Sarah Schulman\u27s latest non-fiction book, The Gentrification of the Mind (University of California Press, 2012) examines the intersection of the American AIDS crisis and urban development. She was the first person in America to write on AIDS and the homeless (The Nation and The Village Voice). Twenty five years later on April 25, 2012, Occupy Wall Street teamed up with ACTUP along with supporters from Housing Works, Health GAP, National Nurses United, OWS Healthcare for the 99% Working Group, Visual AIDS, MIX NYC, Le Petit Versailles, Queerocracy, Queering OWS and other groups who converged for a daylong siege in Lower Manhattan. Schulman also recently co-produced United in Anger: A History of ACT UP (dir. Jim Hubbard, 2012), the new fea...
How does individual trauma influence collective memory? Within queer communities, key social institu...
The HIV/AIDS crisis of the 1980s and early 1990s continues to impact the world. In Fall 2016, Winona...
HIV/AIDS is neither a “gay” nor “African” issue; it is a global issue in which 36.9 million people w...
An interview with Sarah Schulman, the New York writer and activist for lesbian and gay liberation, h...
A glimpse into the ACT UP movement.https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/so_racial_relations_zines/1000/...
An excerpt from an interview with Anna Blume for the ACT UP Oral History Project. Anna Blume teaches...
This paper is a conversation between activist videomaker Alexandra Juhasz and writer and organizer T...
For women in the United States, the fight against AIDS has for the past forty years been a fight for...
This essay considers the usefulness of the concept of ‘queer diaspora’ in relation to the work of US...
How are returns to AIDS cultural production whitewashed, and how can we return, attending with care ...
In the age of AIDS, film and video became one of the principal means for grief-stricken activists an...
Working at the intersection of political science, ethnographic sociology, and contemporary historiog...
This paper is a conversation between activist videomaker Alexandra Juhasz and writer and organizer T...
Overview: How have artists responded to the HIV virus creatively in their work, and what effect have...
In Final Transmission: Performance Art and AIDS in LA, eds. Brian Getnick and Tanya Rubbak. When we ...
How does individual trauma influence collective memory? Within queer communities, key social institu...
The HIV/AIDS crisis of the 1980s and early 1990s continues to impact the world. In Fall 2016, Winona...
HIV/AIDS is neither a “gay” nor “African” issue; it is a global issue in which 36.9 million people w...
An interview with Sarah Schulman, the New York writer and activist for lesbian and gay liberation, h...
A glimpse into the ACT UP movement.https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/so_racial_relations_zines/1000/...
An excerpt from an interview with Anna Blume for the ACT UP Oral History Project. Anna Blume teaches...
This paper is a conversation between activist videomaker Alexandra Juhasz and writer and organizer T...
For women in the United States, the fight against AIDS has for the past forty years been a fight for...
This essay considers the usefulness of the concept of ‘queer diaspora’ in relation to the work of US...
How are returns to AIDS cultural production whitewashed, and how can we return, attending with care ...
In the age of AIDS, film and video became one of the principal means for grief-stricken activists an...
Working at the intersection of political science, ethnographic sociology, and contemporary historiog...
This paper is a conversation between activist videomaker Alexandra Juhasz and writer and organizer T...
Overview: How have artists responded to the HIV virus creatively in their work, and what effect have...
In Final Transmission: Performance Art and AIDS in LA, eds. Brian Getnick and Tanya Rubbak. When we ...
How does individual trauma influence collective memory? Within queer communities, key social institu...
The HIV/AIDS crisis of the 1980s and early 1990s continues to impact the world. In Fall 2016, Winona...
HIV/AIDS is neither a “gay” nor “African” issue; it is a global issue in which 36.9 million people w...