In this remarkable study, David A. J. Richards combines an interpretive history of culture and law, political philosophy, and constitutional analysis to explain the background, development, and growing impact of two of the most important and challenging human rights movements of our time, feminism and gay rights. Richards argues that both movements are extensions of rights-based dissent, rooted in antebellum abolitionist feminism that condemned both American racism and sexism. He sees the progressive role of such radical dissent as an emancipated moral voice in the American constitutional tradition. He examines the role of dissident African Americans, Jews, women, and homosexuals in forging alternative visions of rights-based democracy. He also draws special attention to Walt Whitman's visionary poetry, showing how it made space for the silenced and subjugated voices of homosexuals in public and private culture. According to Richards, contemporary feminism rediscovers and elaborates this earlier tradition. And, similarly, the movement for gay rights builds upon an interpretation of abolitionist feminism developed by Whitman in his defense, both in poetry and prose, of love between men. Richards explores Whitman's impact on pro-gay advocates, including John Addington Symonds, Havelock Ellis, Edward Carpenter, Oscar Wilde, and André Gide. He also discusses other diverse writers and reformers such as Margaret Sanger, Franz Boas, Elizabeth Stanton, W. E. B. DuBois, and Adrienne Rich. Richards addresses current controversies such as the exclusion of homosexuals from the military and from the right to marriage and concludes with a powerful defense of the struggle for such constitutional rights in terms of the principles of rights-based feminism.
With its unprecedented focus on Italian American identity and an interdisciplinary approach to comparative culture and law, this timely study sheds important light on the history and contemporary importance of identity and multicultural ...
Where did the right to privacy come from and what does it mean?
Richards , Women , Gays , and the Constitution , 56 [ citing Lydia Maria Child's , An Appeal in Favor of Americans Called Africans ( New York : Arno Press , 1968 ) , 169 originally published in 1836 ] . 12. Richards , Women , Gays , and ...
In Disarming Manhood: Roots of Ethical Resistance, David A.J. Richards examines the lives of five famous men—great leaders and crusaders—who actively resisted violence and presented their causes with more humane alternatives.
For elaboration of this point, see Richards, Women, Gays, and the Constitution: The Grounds for Feminism and Gay Rights in Culture and Law (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998), 178–81. 11. For citations and discussion, ...
Richards, Women, Gays, and the Constitution, note 114 above, at 346, 348. 169. Id. at 229, 308. 170. Adrienne Rich, Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence, reprinted in The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader 227 (Henry Abelove et ...
Liberal Resistance and the Bloomsbury Group David A. J. Richards. Rawson, ed., Beryl, Marriage, Divorce, and Children in Ancient Rome (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2004). Reagan, Ronald, An American Life: Ronald Reagan (New York: Simon 81 ...
Showing how the religious right's attempts to legislate private religious morality into the laws of the state undermines the foundations of the republic and the constitution, the authors demonstrate that gay equality is essential to ...
Lesbians and gays need responsibly. 7. For fuller discussion of these developments, see Richards, Women, Gays, and the Constitution. 8. See, in general, Alan Wolfe, One Nation, After All (New York Viking, 1998), 72-81. 9.
Speech. Codes. Arthur, John and Amy Shapiro (editors), Campus Wars: Multiculturalism and the Politics of Difference, ... Henry Louis, Jr., et al., Speaking of Race: Speaking of Sex: Hate Speech, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties, ...