queer

Garrison Keillor writes:

Ordinarily I don’t like to use this space to talk about my newspaper column but the most recent column aroused such angry reactions that I thought I should reply. The column was done tongue-in-cheek, always a risky thing, and was meant to be funny, another risky thing these days, and two sentences about gay people lit a fire in some readers and sent them racing to their computers to fire off some jagged e-mails. That’s okay. But the underlying cause of the trouble is rather simple.

I live in a small world — the world of entertainment, musicians, writers — in which gayness is as common as having brown eyes. Ever since I was in college, gay men and women have been friends, associates, heroes, adversaries, and in that small world, we talk openly and we kid each other and think nothing of it. But in the larger world, gayness is controversial. In almost every state, gay marriage would be voted down if put on a ballot. Gay men and women have been targeted by the right wing as a hot-button issue. And so gay people out in the larger world feel besieged to some degree. In the small world I live in, they feel accepted and cherished as individuals, but in the larger world they may feel like Types. My column spoke as we would speak in my small world and it was read by people in the larger world and thus the misunderstanding. And for that, I am sorry. Gay people who set out to be parents can be just as good parents as anybody else, and they know that, and so do I.

Maria posted about the sale of Daily Dose of Queer here. She recently sent me an email that included updated traffic statistics. Here are Daily Dose of Queer’s most recent monthly stats:

February 07: 28079 unique visitors, 62360 visitors, 422278 page views

January 07: 19,990 unique visitors, 41,120 visits, 379,817 page views

If you’re interested in making an offer, please contact Maria here. She will respond to all inquiries within 48 hours.

Deadline extended until May 31st!

Gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer men’s gender identities often exist somewhere outside the traditional categories of “masculine” and “feminine.” Sissies, drag queens, and leather daddies alike play with gender in a way that cannot be accounted for in traditional understandings of maleness. This collection — part blog, part anthology, part audiobook — aims to shatter traditional understandings of maleness and point towards a new understanding of how queerness and gender intersect.

BEYOND MASCULINITY is looking for contributions in four key areas. Contributors should not feel bound by these categories – they should rather be seen as potential prompts:

* Identity Intersections: How do race, ability, class, and other kinds of identities and experiences intersect with gender and queerness — and how do these intersections complicate our relationship to traditional understandings of “maleness?”

* Feminism, Gender, and Politics: How can feminism inform our understanding of queer male gender? Can queer men be feminists? How can we use our queerness as a political tool? What does male privilege look like for queer men?

* Bodies, Desire, and Pleasure: What kinds of male bodies are desired? Fetishized? Where does sexual desire intersect with queer gender and how are these politics mapped out on our bodies?

* Queer Male Communities: How are our identities produced through our communities? How do the gender norms and politics of gay/bi/trans/queer male communities both liberate and constrain us?

We’re looking for queer male writers to step up and contribute their thoughts to this online project. This is not your typical bookstore anthology. It will be only available online – and it will be completely free of charge to the public. Wih its unique implementation of media, this anthology aims to change the way queer non-fiction is done.

[via Daily Dose of Queer]

Financial guru Suze Orman was interviewed for the NY Times Magazine section (“She’s So Money“), admits she is gay, and wishes she could wed her partner:

Are you married? I’m in a relationship with life. My life is just out there. I’m on the road every day. I love my life.

Meaning what? Do you live with anyone? K.T. is my life partner. K.T. stands for Kathy Travis. We’re going on seven years. I have never been with a man in my whole life. I’m still a 55-year-old virgin.

Would you like to get married to K.T.? Yes. Absolutely. Both of us have millions of dollars in our name. It’s killing me that upon my death, K.T. is going to lose 50 percent of everything I have to estate taxes. Or vice versa.

I got a note from Maria Angeline, who is selling Daily Dose of Queer:

It’s been a wonderful two years around here. This blog’s most recent accomplishment, becoming a 2007 Bloggies finalist, was a completely unexpected and amazing surprise…I’ve had a great run with this site, but it’s time for me to give all my time and energy to other projects. That said, I am looking to sell DailyDoseofQueer.com.

It’s been one of my daily readers, and always had interesting and substantive news about GLBT issues. Perhaps you, or someone you know would be interested in taking over this outstanding blog.

Editor: Maria Angeline
Publisher: Merge Press
Submissions Deadline: March 15, 2007
Anticipated Publication Date: Spring 2008

Femmes are still invisible. Society can’t see past our heels to hear our stories, so we must continue to build platforms for our voices. Visible: A Femmethology, a forthcoming anthology about the power and complications in presenting femme as a gender and breaking the traditional meaning of feminine, aims to showcase blunt, personal essays exploring what “femme” means to those who claim it as an identity.

Give me your experiences, your inner dialogues, your theories and practices. Please do not send fiction, poetry, or erotica. I will not consider any material to which you do not fully own the rights. I am seeking prose that is thoughtful, analytical, raw, challenging, exploratory, and uniquely you. (more…)

The Lambda Literary Awards are presented in 25 categories. Click on a category below to see the nominees for this year’s awards. Nominations were accepted between September 1 and December 1, 2006.

Finalists in each category will be announced by March 1, 2007. Winners in each category will be announced on Thursday, May 31, at the Lambda Literary Awards Ceremony in New York City.

Anthology | Arts & Culture | Bisexual | Childrens/Young Adult
Drama/Theater |Humor | LGBT Nonfiction | LGBT Studies
Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Horror | Spirituality | Transgender

Lesbian Fiction | Lesbian Romance | Lesbian Mystery | Lesbian Poetry
Lesbian Memoir/Biography | Lesbian Erotica | Lesbian Debut Fiction

Gay Fiction | Gay Romance | Gay Mystery | Gay Poetry
Gay Memoir/Biography | Gay Erotica | Debut Gay Fiction

IMG 0077 Monday NightValentine’s Day Smut: Zaedryn and Rachel read their stories from ‘Best Lesbian Erotica 2007‘ (edited by Tristan Taormino and Emma Donoghue) at Bluestockings Cafe.

IMG 0087 Monday Night‘Under the Covers’ Premiere Party: Rachel Kramer Bussel, Christen Clifford and Lillian Ann Slugocki

IMG 0094 Monday NightUnder the Covers Premiere party: Jamye Waxman (one of the stars of Under the Covers) and her brother Ian. Not shown, her beaming parents.

The Carnival of Bent Attractions is a group of selected blog posts from various blogs on articles of interest to the gay, lesbian, bi-sexual, trans and queer communities. The Carnival of Bent Attractions is published monthly.

The Sex Carnival will be hosting the March Carnival on March 10th. You can submit a post here. The deadline for submission is March 1st.

Initiative 957, an initiative requiring all married couples to file “proof of procreation” within three years of a marriage, was filed by the Washington Defense of Marriage Alliance in response to a ruling made by the Washington Supreme Court last year stating gay and lesbian couples could be prevented from marrying by the state because Washington has a legitimate interest in preserving marriage for couples who can procreate. I-957 has been accepted by Washington Secretary of State Sam Reed.

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A case in California’s Ninth Circuit Court in Pasadena is asking the court to decide if stating specific preferences in roommate ads is discriminatory and in violation of federal Fair Housing statutes.

The suit was filed against Roommates.com by the Fair Housing Councils of San Fernando Valley and San Diego.

    According to the Ninth Circuit lawsuit, if a straight woman were to advertise that she is seeking a gay male roommate, it could be seen as potentially discriminatory towards applicants who aren’t gay males.

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