verdict: vandalizing, burning police cars… became known as “White Night Riots”

Term
34. What’s the relationship among the following: Dade County, Florida’s passing of the Human Rights Ordinance in 1977, Anita Bryant, the “Save the Children” campaign, and Harvey Milk’s statement: “My name is Harvey Milk and I’m here to recruit you.” And what was the voting outcome of the “Save the Children” campaign?
Definition

Human Riots Ordinance included lesbians and gays among people protected from discrimination

-Anita Bryant’s “Save Our Children” campaign sought a repeal of the ordinance… their slogan was, “Homosexuals cannot reproduce, so they must recruit”

-Harvey Milk’s statement was a sarcastic response to Anita Bryant’s campaign slogan

-the “Save Our Children” campaign was able to overturn the Human Rights Ordinance

Term
Stonewall Riots (which occurred on June 27-28, 1969 in NYC) as marking the beginning of a highly visible gay rights movement in the US
Definition

-rioting was a response to police harassment of customers of Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar

-most customers released, but bar staff, three drag queens, and two MtF transgendered people were going to be taken in

-the crowd that formed outside (made of customers) protested by throwing bricks, trashcans, and began a series of several riots for days in area

Term
35. Heteronormative means what?
Definition
presumes heterosexuality is the normal sexual orientation rather than other forms of sexual expression
Term
41. Two cases that show the difficulty faced when a progressive political agenda in favor of LGBT rights meets political opposition can be seen in the efforts of President Bill Clinton to end the ban on gays in the military and to add lesbian and gay people to proposed hate crimes legislation” (pp. 80-82). Explain the outcome of Clinton’s efforts in both cases.
Definition
In Clinton's efforts to end bans on gays in the military, he instituted the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, Don’t Pursue, Don’t Harass Policy”. This policy mandated punishment for those who came out while serving and didn’t succeed in integrating homosexuality into the military. This policy, which was supposed to be a progressive move designed to end the U.S military’s practice seeking out homosexuals, actually extended the “offenses” that could result in expulsion from the military.
Term
42. Kinsey's Scale
Definition
The Kinsey scale attempts to describe a person's sexual experience or response at a given time. It uses a scale from 0, meaning exclusively heterosexual, to 6, meaning exclusively homosexual.
Term
43. Be able to explain Kinsey’s 10% concept
Definition
Kinsey found that approximately 10% of males are gay.”One in ten” people are gay- a concept that figures so prominently in the gay community
Term
44. Kinsey did not invent his sexuality scale out of thin air. Explain Magnus Hirschfeld’s work
Definition
Magnus Hirschfeld had constructed two elaborate schemata for measuring the intensity of sexual attraction. The first chart laid out a 10-point scale indicating the strength of an individuals “love drive,” irrespective of object. The second chart used that scale to plot the degree of attraction to the same sex or a different sex. Hirschfelds results, identify three sexual types: heterosexual, bisexual, and homosexual.
Term
45. that would influence Kinsey’s development of his seven-point scale
Definition
Kinsey adapted this continuum format to demonstrate the range and diversity of human sexual behavior.
Term
Difference between Human Rights and Civil Rights
Definition
  • Human rights are those rights that individuals enjoy because they are human. No government body, group or person can deprive human rights to an individual. Some of the basic human rights are the right to life, education, fair trail, protection from torture and freedom of expression.
  • Civil rights are rights that an individual enjoys by virtue of citizenship. Civil rights have the protection of the constitution. Civil rights protect the individual from discrimination and unjustifiable action by others, government or any organization. Having a philosophical and legal basis, civil rights is an agreement between thenationand the individual.
Term
What is bisexuality?
Definition
I call myself bisexual because I acknowledge that I have in myself the potential to be attracted—romantically and/or sexually—to people of more than one sex, and/or gender, not necessarily at the same time, not necessarily in the same way, and not necessarily to the same degree.’
Term
51. Whitman’s concept of “adhesiveness”
Definition
The Calamus poems openly celebrate what Whitman called “adhesiveness,” the “love that fuses, ties and aggregates, making the races comrades, and fraternizing all,” as distinguished from “individualism, which isolates”.
Term

52. Thomas Eakins created, “The Swimming Hole,” and intended much of his art of the 1890s to convey the ideas of Whitman (p. 213) “The Swimming Hole” is a painting of what?

