Academic literature on the topic 'Gay liberation'

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Journal articles on the topic "Gay liberation"

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Ashley, Colin P. "Gay Liberation." New Labor Forum 24, no. 3 (August 6, 2015): 28–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1095796015597453.

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Wyman, Hastings. "Gay Liberation Comes to Dixie—Slowly." American Review of Politics 23 (July 1, 2002): 167–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.15763/issn.2374-7781.2002.23.0.167-192.

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This article examines a little studied aspect of southern politics: the emergence of gay rights activists as players in mainstream southern politics. The article examines state-by-state electoral successes of openly-gay candidates throughout the South as well as the impact of gay rights activists on public policy (at both the local and state level), hate crimes legislation, employment rights, higher education, and private business. The movement of homosexuals from the shadows of society to open participation in public life has been a major national trend during the past three decades, and the South has not been in the forefront of this development. However, significant evidence suggests that, as Dixie has accommodated to other social changes, it is adapting to gay liberation-albeit more slowly than the rest of the nation.
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Rupp, Leila J., and Margaret Cruikshank. "The Gay and Lesbian Liberation Movement." American Historical Review 99, no. 1 (February 1994): 326. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2166354.

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Kennedy, Elizabeth Lapovsky, and Margaret Cruikshank. "The Gay and Lesbian Liberation Movement." Journal of American History 81, no. 2 (September 1994): 824. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2081412.

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Schehr, Lawrence R. "Defense and Illustration of Gay Liberation." Yale French Studies, no. 90 (1996): 139. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2930361.

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Adam, Barry D., and Margaret Cruikshank. "The Gay and Lesbian Liberation Movement." Contemporary Sociology 22, no. 6 (November 1993): 813. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2075962.

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Chin, Matthew. "Tracing “Gay Liberation” through Postindependence Jamaica." Public Culture 31, no. 2 (May 1, 2019): 323–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/08992363-7286849.

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Wallace, Rachel. "Gay Life and Liberation, a Photographic Record of 1970s Belfast." Public Historian 41, no. 2 (May 1, 2019): 144–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/tph.2019.41.2.144.

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In March 2017, the first LGBTQ+ history exhibition to be displayed at a national museum in Northern Ireland debuted at the Ulster Museum. The exhibition, entitled “Gay Life and Liberation: A Photographic Exhibition of 1970s Belfast,” included private photographs captured by Doug Sobey, a founding member of gay liberation organizations in Belfast during the 1970s, and featured excerpts from oral histories with gay and lesbian activists. It portrayed the emergence of the gay liberation movement during the Troubles and how the unique social, political, and religious situation in Northern Ireland fundamentally shaped the establishment of a gay identity and community in the 1970s. By displaying private photographs and personal histories, it revealed the hidden history of the LGBTQ+ community to the museum-going public. The exhibition also enhanced and extended the histories of the Troubles, challenging traditional assumptions and perceptions of the conflict.
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Zafir, Lindsay. "Queer Connections." GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 27, no. 2 (April 1, 2021): 253–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10642684-8871691.

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This article examines the gay French author Jean Genet’s 1970 tour of the United States with the Black Panther Party, using Genet’s unusual relationship with the Panthers as a lens for analyzing the possibilities and pitfalls of radical coalition politics in the long sixties. I rely on mainstream and alternative media coverage of the tour, articles by Black Panthers and gay liberationists, and Genet’s own writings and interviews to argue that Genet’s connection with the Panthers provided a queer bridge between the Black Power and gay liberation movements. Their story challenges the neglect of such coalitions by historians of the decade and illuminates some of the reasons the Panthers decided to support gay liberation. At the same time, Genet distanced himself from the gay liberation movement, and his unusual connection with the Panthers highlights some of the difficulties activists faced in building and sustaining such alliances on a broad scale.
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Mahaffy, Kimberly A., and Richard Cleaver. "Know My Name: A Gay Liberation Theology." Review of Religious Research 38, no. 3 (March 1997): 284. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3512098.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Gay liberation"

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de, Souza Torrecilha Ramom. "The mobilization of the gay liberation movement." PDXScholar, 1986. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/3661.

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This thesis examines the development and evolution of the gay movement. It raises the questions as to why the gay movement was not organized prior to the 1960's. The study starts in the 1940's and ends in 1970. It employs qualitative research methods for the collection and analysis of primary and secondary data sources. Blumer's description of general and specific social movements and Resource Mobilization Theory were used as theoretical frames of reference. The former explained the developmental stages in the career of the movement and the latter focused on the behavior of movement organizations.
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Callwood, Dan. "Re-evaluating the French gay liberation moment, 1968-1983." Thesis, Queen Mary, University of London, 2017. http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/25809.

