In Search of Stonewall  The Riots at 50, the Gay & Lesbian Review at 25  Best Essays, 1994-2018
Free Download Richard Schneider Jr., "In Search of Stonewall : The Riots at 50, the Gay & Lesbian Review at 25 : Best Essays, 1994-2018"
English | 2019 | pages: 211 | ISBN: 0578411083 | EPUB | 1,8 mb
The year was 1994. It was the 25th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots and, as luck would have it, the year in which a new magazine called The Harvard Gay & Lesbian Review was publishing its first issue (Winter '94). The fact that The G&LR's first year coincided with Stonewall's 25th forever joined its fate with that of the founding event of the modern LGBT movement. This book commemorates the magazine's 25th birthday with a collection of relevant articles culled from its 136 issues.


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Gonzo Wall Street Riots, Radicals, Racism and Revolution
Free Download Richard E. Farley, "Gonzo Wall Street: RIOTS, RADICALS, RACISM AND REVOLUTION: How the Go-Go Bankers of the 1960s Crashed the Financial System and Bamboozled Washington"
English | 2022 | ISBN: 1682452166, 1682451984 | 385 pages | AZW3 / MOBI | 25.3 MB
In the 1960s, the fabric of American society was torn apart by deep divisions over the Vietnam War, violence in our cities, and the senseless assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr., and Senator Robert Kennedy. Civil rights, as well as women's and gay liberation movements, were challenging America. Music, literature, fashion, and "substances" were transforming the culture and upending conventional morality and manners. The public, the media, and politicians, preoccupied with these dramatic changes, paid little attention to Wall Street, where a crisis was brewing that would cause more investment banks to fail than during the Great Depression.


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Race Riots Comedy and Ethnicity in Modern British Fiction
Race Riots: Comedy and Ethnicity in Modern British Fiction By Michael L. Ross
2006 | 328 Pages | ISBN: 0773531092 | PDF | 5 MB
From Black Mischief to The Buddha of Suburbia, twentieth-century British fiction is rife with racial humour. Challenging the common reluctance to take such comedy seriously, Michael Ross shows how humour directed at ethnic others exposes deep-seated national attitudes. Race Riots explores the development and implications of racial comedy in British literature from the early twentieth century to the present. Ross examines racial humour as a manifestation of post-colonialism and questions contemporary critiques of political correctness. Looking at cartoons from pre-World War II issues of Punch, Ross shows how disdain for non-Europeans plays a key role in period British humour and links this idea to the racial humour in the work of Evelyn Waugh and Joyce Cary. He also demonstrates how these assumptions are later turned on their heads by writers such as Salmon Rushdie. Race Riots documents the growing self-consciousness in British comic fiction about the moral status of humour itself, a tendency that aligns recent writers like Hanif Kureishi, Zadie Smith, and Angela Levy with broader postmodernist trends.


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