Lambda Literary Award for LGBT Studies

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Lambda Literary Award for LGBT Studies
Awarded forLiterary award
Sponsored by Lambda Literary Foundation
DateAnnual

The Lambda Literary Award for LGBT Studies is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, presented to scholarly work that address "issues relating to sexual orientation and gender identity, and oriented toward academia, libraries, cultural professionals, and the more academic reader." [1] Most works are published by university presses. [1]

Recipients

Lambda Literary Award for LGBT Studies Recipients
YearAuthorTitleResultRef.
2002 Joyce Murdoch and Deb Price Courting Justice: Gay Men and Lesbians v. the Supreme CourtWinner [2]
Gay Wachman Lesbian Empire: Radical Crosswriting in the TwentiesFinalist [2]
Suzanna Danuta Walters All the Rage: The Story of Gay Visibility in America
William J. Mann Behind the Screen: How Gays and Lesbians Shaped Hollywood, 1910-1969
Ricardo J. Brown and William Reichard (editors)The Evening Crowd at Kirmser’s
2003 Neil Miller Sex-Crime PanicWinner [3] [4]
Craig Rimmerman From Identity to PoliticsFinalist [4]
Colm Tóibín Love in a Dark Time
Ruth Vanita (editor)Queering India
David Nimmons Soul Beneath the Skin
2004 Devon W. Carbado and Donald Weise (editors)Time on Two CrossesWinner [5]
Wayne Besen Anything But Straight Finalist [5]
Michael Mancilla and Lisa TroshinskyLove in the Time of HIV
James McCourt Queer Street
Mack Friedman Strapped for Cash
2005 Elisabeth Kirtsoglou For the Love of Women: Gender, Identity and Same-Sex Relations in a Greek Provincial TownWinner [6]
Andrea Barnet All-Night PartyFinalist [6]
Will Fellows {A Passion to Preserve
Abigail Garner Families Like Mine
Evan Wolfson Why Marriage Matters
2006 Susan Ackerman When Heroes Love: The Ambiguity of Eros in the Stories of Gilgamesh and DavidWinner [7]
Jennifer KellyZest for Life: Lesbians’ Experience of MenopauseFinalist [7]
Dwight A. McBride Why I Hate Abercrombie and Fitch
Esther D. Rothblum and Penny Sablove (editors)Lesbian Communities Festivals, Rvs And the Internet
Ruth Vanita Love’s Rite: Same-Sex Marriage in India and the West
2007 Horace Griffin Their Own Receive Them NotWinner [8]
Robert McRuer Crip TheoryFinalist [8]
Kathryn Stockton Beautiful Bottom, Beautiful Shame
Carellin Brooks Every Inch A Man: Phallic Possession, etc.
David Eisenbach Gay Power: An American Revolution
2008 Sharon Marcus Between WomenWinner [9] [10]
Bertram Cohler Writing DesireFinalist [9]
Pagan Kennedy The First Man-Made Man
Mark Padilla Caribbean Pleasure Industry
Robert Reid-Pharr Once You Go Black: Choice, Desire, & the Black American Intellectual
2009 Regina Kunzel Criminal Intimacy: Prison and the Uneven History of Modern American SexualityWinner [11]
Michelle Ann Abate Tomboys: A Literary & Cultural HistoryFinalist [11]
Amin Ghaziani The Dividends of Dissent: How Conflict and Culture Work in Lesbian and Gay Marches on Washington
Kevin P. Murphy Political Manhood: Red Bloods, Mollycoddles, & the Politics of Progressive Reform
Linda WilliamsScreening Sex
2010 Margot Canaday The Straight State: Sexuality and Citizenship in Twentieth Century AmericaWinner [12]
Armando Maggi The Resurrection of the Body: Pier Paolo Pasolini from Saint Paul to SadeFinalist [12]
Julie Abraham Metropolitan Lovers: The Homosexuality of Cities