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The thesis offers a reappraisal of the process of 'liberation' for homosexual men in France from the events of May 1968 until the onset of the AIDS crisis in 1983. I argue that what we have come to call gay liberation was in fact a complex and contentious process of transformation in the place of homosexual men in French society, a decade marked as much by continuity as it was by change. Gay liberation has been previously understood as a political movement that brought the gay man onto the political stage in spectacular fashion, beginning in the US and sweeping across Western Europe. New political activism is said to have provoked the changes that led to legal equality, culminating in recent marriage legislation. This narrative has solidified into a liberation 'mythology', written mainly by activists themselves, replete with its founding events, language and metaphors. A re-evaluation of the 1970s as a historical moment reveals not the beginning of a triumphant march to equality led by activists, but a transformation in the place of homosexual men in society that contains its own fits and starts, successes and dead ends. The thesis is divided into three parts: Ruptures, continuities and life stories. Part one focuses on aspects of change, the emergence of radical political groups and the burgeoning market catering to gay men. The second part moves to aspects of continuity: the repression of homosexual activity and the persistent stereotyping of homosexuality as the realm of a Parisian literary elite. To close the thesis, part three uses oral history to consider the life stories of men who experienced the period.
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Sewell, Shaun Erwin. "Public sexuality a contemporary history of gay images and identity /." Connect to this title online, 2005. http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-01212005-212501/.

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Higgins, Ross. "A sense of belonging : pre-liberation space, symbolics, and leadership in gay Montreal." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/tape16/PQDD_0012/NQ36983.pdf.

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Edwards, Malcolm Stuart. "Christianity and subversion of identity : theology, ethics and gay liberation." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1998. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/272491.

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Mechar, Kyle William. "The politics of speaking for : theorizing the limits of liberation and equality in gay and lesbian political discourse." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2000. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp02/NQ54374.pdf.

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Waites, Matthew. "The age of consent, homosexuality and citizenship in the United Kingdom (1885-1999)." Thesis, London South Bank University, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.369884.

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DeFilippis, Joseph Nicholas. "A Queer Liberation Movement? A Qualitative Content Analysis of Queer Liberation Organizations, Investigating Whether They are Building a Separate Social Movement." Thesis, Portland State University, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3722297.

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In the last forty years, U.S. national and statewide LGBT organizations, in pursuit of “equality” through a limited and focused agenda, have made remarkably swift progress moving that agenda forward. However, their agenda has been frequently criticized as prioritizing the interests of White, middle-class gay men and lesbians and ignoring the needs of other LGBT people. In their shadows have emerged numerous grassroots organizations led by queer people of color, transgender people, and low-income LGBT people. These “queer liberation” groups have often been viewed as the left wing of the GRM, but have not been extensively studied. My research investigated how these grassroots liberation organizations can be understood in relation to the equality movement, and whether they actually comprise a separate movement operating alongside, but in tension with, the mainstream gay rights movement.

This research used a qualitative content analysis, grounded in black feminism’s framework of intersectionality, queer theory, and social movement theories, to examine eight queer liberation organizations. Data streams included interviews with staff at each organization, organizational videos from each group, and the organizations’ mission statements. The study used deductive content analysis, informed by a predetermined categorization matrix drawn from social movement theories, and also featured inductive analysis to expand those categories throughout the analysis.

This study’s findings indicate that a new social movement – distinct from the mainstream equality organizations – does exist. Using criteria informed by leading social movement theories, findings demonstrate that these organizations cannot be understood as part of the mainstream equality movement but must be considered a separate social movement. This “queer liberation movement” has constituents, goals, strategies, and structures that differ sharply from the mainstream equality organizations. This new movement prioritizes queer people in multiple subordinated identity categories, is concerned with rebuilding institutions and structures, rather than with achieving access to them, and is grounded more in “liberation” or “justice” frameworks than “equality.” This new movement does not share the equality organizations’ priorities (e.g., marriage) and, instead, pursues a different agenda, include challenging the criminal justice and immigration systems, and strengthening the social safety net.

Additionally, the study found that this new movement complicates existing social movement theory. For decades, social movement scholars have documented how the redistributive agenda of the early 20th century class-based social movements has been replaced by the demands for access and recognition put forward by the identity-based movements of the 1960s New Left. While the mainstream equality movement can clearly be characterized as an identity-based social movement, the same is not true of the groups in this study. This queer liberation movement, although centered on identity claims, has goals that are redistributive as well as recognition-based.

