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I'm currently working as a practicum student at the Ohio Historical Society. My project is to index and create a finding aide for a collection of papers from Stonewall Columbus, a GLBT rights group. Most of the papers are agendas, minutes, newsletters, etc, from the mid to late 1980's. Obviously I don't have time to read every paper, but I've gotten an eye-opening look into what the gay community went through during that time.
The fear of HIV/AIDS is easy to see in many of the publications; I read a few medical advice brochures, and it's hard to imagine the terror of a disease that no one really knew anything about, or how it was spread (though their advice seemed to be very sound, concerning safe sex practices, testing, etc). There was almost desperation in the tone of some of the advice. I can't imagine what it was like to live in such a dangerous and uncertain environment.
The photos of rallies and marches are interesting too. Primarily in that the signs and slogans are basically identical to the signs and slogans I see now. Rightwingers like to claim that gay marriage has suddenly become an issue in the last 5-10 years. Well, I've seen pictures of people advocating that exact thing dating from years before I was born. I think that cultural acceptance of homosexuality has increased (though I have no perspective from inside the community, so maybe it hasn't). But it's sobering to realize that in legal terms, for most states, nothing much has changed in the last 30 years.
Reading letters to the editor, magazine columns, and personal correspondence really puts a face on the issues GLBT people have had to deal with. It's so easy to talk about "The ____ Movement" and leave it at that, forgetting that real people have really suffered; I see this with liberals just as much as conservatives.
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