2007:
Marcia M. Gallo is a lesbian social justice activist who has taught the history of sexuality, U.S. and New York history, and American Studies at Lehman College for the last three years. She is the author of Different Daughters: A History of the Daughters of Bilitis and the Rise of the Lesbian Rights Movement (Carroll & Graf, 2006), the first and only full-length work to explore the pioneering American women’s organization. It won the 2006 Lambda Literary Foundation Award for LGBT Nonfiction and was a finalist for the 2006 Publishing Triangle Judy Grahn Award. Different Daughters also was named one of the best books of 2006 by the San Francisco Chronicle. Gallo has researched and written about Cold War women’s history, focusing on the ways in which women of color, working and poor women, and sexually nonconforming women organized for civil and human rights in the U.S. and internationally. She is now working on a book about Catherine “Kitty” Genovese, who was murdered in Queens, New York in 1964 and became an international symbol of urban apathy and the failure of community.
2006:
Christopher (Kitt) Carpenter is an Assistant Professor
of Economics/Public Policy at The Paul Merage School of Business at
University of California – Irvine. Previously he spent two years at the
University of Michigan School of Public Health as a Robert Wood Johnson
Postdoctoral Scholar in Health Policy. His research considers the causes
and consequences of youth alcohol use. He is also interested in the
effects of workplace substance abuse policies and the role of sexual
orientation in determining economic outcomes. Dr. Carpenter has published
extensively in research journals, and he has a chapter titled “Do Straight
Men ‘Come Out’ at Work Too? The Heterosexual Male Marriage Premium and
Discrimination Against Gay Men,” forthcoming in Bias without Borders:
International Evidence of Sexual Orientation Discrimination, edited
by M.V. Lee Badgett and Jeff Frank (Routledge, 2006).
2005:
Gayatri Gopinath is an Associate Professor of Women and Gender Studies at the University of
California, Davis. Her book, Impossible Desires: Queer Diasporas and South Asian Public Cultures
(Durham: Duke UP 2005), examines the how the notion of a queer diaspora challenges both
heteronormative nationalist and diasporic ideologies, as well as homonormative queer ones. She
has published widely on South Asian popular film, music and literature in the diaspora in journals
such as GLQ, Positions, and Social Text, as well as numerous anthologies. Her next project looks
at the question of queerness and notions of the region in order to map south-south connections
between sexual economies in seemingly "marginal" locations.
2004:
Dwight McBride is an Associate Professor of English and
African American Studies, and Chair of African American Studies at
Northwestern University. He has published widely in the areas of
literature, race theory and black cultural studies. He is the editor of
James Baldwin Now (NYU Press, 1999) and co-editor of Black Like Us:
A Century of Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual African American Fiction (Cleis
Press, 2002). His latest work, Why I Hate Abercrombie and Fitch:
Essays on Race and Sexuality in the U.S., is forthcoming from NYU
Press in 2004.
2003:
Siobhan Somerville is Associate Professor of English and Women's Studies at the
University
of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign), and is the author of Queering the Color Line: Race and the
Invention of Homosexuality in American Culture (Duke UP, 2000). She has edited "Queer
Fictions of Race," a special issue of Modern Fiction Studies (2002); and
(with Judith Roof), "Recent Lesbian Theory," a special issue of Concerns.
Her work has also appeared journals such as American Literature and the Journal of the
History of Sexuality. Her current work explores questions of citizenship, sexuality,
and
race in American law, fiction, and film in the U.S. from 1940-1968.
2002:
Robert McRuer is currently Assistant Professor of English at George Washington
University.
He published The Queer Renaissance: Contemporary American Literature and the Reinvention
of
Lesbian and Gay Identities in 1997 and has edited the forthcoming Desiring
Disability, a
special issue of GLQ that looks at queer theory and disability studies. He attended
the
National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute on Disability Studies and is
currently working on a book project tentatively titled De-Composing Bodies: Cultural
Signs of Queerness and Disability.
2001:
Molly McGarry is currently a lecturer in the department of History
at Bryn Mawr College. In 1994, she was co-curator of the New York Public Library's
groundbreaking exhibition, Becoming Visible: The Legacy of Stonewall and co-authored
the follow-up publication entitled Becoming Visible: An Illustrated History of Lesbian
and Gay Life in Twentieth Century America (Viking/Penguin, 1998). Her dissertation,
"Haunting Reason: Spiritualism and the Cultural Politics of Nineteenth-Century America,"
was nominated for an Allan Nevins Award for best dissertation in American History by the
Society of American Historians and was awarded NYU's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Dean's Dissertation Award.
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