While the emergence of this distinct social movement is significant on its own, of equal significance is the fact that it represents a new post-structuralist model of social movement. This study presents a “four-domain” framework to explain how this movement exists simultaneously inside and outside of other social movements, as a bridge between them, and as its own movement. Implications for research, practice, and policy in social work and allied fields are presented.

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Mongie, Lauren Danger. "The discourse of liberation: the portrayal of the gay liberation movement in South African news media from 1982 to 2006." Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/85802.

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Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2013.
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This dissertation reports on a study that straddles the applied linguistic fields of discourse analysis, critical discourse analysis and a sociolinguistic field recently referred to as “queer linguistics”. The study investigated the linguistic construction of gay mobilisation in South African media discourses across a period of almost 30 years. It aimed to identify characteristics of the Discourse that topicalised the gay liberation movement, considering specifically the linguistic means used in articulating on the one hand the need and the right to gay liberation, and on the other hand the public opposition to acknowledging gay rights. It invoked a social theory identified as ‘framing theory’ in analysing the different kinds of views, attitudes, social positions and arguments motivating for or agitating against the institution and protection of gay rights in post-apartheid South Africa. The project takes Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA), particularly its applications in considering features and functions of media discourses, as its primary theoretical framework. First, following the insistence of the Discourse-historical approach put forward by Wodak (1990), it gives an overview of the social and historical context against which the recognition of gay rights in South Africa developed. It follows the analytic methodology suggested by van Dijk (1985) in considering issues of ‘language and power’, and the ways in which the access of elites to media attention is drawn on to support and give credence to particular ideologies. Supplementary to the application of CDA methods, an analytic approach from the fields of Social Movement Theory and Collective Action Framing is introduced to make sense of the discursive strategies implemented in the Discourse thematically tied to the South African gay liberation movement, particularly from the early 1980s up to 2006. This period was marked by the movement’s pursuit of social mobilization. Attention went to the ways in which arguments for and against gay rights were instantiated in the media using a variety of different frames. Such analysis could disclose the extent to which the "anti-apartheid" master frame was utilised by actors of the gay liberation movement. Based on their circulation demographics, two local South African weekly newspapers, City Press and Mail & Guardian, were screened in order to identify articles and letters to the editor relevant to the gay liberation discourse. The full complement of published items topicalising homosexuality directly and indirectly were collected as two corpora in order to assess the ways in which they contributed to public discourses of gay liberation. Two analytic exercises were done: first, the content of the full data-set was “tagged” and categorised according to the textual nature of the newspaper item, and the kinds of frames used in its presentation; second, a number of articles and letters were selected from the corpora for detailed analysis that would illustrate the use of the various strategies and frames found to characterise the Discourse. The first more quantitative analysis provided an overview of patterns, trends and editorial practices typically used in the media representations. The second more qualitative analysis provided insight into the finer details of media presention of ideas aimed at affecting the knowledge and attitudes of the intended and imagined readers. The findings of these analyses were presented in terms of quantifiable results as well as detailed descriptions. In broad strokes, the quantifiable findings showed that the Mail & Guardian corpus was significantly more outspoken in advocating for gay rights than the City Press corpus, and that both publications frequently framed homosexuality in terms of “tolerance”, “religion” and “rights”. The quantifiable findings also showed that in their discourses of gay tolerance and gay rights, both the City Press and the Mail & Guardian made significant use of frames typically and widely used by the media in the discourse of political change at the time. The detailed analyses investigated the textual reproduction of the authors’ ideologies, drawing attention to their regular reliance on certain types of arguments used for and against gay rights in the selected newspapers.