Angela Lynn Douglas | |
---|---|
Born | 1943 Washington, D.C., U.S. |
Died | 2007 |
Other names | Angela Keyes Douglas |
Occupation(s) | Activist, journalist, musician |
Known for | Transgender activist, founder of the Transsexual Action Organization. |
Angela Lynn Douglas was an American transgender activist and singer. She was a transgender woman who performed as a rock musician and was a prominent pioneering figure in transsexual activism during the 1970s. She founded the Transsexual Action Organization (TAO), the first international trans organization. She wrote articles about the state of trans politics at the time for the Berkeley Barb , The Advocate , the Bay Area Reporter , Come Out! and Everywoman, in addition to TAO's Mirage magazine and Moonshadow Bulletin. [1] She expressed racist attitudes at various points in her life, and at one point became active with the Nazi party. [2]
Douglas was born in Detroit in 1943 to Hungarian immigrants. Her father was in Air Force Intelligence and her mother worked for the AEC, CIA, and DEA. She went to Hialeah High School, where she met her future wife Norma Arcadia Rodríguez. In 1962, she married Rodríguez despite her family's objections. In 1967, Rodríguez, pregnant, left Douglas to pursue a lesbian relationship with Joan Black. [2]
In 1969, Douglas came out as a trans woman and became active in the LA Gay Liberation Front, leaving in 1970 due to reluctance within the GLF to link homosexuality with transsexuality, and the fact they failed to support the campaign for a transsexual clinic in Los Angeles. [3] [4]
The Advocate published the headline "Gay Lib survives bitch fit", detailing her departure from the GLF to found the TAO while misgendering her. She later wrote for the same magazine in 1973 to defend Sylvia Rivera, critiquing her exclusion from the mainstream gay rights movement and trans people's exclusion from Pride. She denounced the "attacks on transsexualism and transvestism made by lesbian feminist leaders, such as Jean O'Leary", and concluded the piece by stating "it is encouraging to find so many transsexuals and transvestites willing to tear down the crosses which were used to burn and crucify Joan of Arc and Christine Jorgensen, among countless others, and beat their oppressors over the head with them." [4]
In 1970, Douglas formed the Transsexual and Transvestite Action Organization (TAO, later Transsexual Action Organization) to amplify and support trans people and their struggles. It was originally headquartered in Los Angeles. [2] [3]
The TAO was a radical and militant organization, calling for confrontational protests and street demonstrations. Early actions included blocking the entrance to a showing of the film Myra Breckinridge to protest the movie's portrayal of a transsexual by a cisgender actor, and protesting Los Angeles welfare officials' refusal to continue aid to "men dressed as women". [5]
In 1970, the TAO persuaded the Californian Peace and Freedom Party to include "the right to determine the uses of one's body, as in sex changes operations and others" in its platform and the Socialist Workers Party to denounce arrests for "cross-dressing." [6] [5]
As part of the more radical "second wave" of transgender activism, the organization spoke out against sexism, worked with women's liberation groups, and maintained contact with the GLF. In a letter to Playboy Magazine , she wrote the TAO supported "both gay liberation and women's liberation: we believe that all victims of prejudice and discrimination must work together to change this society." [5] In addition to material fights, the group appealed to and cited extraterrestrial support. [7]
Douglas announced the TAO would no longer support the Black Panther Party due to its refusal to respond to the concerns of lesbians and sexism at the Revolutionary People's Constitutional Convention at Temple University in Philadelphia in September 1970. [8]
In 1971, TAO was renamed to the Transsexual Action Organization, stating some transsexuals call themselves transvestites for simplicity but distinguishing transsexuals as those who live as they are permanently and transvestites who dress up temporarily then resume living as a man. [2]
The same year, Douglas was arrested for "cross-dressing" in Miami. The judge dismissed the charge, labeling it a "bad arrest", but did not rule on the ordinance's constitutionality. [5]
In 1972, Douglas moved to Miami to set up another branch of TAO with Collete Tisha Goudie, Tara Carn, and Kimberly Elliot. This branch focused heavily on police brutality towards trans women and set up a "security force" to publicize arrests, beatings, and sexual abuses of trans people by the police force. [5]
Douglas also organized and published the newsletter Moonshadow and the magazine Mirage, which reported on the TAO's activism and national news concerning trans people; it was printed from 1972 to 1980. [5]
When the American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality as a diagnosis in 1973, TAO called on it to delist transsexualism as well. [5]
However, she began making stranger accusations, such as that the CIA had set up the Johns Hopkins gender clinic and was working with the Erickson Educational Foundation, a group she criticized for focusing too heavily on assimilation. [5]
Dr. John Ronald Brown offered Mirage several thousand dollars in exchange for public promotion of him, which Douglas accepted. [2]
TAO broke off relations with Gay Activists Alliance of Miami after the group refused to include transsexuals in a lawsuit countering police brutality in Miami Beach. [2]
In 1974, Douglas stepped down as TAO's president, with Barbara Rosello taking over the organization. At the time, TAO had begun to include more trans men and had chapters in San Francisco, Philadelphia, Chicago, Atlanta, Orlando, Jacksonville, Miami Beach, and even abroad in England, Canada, and Northern Ireland. [5] [2]
In 1976 Douglas moved to Berkeley, formally disbanding the TAO in 1978.