Definition
Eakins’ carefully composed images of naked youths in arcadian landscape settings constitute visual equivalents of Whitman’s poems, celebrating male beauty and comradeship.
Term
53. Padlock Law
Definition
Mayor Jimmy Walker signed the law whereby city authorities would padlock the doors and arrest the cast of any theater that dared to present to homosexuality, sex outside of marriage, or prostitution. This type of censorship continued for the next four decades. (started after Edouard Bourdet’s The Captive opened on Broadway in 1926)
Term
54. Carolyn Gage’s position on the reason for lesbian invisibility in theater
Definition
Many lesbian playwrights’ had a tendency to focus on socially threatening “uncolonized women. “Telling the truth is always disruptive. And theater, of all the art forms, is a particular powerful medium for truth-telling. Playwrights historically have ended up in hot water, because the nature of live theater is inherently political.”
Term
55. Hostile cultural environments have produced three characteristic types of LGBT literature in the Latin world
Definition

-highly coded literature (prison cell to represent the closeted lesbian life)

-reflects the forced exile of many gay men to more accepting locations

-an intersectional  approach that buries LGBT plotlines within discussions of social or political struggles

Term
61. Annie Liebowitz
Definition
Annie Leibovitz was named “best known photographer” by Newsweek in 2007. She began her career shooting for the fledgling Rolling Stone and among her most familiar photographs is one of Yoko Ono and John Lennon taken only hours before Lennon’s murder.  She also took a very controversial photo of a nude and pregnant Demi Moore, which appeared on the cover of Vanity Fair. So basically her work is very well-known, but also transgressive. So people who wouldn’t normally look at transgressive art start seeing it anyway.
Term
62. If art is commodified and accepted as part of the popular culture, can it still be considered transgressive?
Definition
It can be seen as transgressive at the time but after it is accepted it no longer fits the definition of transgressive and therefore something new must come about to be transgressive.
Term
63. Italian photographer, Oliviero Toscani
Definition
Toscani produced controversial advertising images. Some of them sell products, but also aim social critiques at war, capital punishment, racism, and homophobia. It was a mix of advertising and activism. People complained about his photos because they didn’t want to explain the flagrant displays of homosexuality to their children. But perhaps that was the aim of his work--to force people to discuss these issues that are usually left in the dark.
Term
64. The limits of (queer) transgressive practices (e.g. the case of drag performances)
Definition
Some argue that drag performances show that gender isn’t a given, but is really just a performance that we have to perform again and again to be considered “normal.” Like, proving that femininity/masculinity are just social constructs. Others argue that drag performance actually reinforces gender roles and the binary of male/female. They say drag performers actually disparage femininity and feminine behavior rather than celebrate it.
Term
65. Oscar Wilde trials
Definition
Oscar Wilde (an author) was accused of “grossly indecent” behavior because he was involved with a variety of working class young men. The prosecutors focused on locating passages from Widle’s writing that seemed to allude to homosexuality. They thought that the literature depicting immoral acts of feelings could contribute to the degradation of those reading it; their innocent minds would be corrupted. This created a moral panic and some members of the public expressed relief when Wilde was sent to prison.
Term
66. Radclyffe Hall’s novel, The Well of Loneliness, was the first to insist upon a literary space for the female sexual invert
Definition
famous playwright was arrested on charges of “gross indecency” because of evidence that he had been with various men and secual acts b/t men had just become criminalized. the first trial ended in a hung jury and in the second he was convicted. his writtings and letter were used as evidence
Term
67. Queering of children's books
Definition
Queer-themed books aimed at young adult readers are easily found but queer-themed books for elementary school-aged children. Studies show that 3 out of 4 parents feel that learning about LGBT issues is appropriate at the high school age, and about half feel it is appropriate in middle school, but a very small percentage of parents feel this topic is appropriate in elementary schools. The most popular queer-themed books aimed at elementary school children can be found on the list of most challenged books because they “promote the gay agenda” and “corrupt children”.
Term