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie proefskrif lewer verslag oor ‘n studie wat die toegepaste taalwetenskapterreine van diskoersanalise en kritiese diskoersanalise asook ‘n sosiolinguistiese terrein wat sedert onlangs “queer-taalwetenskap” genoem word, betrek. In die studie word daar ondersoek ingestel na die linguistiese konstruksie van gaymobilisering in Suid-Afrikaanse mediadiskoerse wat oor ‘n tydperk van bykans 30 jaar strek. Die doel van die studie was om eienskappe van die Diskoers wat die gaybevrydingsbeweging topikaliseer te identifiseer, met inagname van spesifiek die taalkundige middele gebruik tydens die artikulering van die behoefte aan en die reg tot gaybevryding aan die een kant en die openbare weerstand teen die erkenning van gayregte aan die ander kant. Die analises van die verskillende standpunte, gesindhede, sosiale posisies en argumente ten gunste van of teen die instelling en beskerming van gayregte in post-apartheid Suid-Afrika beroep hulself op ‘n sosiale teorie wat as “ramingsteorie” (Engels: framing theory) geïdentifiseer is. Die projek neem kritiese diskoersanalise as hoof teoretiese raamwerk aan, veral kritiese diskoersanalise se toepassings in die oorweging van kenmerke en funksies van mediadiskoerse. Eerstens, deur die aandrang van die Diskoers-historiese benadering voorgestel deur Wodak (1990) te volg, word daar ‘n oorsig oor die sosiale en historiese konteks gegee waarin die erkenning van gayregte in Suid-Afrika ontwikkel het. Die analitiese metodologie voorgestel deur van Dijk (1985) word gebruik tydens die oorweging van kwessies rakende “taal en mag” asook wyses waarop sogenaamde “elites” se toegang tot media-aandag betrek word om geloofwaardigheid aan bepaalde ideologieë te verleen. Aanvullend tot die toepassing van kritiese diskoersanalise-metodes word ‘n analitiese benadering uit die terreine van Sosiale Bewegingsteorie en Kollektiewe Ramingsteorie betrek om sin te maak uit die diskursiewe strategieë wat (spesifiek van die vroeë 1980s tot 2006) geïmplementeer is in die Diskoers wat tematies aan die Suid-Afrikaanse gaybevrydingsbeweging verbind is. Hierdie tydperk is gekenmerk deur die beweging se nastrewing van sosiale mobilisering. Aandag is verleen aan die wyses waarop argumente ten guste van en teen gayregte geïnstansieer is in die media deur gebruik te maak van ‘n verskeidenheid rame. Só ‘n analise kan die mate waarin die “anti-apartheid” meesterraam deur spelers in die gaybevrydingsbeweging gebruik is, onthul. Gebaseer op hul oplaagdemografie is bydraes in twee Suid-Afrikaanse weeklikse koerante, City Press en Mail & Guardian gesif om artikels en briewe aan die redakteur relevant tot die gaybevrydingsdiskoers te identifiseer. Die vol getal gepubliseerde items wat homoseksualiteit direk en/of indirek topikaliseer, is as twee korpusse versamel om sodoende die wyses te ondersoek waarop hulle bydra tot openbare diskoerse van gaybevryding. Twee analitiese oefeninge is uitgevoer: eerstens is die inhoud van die volledige datastel geëtiketteer en gekategoriseer op grond van die teks-aard van die koerantitem en die tipe rame wat in die item se aanbieding gebruik is; tweedens is ‘n aantal artikels en briewe uit die korpusse geselekteer vir gedetailleerde analise wat die gebruik van verskeie strategieë en rame sou illustreer wat bevind is om kenmerkend van die Diskoers te wees. Die eerste, meer kwantitatiewe analise het ‘n oorsig gegee oor patrone, tendense en redaksionele praktyke wat tipies in die mediavoorstellings gebruik is. Die tweede, meer kwalitatiewe analise het insig gegee in die fyner besonderhede van mediavoorstelling van idees wat daarop gemik is om die kennis en gesindhede van die bedoelde en denkbeeldige lesers te affekteer. Die bevindinge van hierdie analises is in terme van kwantifiseerbare resultate asook gedetailleerde beskrywings aangebied. In breë trekke het die kwantifiseerbare bevindinge daarop gedui dat die Mail & Guardian-korpus beduidend meer uitgesproke as die City Press-korpus was in die bepleiting van gayregte, en dat beide koerante gereeld homoseksualiteit in terme van “toleransie”, “godsdiens” en “regte” geraam het. Die kwantifiseerbare bevindinge het ook aangetoon dat beide City Press en Mail & Guardian beduidend van rame gebruik gemaak het wat tipies en wyd in daardie stadium deur die media gebruik is in die diskoers van politieke verandering. Die gedetailleerde analises het ondersoek ingestel na die tekstuele reproduksie van die skrywers se ideologieë, en spesifiek die aandag gevestig op hul gereelde staatmaking op sekere tipes argumente wat in die geselekteerde koerante vir en teen gayregte gebruik is.
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Green, Adam. "Saved, sanctified and filled with gay liberation theology with aamsm and the black church." Honors in the Major Thesis, University of Central Florida, 2011. http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETH/id/387.

