Encourage you to join friends of the festival. Thank you. [applause] [inaudible conversations] host youre watching live coverage of the tucson festival of books, we are live from the university of arizona. As you can see, large audiences for each of these author panels. And outside of this theater the festival is going on on a Beautiful Day here this in tucson on the campus. Coming up, there are several more author panels that youll hear including slavery in america, big money and philanthropy and the history of women in the sciences. Now, in just a minute one of the panelists are this last panel, lillian faderman. Her book is called the gay revolution the story of the struggle. Shell be joining us to take your calls. Youve been listening to the panel for the last hour or so, and now ms. Faderman has agreed to come over and join us and to take some of your comments as well. 202 is the area code, 7488200 in the east and central time zones, 2027488201 if you live in the mountain and paci
Difficult to get people to join that organization. So i talk about the persecutions in the 1950s and why an organization was necessary. You know, in the 50s all of the churches, gay people were sinners. And to psychiatrists, all gay people were mentally ill. And to the police, all gay people were criminals. And to the federal government, if you had a job that had anything to do with government and slowly facilitiered down even to teachers filtered down even to teachers and social workers, all gay people were subversives and morally corrupt and shouldnt be employed by the government. And so the 1950s was a very rife period, and thats why i start there. Host but there were gay people before 1950s, right . [laughter] guest i think people called themselves gay as early as the late 19th century. But there were people that we would today tribe as homosexual describe as homosexual or transgender or bisexual who wouldnt have used that word for themselves in earlier eras. But, obviously, whats
The university of arizona. Welcome to the 9th annual tucson festival of books. My name is joyce bollinger, here with Southern Arizona senior pride. We want to thank Cox Communication for sponsoring this venue, faderman is appearing as a result of senior pride. [applause] were pretty thrilled about that. And ms. Nutt by the tucson medical center. [applause]. And jim is here on his own, i guess. Evidently. The preparation will last an hour, including questions and answers and we want to ask you to hold your questions until the end, and we hope to allow plenty of time for questions. Immediately following the session, the authors will be autographing books in the sales and signing area in the ua bookstore tent on the mall. It says booth 141. Books are available for purchase at this location, but miss faderman will be 20 minutes late since shes going to be interviewed by cspan. We hope youre enjoying the festival and invite you to become a friend of the festival today. You can text friend t
[inaudible conversations] in the mountain and pacific time zones. Lillian faderman, why does the struggle at least in your book begin in the 1950s . Guest well, i could have begun even earlier, of course, but the 1950s marked the time when gay people started to organize. Incidentally, we were all called gay at that time, not lgbtq, but gay was sort of the umbrella term, the underground term for all of us. So the first ongoing organization that formed started in 1950s, and that would be [inaudible] society and it was very difficult to get people to join that organization. So i talk about the persecutions in the 1950s and why an organization was necessary. You know, in the 50s all of the churches, gay people were sinners. And to psychiatrists, all gay people were mentally ill. And to the police, all gay people were criminals. And to the federal government, if you had a job that had anything to do with government and slowly facilitiered down even to teachers filtered down even to teachers
That cold war conformity gave rise to new forms of sexual and social order in the first decade or two after the second world war. We talked about how the cold war conformity established a white suburban, middle class heterosexuality as the domestic ideal and norm in america, and how Nuclear Families came to be the kind of central calling card of american normalcy. That, in turn of course, as we have discussed before, left a lot of other people outside that norm, especially those left behind in american cities, including people of color, and those who are choosing not to get married in what was the most marrying generation in American History. Namely lesbians and gay men, but not exclusively so. Those groups, as we talked about before, came to be seen as socially and sexually deviant, as threats to American Family and democracy, and as people who should be excluded from society and the abundance of the postwar economic order. Now we are moving into the late 1960s and early 1970s to look