Deborah B. Gould Moving Politics: Emotion and ACT UP’s Fight Against AIDS
Kathryn Bond Stockton The Queer Child, or Growing Sideways in the Twentieth Century
2011 Scott Herring Another Country: Queer Anti-UrbanismWinner [13]
Gayle Salamon Assuming a Body: Transgender and Rhetorics of Materiality
Fran Martin Backward Glances: Contemporary Chinese Cultures and the Female Homoerotic ImaginaryFinalist [14]
Deborah Cohler Citizen Invert Queer: Lesbianism and War in Early Twentieth-Century Britain
Rafael de la Dehesa Queering the Public Sphere in Mexico and Brazil: Sexual Rights Movements in Emerging Democracies
2012 Lisa L. Moore Sister Arts: The Erotics of Lesbian LandscapesWinner [15] [16]
Eric A. Stanley and Nat Smith (editors)Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment and the Prison Industrial ComplexFinalist
Chandan Reddy Freedom with Violence: Race, Sexuality, and the US State
Margot Weiss Techniques of Pleasure: BDSM and the Circuits of Sexuality
Jafari S. Allen ¡Venceremos?: The Erotics of Black Self-making in Cuba
2013 Ramón H. Rivera-Servera Performing Queer Latinidad: Dance, Sexuality, PoliticsWinner [17]
Louis-Georges Tin The Invention of Heterosexual CultureFinalist [18]
Ernesto Javier Martínez On Making Sense: Queer Race Narratives of Intelligibility
Ashley Currier Out of Africa: LGBT Organizing in Namibia and South Africa
Bernadette C. Barton Pray the Gay Away The Extraordinary Lives of Bible Belt Gays
Brenna M. Munro South Africa and the Dream of Love to Come: Queer Sexuality and the Struggle for Freedom
Sara WarnerActs of Gaiety: LGBT Performance and the Politics of Pleasure
Ann Cvetkovich Depression: A Public Feeling
Tracy Baim Gay Press, Gay Power: The Growth of LGBT Community Newspapers in America
David M. Halperin How To Be Gay
2014 Christina B. Hanhardt Safe Space: Gay Neighborhood History and the Politics of ViolenceWinner [19] [20] [21]
Marlon M. Bailey Butch Queens Up in Pumps Gender, Performance, and Ballroom Culture in DetroitFinalist [21]
Victoria Hesford Feeling Women’s Liberation
Colin R. JohnsonJust Queer Folks: Gender and Sexuality in Rural America
Lisa Henderson Love and Money: Queers, Class, and Cultural Production
Susana Pena Oye Loca: From the Mariel Boatlift to Gay Cuban Miami
Afsaneh Najmabadi Professing Selves: Transsexuality and Same-Sex Desire in Contemporary Iran
Lucetta Yip Lo Kam Shanghai Lalas
Peter M. Coviello Tomorrow’s Parties: Sex and the Untimely
Isaac West Transforming Citizenships: Transgender Articulations of the Law [21] [22]
2015 Vincent Woodard , Justin A. Joyce and Dwight McBride (editors)Delectable Negro: Human Consumption and Homoeroticism within US Slave CultureWinner [23]
Noelle M. Stout After Love: Queer Intimacy and Erotic Economies in Post-Soviet CubaFinalist [24]
Rachel Hope Cleves Charity & Sylvia: A Same-Sex Marriage in Early America
Marcia Ochoa Queen for a Day: Transformistas, Beauty Queens, and the Performance of Femininity in Venezuela
Lisa Tatonetti The Queerness of Native American Literature
Juana María Rodríguez Sexual Futures, Queer Gestures, and Other Latina Longings
Susan S. Lanser The Sexuality of History: Modernity and the Sapphic
Bobby Benedicto Under Bright Lights: Gay Manila and the Global Scene
2016 Hiram Pérez A Taste for Brown Bodies: Gay Modernity and Cosmopolitan DesireWinner [25]