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AAMSM (African American men who have sex with men) endure homophobia and racism in their political realities because of their identity. How do multiple oppressions impact the experiences of AAMSM participating within Black churches? Despite the Black church's legacy for liberating African Americans, AAMSM feel demonized and alienated while enduring religion-based homophobia espoused within many Black churches. In the church, AAMSM are pushed further down the hierarchy of oppression and privilege. In response to these observations, this thesis employs a sexual discourse of resistance. I engage this discourse with a literature review in order to discover links between homophobia and AAMSM in an interdisciplinary manner. Jungian psychology is then utilized to interpret internalized oppression. This leads to a discussion of social and religious justice for AAMSM in the Black church through the lens of liberation theology. While the oppressed have become oppressors within the Black church as regards AAMSM, liberation theology affirms all of humanity. Liberation theology provides a message of love for AAMSM and a source of Christian ethics for the Black church.
B.A.
Bachelors
Office of Undergraduate Studies
Interdisciplinary Studies
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Books on the topic "Gay liberation"

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Homosexual: Oppression and liberation. New York: New York University Press, 1993.

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Homosexual: Oppression and liberation. London: Serpent's Tail, 1993.

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Colin, Wilson. Socialists and gay liberation. London: Socialist Worker, 1994.

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Fritscher, Jack. Stonewall: Stories of gay liberation. San Francisco: Palm Drive Pub., 2009.

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Dilley, Patrick. Gay Liberation to Campus Assimilation. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04645-3.

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Mike, Macnair, ed. Gay liberation in the eighties. London: Pluto Press, 1985.

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Cruikshank, Margaret. The gay and lesbian liberation movement. New York, NY: Routledge, 1992.

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Theologizing gay: Fragments of liberation activity. Oak Cliff, Texas: Minuteman Press, 1991.

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The end of straight supremacy: Realizing gay liberation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.

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Karla, Jay, and Young Allen 1941-, eds. Out of the closets: Voices of gay liberation. 2nd ed. New York: New York University Press, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Gay liberation"

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Strub, Whitney. "Gay Liberation (1963–1980)." In The Routledge History of Queer America, 82–94. New York, NY : Routledge, 2018. |: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315747347-7.

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Dilley, Patrick. "An Introduction to Early Gay and Lesbian Campus Organizing." In Gay Liberation to Campus Assimilation, 1–12. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04645-3_1.

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Dilley, Patrick. "Student Groups’ Formulation of Gay Liberation Identity in the 1970s: Part I." In Gay Liberation to Campus Assimilation, 13–73. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04645-3_2.

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Dilley, Patrick. "Student Groups’ Formulation of Gay Liberation Identity in the 1970s: Part II." In Gay Liberation to Campus Assimilation, 75–118. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04645-3_3.

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Dilley, Patrick. "Gay and Lesbian Student Groups Struggle to Serve Campus in the 1980s." In Gay Liberation to Campus Assimilation, 119–79. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04645-3_4.

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Dilley, Patrick. "Student Groups Assimilate Despite Campus Resistance in the Early 1990s." In Gay Liberation to Campus Assimilation, 181–232. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04645-3_5.

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Dilley, Patrick. "How Non-heterosexual Student Groups Utilized Liberation to Achieve Campus Assimilation." In Gay Liberation to Campus Assimilation, 233–52. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-04645-3_6.

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Ross, Liz. "The Australian left and gay liberation." In The Far Left in Australia since 1945, 191–209. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2018. | Series: Routledge studies in fascism and the far right: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429487347-11.

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Sibalis, Michael. "The Gay Liberation Movement in France." In Sexual Revolutions, 188–202. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137321466_11.

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Slonecker, Blake. "The Collective Will: Gay Liberation and Cubaphilia." In A New Dawn for the New Left, 111–24. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137280831_9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Gay liberation"

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Makii, Daiki, Hirotoshi Sasaki, and Yuka Iga. "In-Situ Measurement of Liberation of a Dissolved Gas in Unsteady Cavitating Flow in Water." In ASME-JSME-KSME 2019 8th Joint Fluids Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ajkfluids2019-5593.