In 1977, Douglas wrote a satirical letter to the lesbian journal Sister about how transsexual women were superior to cisgender women and would replace them when technology and medical science allowed trans women to give birth in response to the firing of Sandy Stone from Olivia Records. This was quoted as serious evidence that trans women hated cisgender women by Janice G. Raymond in The Transsexual Empire, which led to critiques of intellectual dishonesty for misquoting. [9]
Due to her popularity as a rock musician and writer, she faced a lot of speculation about her surgical transition, which was completed by John Ronald Brown in 1977. However, she said the results left her mutilated and helped get him arrested. [5] [10]
In 1978, Stan Grossman with Newcastle Publishing Company profited off of featuring her in an X-rated magazine, using erotic photos of her pre- and post-operation, without paying her any royalties. Douglas attempted to sue him, but the results are unknown. [10] [1]
Between 1978 and 1979, Douglas became an active participant in US Nazi politics and espoused extremely racist views, later suggesting her far-right shift was caused by mind control by her enemies. [2]
In 1982, Douglas returned to living as a man. In 1991, after winning $232,567 in a lottery game, she returned to living as Angela and moved to Palm Beach, Florida. In 1992, she ran out of money, and after suffering a stroke, was reported to have continued living as a man.
Douglas also self-published the autobiographies Triple Jeopardy: The Autobiography of Angela Lynn Douglas in 1983 and Hollywood's Obsession in 1992, where she claimed that most representations of transsexuals in the media were based on her life. Historical accounts note a degradation in her mental health as she aged, claiming in Triple Jeopardy that her friend Randy Towers was a "reptilian, transsexual ET" who'd come to earth to "aid human transsexuals" and that Angela Davis spent years impersonating Douglas. [2] [7]
Douglas used racist and sexualizing language toward Black and Latino people. In Triple Jeopardy, Douglas presented herself as someone who challenged her family members' racist conceptions. However, her depictions of Rodriguez were highly sexualized, and she commented that Rodriguez was intelligent despite being Cuban. [2] Douglas stated life for transsexuals in jail is similar to the outside world since "the most ignorant black, Latin, or anyone is still above us and can control our lives to a great extent, with the full weight of a sexist, callous Society and legal system on their side." [11] [2]
In 2007, Douglas died from heart complications. [2]
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) movements are social movements that advocate for LGBTQ people in society. Although there is not a primary or an overarching central organization that represents all LGBTQ people and their interests, numerous LGBT rights organizations are active worldwide. The first organization to promote LGBT rights was the Scientific-Humanitarian Committee, founded in 1897 in Berlin.
The Stonewall riots, also known as the Stonewall uprising, Stonewall rebellion, Stonewall revolution, or simply Stonewall, were a series of spontaneous, violent demonstrations against a police raid that took place in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969, at the Stonewall Inn, in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of New York City. Although the demonstrations were not the first time American homosexuals fought back against government-sponsored persecution of sexual minorities, the Stonewall riots marked a new beginning for the gay rights movement in the United States and around the world.
The word cisgender describes a person whose gender identity corresponds to their sex assigned at birth, i.e., someone who is not transgender. The prefix cis- is Latin and means on this side of. The term cisgender was coined in 1994 as an antonym to transgender, and entered into dictionaries starting in 2015 as a result of changes in social discourse about gender. The term has been and continues to be controversial and subject to critique.
Gay Liberation Front (GLF) was the name of several gay liberation groups, the first of which was formed in New York City in 1969, immediately after the Stonewall riots. Similar organizations also formed in the UK, Australia and Canada. The GLF provided a voice for the newly-out and newly radicalized gay community, and a meeting place for a number of activists who would go on to form other groups, such as the Gay Activists Alliance, Gay Youth New York, and Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR) in the US. In the UK and Canada, activists also developed a platform for gay liberation and demonstrated for gay rights. Activists from both the US and UK groups would later go on to found or be active in groups including ACT UP, the Lesbian Avengers, Queer Nation, Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, and Stonewall.
Transfeminism, or trans feminism, is a branch of feminism focused on transgender women and informed by transgender studies. Transfeminism focuses on the effects of transmisogyny and patriarchy on trans women. It is related to the broader field of queer theory. The term was popularized by Emi Koyama in The Transfeminist Manifesto.
