
Attribution
John Gallagher and Chris BullPublication Details
Book1st edCrown Publishers1996Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (LOWER LEVEL) HQ76.8.U5 G34 1996 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogDescription
In Perfect Enemies, Chris Bull and John Gallagher trace the origins and growth of both groups from the seminal year 1969, when the Stonewall Riots ushered in the modern gay rights movement and when Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell embarked on direct political action to bring strict biblical interpretation to bear on public policy. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
- Gay rights — United States
- Gay liberation movement — United States
- Homophobia — United States
- Homosexuality — Religious aspects — Christianity
- Fundamentalism
- Conservatism — United States
- Conservatism — Religious aspects — Christianity
- Christianity and politics
- United States — Politics and government — 1993-2001
Places in this work
Notes
- Includes index
- A political war is raging in the United States between two groups once considered radical, even marginal, by most Americans: the religious right and the gay movement. Perfect Enemies reveals why this conflict has moved to the center of political debate and become a pivotal issue in elections at all levels. In Perfect Enemies, Chris Bull and John Gallagher trace the origins and growth of both groups from the seminal year of 1969, when the Stonewall Riots ushered in the modern gay rights movement and when Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell embarked on direct political action to bring strict biblical interpretation to bear on public policy. The skillful grassroots organizational efforts of both movements, based on a mutual demonization of each side by the other, resulted in growing political clout that developed under the radar of mainstream political commentators - and exploded upon the scene in a series of bitter and, to most Americans, bewildering political conflicts. From President Clinton’s aborted pledge to lift the ban on gays and lesbians in the armed forces to the statewide antigay initiatives in Oregon, Colorado, and Maine, Bull and Gallagher offer the first comprehensive account of the rhetoric and strategies - often remarkably alike - of both sides, and of how the mutual passion of these perfect enemies is influencing electoral politics from the state houses to the White House
Contents
- Ch. 1. The Battle Lines Are Drawn: The culture wars of today are rooted in old hostilities
- Ch. 2. Test Market: Oregon becomes the home of the antigay initiative
- Ch. 3. Angels and Demons: Gays and religious conservatives in the 1992 presidential campaign
- Ch. 4. No Special Rights : The success of Colorado’s antigay amendment
- Ch. 5. The Stroke of a Pen: How the religious right bested gay groups on the military ban
- Ch. 6. Brushfires: Antigay outbreaks in Cincinnati, Georgia, and Texas
- Ch. 7. Family Values: The promise and peril of gay marriage and parenting
- Ch. 8. Running on Religion: The Republican Revolution and the 1996 presidential race
- Epilogue: From Arms to Armistice - Why the gay rights debate is not a war
ISBN
- 0517701987
LCCN
Open Library ID
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