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Abstract Cavitation is a phenomenon in which phase change occurs in a liquid by pressure decrease due to flow acceleration. The phase change is caused by mainly evaporation of the liquid but sometimes by liberation of dissolved non-condensable gas in the liquid. In particular, unsteady cavitation causes vibration, noise, erosion and performance deterioration, which has been a serious problem in the development of fluid machinery. Therefore, it is important to research the characteristics of cavitation generation and develop methods to suppress or control it. In the current CFD (computational fluid dynamics) model of cavitating flow, the saturated vapor pressure has been used as a criterion for determining the cavitation generation or disappearance based on the idea of phase equilibrium, however it is well known that these calculation results don’t agree well with experimental results. For example, it is reported that the cavitation inception pressure is higher than its saturated vapor pressure in water. This is predicted to be resulting from the generation of gaseous cavitation which is caused by liberation of dissolved air, however this has not been taken into consideration in the current CFD model. Here, liberation of non-condensable gas is supposed to be treated by MD (molecular dynamics) then it is not suitable for CFD. Thus, in order to develop a more accurate CFD model for cavitating flow, it is necessary to develop a macroscopic and coarse-grained model of liberation should be developed, which may be related to flow dynamic-stimulation of the unsteady flow field with cavitation. In the present study, we focus attention on relationship between liberation of dissolved gas and unsteadiness of cavitation. Experiment is conducted in high-temperature water cavitation tunnel in which in-situ measurement of the amount of dissolved oxygen can be performed during the operation with cavitation. The variation of dissolved oxygen is used as one of the indexes of liberation of dissolved non-condensable gas during the experiment. The degree of cavitation unsteadiness is judged by calculation based on the FFT (Fast Fourier Transform) of the downstream fluctuation pressure and the RMS (root mean square) of brightness value using images taken with a high-speed camera. In addition, in order to eliminate the factors of dissolved gas liberation other than cavitation unsteadiness, the mainstream pressure, the mainstream temperature and volume of the cavity are made to be equal, respectively. Under the above preconditions, the time evolution of dissolved oxygen amount is measured in several kinds of cavitating flow fields around NACA0015 and NACA16012 hydrofoils.
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Ovchinnikova, Anastasia S., Ilya I. Patrushev, and Alexander M. Grif. "Modeling of Gas-liquid Mixture Flow Considering the Processes of Gas Liberation and Dissolution." In 2021 XV International Scientific-Technical Conference on Actual Problems Of Electronic Instrument Engineering (APEIE). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/apeie52976.2021.9647542.

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3

Neiburger, Par. "The Potential for the Use of Natural Gas and Propane As Alternative Fuels in the Marine Industry." In ASME/USCG 2013 3rd Workshop on Marine Technology and Standards. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/mts2013-0305.

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Liberator Engine Company, LLC designs, develops and produces alternative fuel engines for vehicles around the globe. The Company’s 6.0 Liter Liberator™ gaseous fuels engine will have the ability to operate on Compressed Natural Gas, Liquefied Natural Gas or Liquid Propane Gas: clean, domestic, economical fuels. The Liberator engine will target OEM on road vehicles, as well as off road applications. The Liberator engine is also an excellent choice for the repower of existing diesel vehicles. The 6.0L Liberator™ engine will serve as a replacement engine for vehicle currently operating on a Cummins 5.9L diesel engine or Mercedes diesel 6.0L engine. Paper published with permission.
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Ingistov, Steve. "Flexible Spacers Compressor Stator Blades for Heavy Industrial Gas Turbines Model 7EA." In ASME Turbo Expo 2003, collocated with the 2003 International Joint Power Generation Conference. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2003-38937.

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This paper describes efforts to upgrade the mechanical integrity of axial compressor stator blades. The blades under discussion are part of an axial compressor of a heavy duty industrial Combustion Gas Turbine (CGT) made by GE, frame No. 7, model EA. The axial compressor stator blades, in the later stages of compression, are kept in required position by spacers or shims shaped to match the root profile of the blades. These spacers/shims may be as thick as 1/4 of an inch and as thin as 1/32 of an inch. These spacers/shims tend to wiggle out of the slots and eventually liberate themselves from the stator. This paper introduces a proposed solution to minimize liberation of the spacer/shims by introduction of flexible spacers/shims. This paper also describes field experience with loss of the stator blades in the last stage of compression, due to aerodynamic disturbances.
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Anderson, Rodger O. "Gas Turbine Compressor Casing Repair." In ASME 2005 Power Conference. ASMEDC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pwr2005-50176.

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Many older heavy duty gas turbine models have a very simple compressor casing design for attaching the stationary blades. It consists of grooves machined into a cast iron casing into which are slid blades with square bases. These bases have extending ears on two sides that engage undercut grooves in the main groove. This design works well, however, when the blade groove is very close to an extraction slot this results in a thin ligament in the casing which eventually cracks. This allows blades to liberate into the flow stream which results in major engine damage. One engine, the GE frame 5 with compressor cast iron casings has a tendency to crack in the blade attachment groove at the horizontal joint in row 10 where the air extraction is taken. The casing hook tends to bend due to the aerodynamic forces on the blades. An analysis shows how the blade forces are transferred to the weak casing ligament. This results in a crack at the thin ligament. The bent and cracked casing hooks are generally visible through a borescope inserted into the extraction cavity from the air pipe flanges. If this situation is not repaired, the cracks can lead to both casing material and blade liberation into the compressor flow stream. A quick and low cost repair has been developed to restore these engines to a reliable operating condition.
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Swedenborg, J., S. Frebelius, S. Nydahl, and P. Olsson. "ROLE OF ANTITHROMBIN FOR INACTIVATION OF THROMBIN ON ENDOTHELIUM." In XIth International Congress on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Schattauer GmbH, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1643342.

