Search Articles
Advanced Search
  About Us   WCMG Info   Publications   QueerCast   Blogs   Videos   Advertisers   Events/Lists   OUT! Guide

    

    

    


Windy City Times Current DownloadNightspots Current DownloadQueercast Current DownloadVideocast Current DownloadWindy City Media Group BlogsJoin Our Email List!
Click here for only most current editions; click on red bars above for past editions.
  Windy City Times    Download PDF Issue
Windy City Times' Sixth Annual Pride Literary Supplement: STONEWALL 40: Looking Out
2009-06-24
EDITED BY KATHIE BERGQUIST AND OWEN KEEHNEN

Editing this year's Windy City Times Pride Literary Supplement was a tough but rewarding task. Once more we were fortunate enough to have received quality entries from LGBTQ folks worldwide. Our final selection was based on the combined considerations of merit as well as thematic relevance.

To celebrate the 40th anniversary of Stonewall we chose "Looking Out" as this year's theme. We specifically chose something that leant itself to broad interpretation. It was a theme that prompted perspective. Many interpreted it as taking a stand and looking out to see what has happened since that hot June night outside New York's Stonewall Inn when harassment and bigotry proved no longer tolerable and overnight the outcasts became the heroes. Others explored the idea of looking out in terms of not passing, as in physically representing your queer self to the public at large.

In the span of four decades we've made incredible strides as a community. We have struggled to be seen, to keep our jobs, and to be parents. We have struggled to declare our love, to display our lust, and to do so many things which most members of our society take for granted. In those forty years many survived a pandemic and many did not. Many were asked not to tell. Many mustered every ounce of courage to open the closet door, to push gender boundaries, and to cross gender lines. Many suffered violence and many did not survive it. Many suffered ridicule and harassment for choosing not to pass, for being queer and for "looking out." Our journey has been rife with struggle but it hasn't been in vain. We've become a part of the political dialogue, we've become media savvy, and we've made many friends in the straight world. We've made amazing progress and although full acceptance is nearer, it is by no means here.

Looking Out is not only about where we've been and how far we've come, it's also about where we're going. It looks to the future and asks where we need to be. It's clear we're still struggling with social and legislative inequality in this country and around the world, not to mention racial and gender bigotry within our own GLBTQ communities. If our struggles have taught us anything it is that a community at odds cannot stand together and that a community apart stands for nothing. Therefore, as we celebrate what unites us, we also strive to honor the diversity of the myriad communities that gather under the rainbow umbrella.

Read more story below....

On the anniversary of that original uprising it's important to acknowledge progress as well as to realize that the journey continues. Rather than let this dampen our spirit we need to be proud of our determination to go even further. What better way to honor the past and the fallen than by asking more of ourselves as well as for ourselves.

It is with great love, great pride, and in this spirit of unity and continued progress that we present the 2009 Windy City Times Literary Supplement, "Stonewall 40: Looking Out."

Kathie Bergquist is co-author ( with Robert McDonald ) of the book, A Field Guide to Gay and Lesbian Chicago. She is adjunct faculty in the fiction department of Columbia College Chicago, and curates Women & Children First's monthly Sappho's Salon.

Owen Keehnen's fiction, reviews, erotica, essays and poetry have appeared in hundreds of periodicals and anthologies worldwide including Out and Proud in Chicago. He has had two pieces adapted for the stage and is the author of four books of interviews with gay porn stars—Starz, More Star, Ultimate Starz, and the upcoming Rising Starz. Keehnen also recently completed work on a humorous fictional memoir entitled I May Not Be Much But I'm All I Think About, a horror fantasy novel Doorway Unto Darkness, and is currently co-editing a book of Jon-Henri Damski's work entitled Men & Boys. He lives in Roger's Park with his partner, Carl, and dogs Flannery and Fitzgerald.

Share this article:                         del.icio.us digg facebook Email
BOOK REVIEW At Least in the City Someone Would Hear Me Scream 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement 1st Place Poetry Winner: homebois/butches don't write enough 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement 1st Place Prose Winner: Blown at the Pride Parade (bitsy club version) 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Stonewall 40 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Stonewall Moments 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplemen: Rouge Parrots 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Beggar of Love (Excerpt) 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplemen: America's First Coming Out 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Goal Weight 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Ghosts 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplemen: Let's Marae! 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Stonewall 40-Year Pride Celebration 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplemen: Echo 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplemen: A Sestina for Simon Sheppard 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Constantin Brancusi's The Kiss 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: In My Lifetime 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Bible Truth 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: What She Knew 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Stars For One Night Only 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Strangers Weathering 2009-06-24
Pride Literary Supplement: Remembering SAME 2009-06-24






 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 

Copyright © 2010 Windy City Media Group. All rights reserved.
Reprint by permission only. Back issues available for $3 per issue (postage included). Return postage must accompany all manuscripts,
drawings, and photographs submitted if they are to be returned, and no responsibility may be assumed for unsolicited materials.
All rights to letters, art and photos sent to Nightspots (Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and
Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay and Lesbian News and Feature Publication) will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication
purposes and as such, subject to editing and comment. The opinions expressed by the columnists, cartoonists, letter writers, and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of Nightspots (Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and
Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay and Lesbian News and Feature Publication).

The appearance of a name, image or photo of a person or group in
Nightspots (Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay and Lesbian News and Feature Publication)
does not indicate the sexual orientation of such individuals or groups.
While we encourage readers to support the advertisers who make this newspaper possible,
Nightspots (Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and
Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay and Lesbian News and Feature Publication) cannot accept responsibility for advertising claims.

Windy City Media Group produces Windy City Queercast, and publishes Windy City Times,
The Weekly Voice of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Trans Community,
Nightspots, Out! Resource Guide, and Identity.
5315 N. Clark St. #192, Chicago, IL 60640-2113 • PH (773) 871-7610 • FAX (773) 871-7609.
www.windycitymediagroup.com
contact editor  •  contact advertising  •  contact webmaster

Website Powered by Materville Studios / LoveYourWebsite.com

 



cheerful-nonunion