68. Deepa Mehta’s 1996 film, Fire (film followed that lives of two sister-in-laws living in India that were unhappy in their marriages and began to fall in love with each other. When the film was released in India, protesters argued that the film violated their religion and their countries morals as a whole, claiming that the movie was actually “un-Indian” and was thought to “spoil their women”)

Definition
We argue that this trajectory typically follows moral panics; the very rhetoric designed to muzzle transgressive art also tends to spur the creation of new work with similar themes
Term
69. Vito Russo’s film, The Celluloid Closet
Definition
Before this film, homosexuals were usually portrayed as sad, suicidical, psychopathic, and unstable in movies. Some movies also showed that it was possible to be turned or talked into being gay.
Term
70. What’s the difference between “encoding” and “decoding”?
Definition
  • encoding refers to messages deliberately included in cultural products by their makers
  • decoding refers to the messages cultural consumers glean from these products (not necessarily encoded)

Term
71. The Puppy Episode
Definition

the episode on the episode on the Ellen show where she “came out’ and professed her love for a woman

Term
72. Queer as Folk
Definition
show (200-2005) pushed boundaries by showing real issues in gay community (drug addiction, nonmonogamy, job discrimination, etc.)  had some of the most graphic/erotic sex scenes in queer television drama
Term
73. Be able to explain the concept of “home” in relation to LGBT/Alternative Media
Definition
most LGBT ppl feel displaced and alone in a world of heteros. Many of them look for validation and support. Alternative media is that which aims to a particular group and lies outside of mainstream media. locations of LGBT alternative creation and expression are nurtured and share are thus “homes”
Term
11. Who was Katherina Hetzeldorfer
Definition
Was drowned for being trans – woman, her charge was seducing 2 women with a leather dildo
Term
12. What is sexology?
Definition
Pseudo-scientific study of human sexual behavior and identity
Term
13. By the end of the nineteenth century, that love (the Love that dare not speak its name) was nameless in 3 important ways—name and explain each
Definition

1. same sex practices were criminalized ;criminalized sexual touching between men, anal intercourse punishable by death

2. Public discourse of homoeroticism and homosexuality existed; western media discussed LGBT issues and european  was considered an illness

3. The term homosexual was just made;

Term
14. Who was Karl Westphal?
Definition
Was a physician who made the term contrary sexual feelings to describe homosexuals
Term
15. Explain the concept 'inverts'
Definition
sexual desire was presented in expected norms for their sex
Term
16. Karl Maria Kertbeny/homosexual
Definition
Made the term homosexual to describe same sex interests. Came from the word inverse.
Term
24. Be able to explain the following statement: “Such a view of history, though, does not take into account the tendency of attitudes toward sexuality to loosen and tighten again”
Definition
Society becomes more strict and restricted because of a certain social crisis
Term
21. Freud’s theory of “polymorphous perversity,” and be able to explain how it differs from that of the sexologists
Definition
  • An innate theory of sexuality that had to be shaped by social forces to achieve reproductive sexuality
  • Sexologists defined sexual instinct as reproductive and naturally hetero while Freud argued that sexual instinct is oriented to pleasure & that the body has many erotic areas that can be satisfied in many different ways.
Term
22. “Early sexual rights activists used sexological research to fight laws designed to criminalize homoerotic behavior” (p. 39) how?
Definition
They argued that it is a natural, researched behavior and not a criminal choice.
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