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Inactivation of thrombin which occurs mainly on the endothelium requires binding of the enzyme to receptors on the endothelial cells. One receptor for thrombin is glycosaminoglycans (GAG). Antithrombin (AT), however, also binds to GAG and may be involved in endothelial inactivation of thrombin.The purpose of the present study was to study the role of AT for the inhibition of thrombin on endothelium. The experiments were performed on rabbit aorta segment in vitro. Thrombin in solution and on the endothelial surface was functionally assayed with aid of a synthetic chromogenic substrate (thrombinS) or fibrinogen (thrombinF). In the latter case liberation of fibrinopeptide A (FPA) was measured. Inactivation of thrombin was estimated by the difference between loss of thrombin from the solution and recovery of thrombin on the endothelial surface during the incubation with thrombin.Preincubation of the endothelium with AT or plasma increased the inactivation of both thrombinS and thrombinF but AT-free plasma had no such effect. Preincubation with heparin (5 IU ml) decreas-the inactivation of thrombin on the endothelium. Endothelial segments preincubated with AT caused a much more rapid inactivation of thrombin over time as compared to control segments. Aortic segments preincubated with heparin caused a slower inactivation of thrombin on the sruface as compared to control segments.It is concluded, that preincubation with AT enhances the inactivation of thrombin on the endothelium whereas preincubation with heparin has the opposite effect. Heparin causes liberation of endogenous AT from the endothelial surface which may explain the decreased inactivation on the surface in the latter case.
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Ling, Ru Piin, Mansoor Hussain, Amin Nizar Razak, Ayham Ashqar, Junirda Jamaludin, and M. Azan A Karim. "Near-Critical Reservoir Fluid Mixture Identification and Phase Behaviour." In International Petroleum Technology Conference. IPTC, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2523/iptc-21288-ms.

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Abstract To appraise hydrocarbon and its properties of a low permeability formation within deep Baram delta reservoirs. Formation X is low permeability silty sandstone. It forms along other formations stacked sandy shale reservoirs. The stacked formations are interpreted as Hydrocabon bearing formations based on the openhole and pressure data. However, the reservoir in question, showed features different from the adjacent reservoirs. This manuscript appraises the reservoir and illustrates the workflow followed to identify its fluid type and the best method to produce the hydrocarbon. Triple combo logs identified formation X as hydrocarbon bearing with low permeability and low porosity. Formation pressures gradients indicated the formation to be oil; however, the bottom hole sample, when pumped out, indicated alternating of oil and gas despite the low differential pressure. During the PVT measurement the sample was first re-pressurised until a single phase was achieved and it was then subjected to Differential Liberation and Constant Composition Experiments (CCE). These experiments showed the Bubble Point pressure of the sample to be higher than the reservoir pressure, thereby indicating two mobile phases in the reservoir and the probability of a Gas-Oil Contact (GOC). The Experiments were also successfully simulated and matched using the Peng Robinson Equation of State. The Laboratory experiments directly contradicted the interpretation of Wireline Logs and pressure gradient both of which, indicated single phase light oil. The collected bottom hole sample indicated that both oil and gas are mobile at reservoir level, this finding is supported by PVT laboratory experiments. The Differential Liberation, CCE experiments and EOS fitting demonstrated the fluid to be two Phases at Reservoir Condition where both phases are likely to be mobile. Therefore, it is suspected that the fluid will go from being Gas to Oil with increasing depth without going through GOC, i.e. with continuous compositional grading as is possible for fluids near their critical temperature. This phenomenon could not be captured using open hole conventional logs and therefore the is team is currently investigating the best practice to identify such reservoirs.
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Kotiyal, Aditya, Guru Prasad Nagaraj, and Lester Tugung Michael. "A Step Change in the Digital Oilfield Arena: Cloud Computing and Workflow Integration for Production Operations Solutions." In SPE/IATMI Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/205761-ms.

