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"American regulation of sexual variation has been responsive to multiple anxieties - about disgusting acts, gender deviation, and predatory sexuality. Gaylaw authoritatively shows how such legal regulation has evolved in the United States throughout the last century, contributing to the construction of homosexuality as a totalizing identity trait and to the phenomenon of the closet, initially a hiding place for gay people, now best viewed as an exclusion from citizenship." "Gaylaw not only questions the remnants of the old regime of compulsory heterosexuality, but offers ideas about public law in a post-closet, indeed post-liberal, era."--BOOK JACKET.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Gay rights, Gays, legal status, laws, etc., Legal status, laws, Gays, Homosexuality, Law and legislation, Lesbians, Homosexualité, Gay men, Homosexuels, Lesbiennes, Constitutional, Droit, LAW, Public, LGBTQ history, LGBTQ sociology, Stonewall Book Awards, LGBTQ law & legalPlaces
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Gaylaw: Challenging the Apartheid of the Closet
April 30, 2002, Harvard University Press
Paperback
in English
- New Ed edition
0674008049 9780674008045
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Gaylaw: Challenging the Apartheid of the Closet
October 22, 1999, Harvard University Press
Hardcover
in English
0674341619 9780674341616
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Gaylaw: challenging the apartheid of the closet
1999, Harvard University Press
in English
0674341619 9780674341616
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. [385]-461) and index.
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Scriblio MARC recordIthaca College Library MARC record
marc_openlibraries_sanfranciscopubliclibrary MARC record
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Internet Archive item record
Better World Books record
Library of Congress MARC record
marc_columbia MARC record
Work Description
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the legal issues concerning gender and sexual nonconformity in the United States.
Part One, which covers the years from the post-Civil War period to the 1980s, is a history of state efforts to discipline and punish the behavior of homosexuals and other people considered to be deviant. During this period such people could get by only at the cost of suppressing their most basic feelings and emotions.
Part Two addresses contemporary issues. Although it is no longer illegal to be openly gay in America, homosexuals still suffer from state discrimination in the military and in other realms, and private discrimination and violence against gays is prevalent.
William Eskridge presents a rigorously argued case for the "sexualization" of the First Amendment, showing why, for example, same-sex ceremonies and intimacy should be considered "expressive conduct" deserving the protection of the courts. The author draws on legal reasoning, sociological studies, and history to develop an effective response to the arguments made in defense of the military ban. The concluding part of the book locates the author's legal arguments within the larger currents of liberal theory and integrates them into a general stance toward freedom, gender equality, and religious pluralism.
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