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Heritage Months and Celebrations

Pride Month

White background with rainbow ribbon reads Pride Month 2023

 

Welcome to the McNichols Campus Library's National Pride Month Research Guide in support of the University of Detroit Mercy Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion's Heritage Months and Celebrations. Pride Month is celebrated each June to commemorate the six day Stonewall uprising of 1969. During that time, LGBTQ protestors clashed with New York city police to protest a police raid on the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village. The Stonewall uprising is generally considered the start of the modern LGBTQ rights movement. If you have questions about LGBTQ+-related resources, please contact a librarian

LGBTQ+ Books in Print and On the Shelves

Let the Record Show

Twenty years in the making, Sarah Schulman's Let the Record Show is the most comprehensive political history ever assembled of ACT UP and American AIDS activism In just six years, ACT UP, New York, a broad and unlikely coalition of activists from all races, genders, sexualities, and backgrounds, changed the world. Armed with rancor, desperation, intelligence, and creativity, it took on the AIDS crisis with an indefatigable, ingenious, and multifaceted attack on the corporations, institutions, governments, and individuals who stood in the way of AIDS treatment for all. 

Sarahland

In Sarahland, Sam Cohen brilliantly and often hilariously explores the ways in which traditional stories have failed us, both demanding and thrillingly providing for its cast of Sarahs new origin stories, new ways to love the planet and those inhabiting it, and new possibilities for life itself.

The Stonewall Reader

For the fiftieth anniversary of the Stonewall uprising, an anthology chronicling the tumultuous fight for LGBTQ rights in the 1960s and the activists who spearheaded it, with a foreword by Edmund White.

LGBTQ+ Books Available Electronically

Pride Parades

With vivid imagery, and showcasing the voices of these participants, Pride Parades tells the story of Pride from its beginning in 1970 to 2010. Though often dismissed as frivolous spectacles, the author builds a convincing case for the importance of Pride parades as cultural protests at the heart of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community. Weaving together interviews, archival reports, quantitative data, and ethnographic observations at six diverse contemporary parades in New York City, Salt Lake City, San Diego, Burlington, Fargo, and Atlanta, Bruce describes how Pride parades are a venue for participants to challenge the everyday cultural stigma of being queer in America, all with a flair and sense of fun absent from typical protests. Unlike these political protests that aim to change government laws and policies, Pride parades are coordinated, concerted attempts to improve the standing of LGBT people in American culture.

Mouths of rain : an anthology of Black lesbian thought

"... collection tracing the history of intellectual thought by Black Lesbian writers..."

LGBTQ Social Movements

LGBTQ Social Movements provides an accessible introduction to mainstream LGBTQ movements in the US, illustrating the many forms that LGBTQ activism has taken since the mid-twentieth century.  Covering a range of topics, including the Stonewall uprising and gay liberation, AIDS politics, queer activism, marriage equality fights, youth action, and bisexual and transgender justice, Lisa M. Stulberg explores how marginalized people and communities have used a wide range of political and cultural tools to demand and create change. The five key themes that guide the book are assimilationism and liberationism as complex strategies for equality, the limits and possibilities of legal change, the role of art and popular culture in social change, the interconnectedness of social movements, and the role of privilege in movement organizing. 

For More Information

Please visit our LGBTQ+ Research Guide for more resources related to books, articles, media and reference sources; university, local, and national resources; and links to websites and podcasts.