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Abstract Digital oilfield applications have been implemented in numerous operating companies to streamline processes and automate workflows to optimize oil and gas production in real-time. These applications are mostly deployed using traditional on-premises systems; where maintenance, accessibility and scalability serves as a major bottleneck for an efficient outcome. In addition to this challenge, the sector still faces limitations in data integration from disparate data sources, liberation of consolidated data for consumption and cross domain workflow orchestration of that data. The dimensional change brought by digital transformation strategies has paved a path for the Cloud- based solutions, which have recently gained momentum in the oil and gas industry pertaining to their wider accessibility, simpler customization, greater system stability and scalability to support larger amount of data in a performant way. To address the challenges mentioned earlier, we have embarked on a journey with Production Data Foundation which brings together production and equipment data from across an organization. In this paper, we will highlight how Production Data Foundation, hosted on the cloud, provides the underlying infrastructure, services, interfaces required to support and unify production data ingestion, workflow orchestration, and through the alignment of the common domain and digital concepts, improve collaboration between people in distinct roles, such as production engineers, reservoir engineers, drilling engineers, deployment engineers, software developers, data scientists, architects, and subject matter experts (SME) working with production operations products and solutions.
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Nilsen, Marius Staahl, and Sigve Hovda. "Fighting Invisible Kicks: Study of Time Dependent Vaporization of Methane Gas Dissolved in Base Oil." In ASME 2020 39th International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2020-18630.

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Abstract Understanding the interaction between the drilling fluid and the natural gas from a gas kick may be of great importance when predicting how a well control incident evolves during drilling operations. This is especially true for oil based mud, which has the ability to dissolve large quantities of gas under high pressure, thus potentially hide any volumetric impact of a gas kick. When the pressure of the dissolved gas decreases below the bubble pressure, free gas will start to emerge. Dangerous situations can occur if the bubble point pressure is low and located close to the surface. This may result in a rapid volumetric expansion of the free gas, as it emerges from solution, thus little to no time to react and initiate proper well control procedures. Most conventional well control simulators that takes gas solubility into consideration assumes an instantaneous vaporization of gas as the vapour-liquid phase equilibria changes. However, this assumption might not always be realistic. It may take some time before a new equilibrium is reached when the conditions are changed. This will thus affecting the rate of gas liberation from the liquid. To better understand this complex issue, an analytical expression for the transition rate of dissolved gas to free gas in a supersaturated liquid has been derived for low pressure systems. The analytical model is strongly dependent on the solubility coefficient, Kh, and the transition rate factor, γ, and follows an exponential curve. In this expression, Kh is a measure of how much the liquid is supersaturated at any given time and controls how much gas that will be liberated. γ determines how fast the system will reach a new equilibrium, i.e. how fast the gas will be liberated based on the size of the supersaturation. Both Kh and γ are thought to be values given for a specific gas-liquid combination. In order to verify the analytical expression, experimental testing has been conducted. The experiment is carried out by pressurizing a tank partly filled with the base oil Exxsol D60 by feeding it with methane gas. Some of the gas will dissolve into the liquid. The rest will flow to the top as free gas and pressurize the tank. By quickly removing some of the free gas, thus depressurize the tank, the liquid will instantaneously become supersaturated, hence triggering liberation of free gas from the solution until a new equilibrium is established. By measuring the tank pressure throughout the degassing phase, values for Kh and γ can be estimated and compared to the analytical model.
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Tayebi, Kamel, Abdurrahman Khalidi, and Alaaeldin Dawood. "Blade Health Monitoring System for Gas Turbines Subjected to Contaminated Air." In ASME Turbo Expo 2022: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2022-81124.

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Abstract Air contamination continues to cause corrosion sometimes leading to catastrophic failures costing tens of millions of dollars in repair/replacement and revenue losses. In the case of heavy-duty gas turbines in the power industry, the problem starts with pitting due to corrosion and progresses to crack initiation, then crack extension due to cyclic load then to unstable crack propagation leading ultimately to blade liberation which in turn creates an extended trail of damage through the various stages of the compressor and the casing. This type of failure usually requires total rotor replacement. It is important to identify the early stages of crack formation and relate it to the level of air contamination and operational parameters of the turbine. This paper addresses improved methods of commissioning and integrated monitoring of a blade health monitoring (BHM) system installed on a turbine that witnessed a previous compressor failure. We particularly show how BHM can be combined with engine operation information for a better understanding of the impact of operational changes on blade behavior. Such an understanding is necessary to detect potential changes in amplitude or frequency characteristics due to damage initiation and progression. It also enables the development and continuous update of site-specific and engine-specific knowledge bases that can be used in predictive analysis and effective decision making for optimal operational performance.
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Reports on the topic "Gay liberation"

1

de Souza Torrecilha, Ramom. The mobilization of the gay liberation movement. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.5545.

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2

Eldridge, Daniel, Hayden Miller, Thomas Rahn, Christopher Campe, Artaches Migdissov, and Hakim Boukhalfa. Gas Liberation, Detection, & Quantification from Geological, Experimental, & Nuclear Weapons Test Materials. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1909546.

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