Jean O'Leary was an American lesbian and gay rights activist. She was the founder of Lesbian Feminist Liberation, one of the first lesbian activist groups in the women's movement, and an early member and co-director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. She co-founded National Coming Out Day.
Marsha P. Johnson was an American gay liberation activist and self-identified drag queen. Known as an outspoken advocate for gay rights, Johnson was one of the prominent figures in the Stonewall uprising of 1969.
Sylvia Rivera was an American gay liberation and transgender rights activist who was also a noted community worker in New York. Rivera, who identified as a drag queen for most of her life and later as a transgender person, participated in demonstrations with the Gay Liberation Front.
Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR) was a gay, gender non-conforming and transvestite street activist organization founded in 1970 by Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P. Johnson, subculturally-famous New York City drag queens of color. STAR was a radical political collective that also provided housing and support to homeless LGBT youth and sex workers in Lower Manhattan. Rivera and Johnson were the "mothers" of the household, and funded the organization largely through sex work. STAR is considered by many to be a groundbreaking organization in the queer liberation movement and a model for other organizations.
LGBT movements in the United States comprise an interwoven history of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and allied social movements in the United States of America, beginning in the early 20th century. A commonly stated goal among these movements is social equality for LGBT people. Some have also focused on building LGBT communities or worked towards liberation for the broader society from biphobia, homophobia, and transphobia. LGBT movements organized today are made up of a wide range of political activism and cultural activity, including lobbying, street marches, social groups, media, art, and research. Sociologist Mary Bernstein writes: "For the lesbian and gay movement, then, cultural goals include challenging dominant constructions of masculinity and femininity, homophobia, and the primacy of the gendered heterosexual nuclear family (heteronormativity). Political goals include changing laws and policies in order to gain new rights, benefits, and protections from harm." Bernstein emphasizes that activists seek both types of goals in both the civil and political spheres.
A transgender person is someone whose gender identity differs from that typically associated with the sex they were assigned at birth. Some transgender people who desire medical assistance to transition from one sex to another identify as transsexual. Transgender can function as an umbrella term; in addition to including binary trans men and trans women, it may also include people who are non-binary or genderqueer. Other definitions of transgender also include people who belong to a third gender, conceptualize transgender people as a third gender, or conflate the two concepts. The term may also include cross-dressers or drag kings and drag queens in some contexts. The term transgender does not have a universally accepted definition, including among researchers.
This article addresses the history of transgender people in the United States from prior to Western contact until the present. There are a few historical accounts of transgender people that have been present in the land now known as the United States at least since the early 1600s. Before Western contact, some Native American tribes had third gender people whose social roles varied from tribe to tribe. People dressing and living differently from the gender roles typical of their sex assigned at birth and contributing to various aspects of American history and culture have been documented from the 17th century to the present day. In the 20th and 21st centuries, advances in gender-affirming surgery as well as transgender activism have influenced transgender life and the popular perception of transgender people in the United States.
Miss International Queen is the world's biggest beauty pageant for transgender women. The pageant was conceived in 2004 and named the largest and most prestigious transgender pageant by CNN original American documentary television series This Is Life with Lisa Ling aired on 26 November 2017.
Feminist views on transgender topics vary widely.
The following outline offers an overview and guide to LGBTQ topics:
Queens Liberation Front (QLF) was a homophile group primarily focused on transvestite rights advocacy organization in New York City. QLF was formed in 1969 and active in the 1970s. They published Drag Queens: A Magazine About the Transvestite beginning in 1971. The Queens Liberation Front collaborated with a number of other LGBTQ+ activist groups, including the Gay Activists Alliance and the Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries.
Mirha-Soleil Ross is a transgender videographer, performance artist, sex worker and activist. Her work since the early 1990s in Montreal and Toronto has focused on transsexual rights, access to resources, advocacy for sex workers and animal rights.
Beth Elliott is an American trans lesbian folk singer, activist, and writer. In the early 1970s, Elliot was involved with the Daughters of Bilitis and the West Coast Lesbian Conference in California. She became the centre of a controversy when a minority of attendees in the 1973 Conference, including a keynote speaker, called for her removal because of her trans status.
Demet Demir is a Turkish LGBT activist. She was awarded the Felipa de Souza Award in 1997 for her activism.
Come Out! was an American LGBT newspaper that ran from 1969 to 1972. It was published by the Gay Liberation Front (GLF), a gay liberation group established in New York City in 1969, immediately following the Stonewall riots. The first issue came out on November 14, 1969, it sold for 35 cents, and 50 cents for outside of New York City. Its run only lasted for eight issues. Its tagline for the first paper was: "A Newspaper By And For The Gay Community".