Brazil Movement Thesis

1164 Words3 Pages

Adam, Barry D. “The Building of a Brazilian Movement .” The Global Emergence of Gay and Lesbian Politics: National Imprints of a Worldwide Movement, Temple University Press, 1999, pp. 91–110. The chapter talks about how gay relationships are not legal but not illegal. Since the 19th and 20th centuries restricting "homosexual behavior." The adults engaging in this type of behavior can be charged with "public assault on decency." The chapter also talks about how men who have sex with other men fall into two different categories. Either the "homim" (real man) or "bicha" (fairy). These terms reflect how a relationship between a man and a woman are considered, where the man is the more dominant in the relationship and the women is more submissive. …show more content…

There are still seventy-five countries that criminalize same-sex acts between consenting adults according to the International Lesbian and Gay Association. They argue that a big argument in LGBTQ social movements is human rights.

Eckstein, Susan, and Timothy P. Wickham-Crowley. “Struggles for Social Rights in Latin America: Claims in the Arena of Subsistence, Labor, Gender, Ethnicity .” Struggles for Social Rights in Latin America, Routledge, 2003, pp. 1–26. This chapter looks at social rights of the lgbtq community in Latin America. The authors say that "social rights" is the key term to their thesis. The authors look at four arenas of social rights in the region. "Rights to subsistence protection and social consumption, rights to work-linked benefits, rights based on gender, and rights based on race/ethnicity."(pp 2) They say that the greater diversity of options means the less likely people are to directly address the violations. Not only do these authors look at social rights for the gay community, but also at social rights for any community in the latin american …show more content…

“Latin America Through Transnational Lenses .” Out in the Periphery: Latin America's Gay Rights Revolution, Oxford University Press, 2016, pp. 15–73. This chapter starts off saying that the gay rights movement started the 1969 Stonewall Rebellion. The riots were a series of brutal protest by the LGBTQ community against the raid that took place that early morning of June 28, 1969. Around the world, especially in Latin America the LGBTQ community demaded for equal rights. They used the word “global queering,” which explained how the international agenda for gay rights moved from New York City to countries around the globe; including Latin America. The author argues that the biggest epidemic to shape “global queering” was the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Robinson, Christine M, and Sue E Spivey. “Putting Lesbians in Their Place: Deconstructing Ex- Gay Discources of Female Homosexuality in a Global Context.” Social Sciences, 9 Sept. 2015, pp. 879–907. Google

Open Document