Clare Sears Arresting Dress: Cross-Dressing, Law, and Fascination in Nineteenth-Century San FranciscoFinalist [26]
L.H. Stallings Funk the Erotic: Transaesthetics and Black Sexual Cultures
Aaron Goodfellow Gay Fathers, Their Children, and the Making of Kinship
Madhavi Menon Indifference to Difference: On Queer Universalism
Jane Ward Not Gay: Sex between Straight White Men
Petrus Liu Queer Marxism in Two Chinas
Valerie Traub Thinking Sex with the Early Moderns
2017 Jennifer Tyburczy Sex Museums: The Politics and Performance of DisplayWinner [27]
Qwo-Li Driskill Asegi Stories: Cherokee Queer and Two Spirit MemoryFinalist [28]
Gregory Woods Homintern
Andrew Jolivette Indian Blood: HIV and Colonial Trauma in San Francisco’s Two-Spirit Community
Jonathan Goldberg Melodrama: An Aesthetics of Impossibility
Kevin Mumford Not Straight, Not White: Black Gay Men From The March on Washington to the AIDS Crisis
Omar G. Encarnación Out in the Periphery: Latin America’s Gay Rights Revolution
Timothy Stewart-Winter Queer Clout: Chicago and the Rise of Gay Politics
2018 Trevor Hoppe Punishing Disease: HIV and the Criminalization of SicknessWinner [29] [30]
Alfredo Mirandé Behind the MaskFinalist [31]
Mari Ruti The Ethics of Opting Out
Emily Hobson Lavender and Red
Jaclyn Pryor Time Slips
Ashley T. Shelden Unmaking Love
David M. Halperin and Trevor HoppeThe War on Sex
Julio Capó Welcome to Fairyland
2019 William T. Hoston Toxic Silence: Race, Black Gender Identity, and Addressing the Violence Against Black Transgender Women in HoustonWinner [32]
E. Patrick Johnson Black. Queer. Southern. Women.: An Oral HistoryFinalist
Lyndon K. Gill Erotic Islands: Art and Activism in the Queer Caribbean
Myrl Beam Gay, Inc.: The Nonprofitization of Queer Politics
Keridwen N. Luis Herlands: Exploring the Women’s Land Movement in the United States
Andrew Billings and Leigh MoscowitzMedia and the Coming Out of Gay Male Athletes in American Team Sports
T. Jackie Cuevas Post-Borderlandia: Chicana Literature and Gender Variant Critique
Anne Balay Semi Queer: Inside the World of Gay, Trans, and Black Truck Drivers
2020 Emily L. Thuma All Our Trials: Prisons, Policing, and the Feminist Fight to End ViolenceWinner [33] [34] [35] [36]
Robb Hernández Archiving an Epidemic: Art, AIDS, and the Queer Chicanx Avant-GardeFinalist [37] [38] [39]
Elizabeth FreemanBeside You in Time: Sense Methods and Queer Sociabilities in the American Nineteenth Century [38] [39]
Kara Keeling Queer Times, Black Futures [37] [38] [39]
Roberto Strongman Queering Black Atlantic Religions: Transcorporeality in Candomblé, Santería and Vodou [38] [39]
Dana Seitler Reading Sideways: The Queer Politics of Art in Modern American Fiction
R.L. Cagle Scorpio Rising: A Queer Film Classic
Jian Neo Chen Trans Exploits: Trans of Color Cultures and Technologies in Movement
2021 Zakiyyah Iman Jackson Becoming Human: Matter and Meaning in an Antiblack WorldWinner [40] [37] [41]
Cait McKinney Information Activism: A Queer History of Lesbian Media TechnologiesFinalist [42]
José Esteban Muñoz The Sense of Brown
Janet Jakobsen The Sex Obsession: Perversity and Possibility in American Politics [42] [37]
Jane Ward The Tragedy of Heterosexuality
2022 Anna Lvovsky Vice Patrol: Cops, Courts, and the Struggle over Urban Gay Life before StonewallWinner [43]
Gila Ashtor Homo Psyche: On Queer Theory and ErotophobiaFinalist [44]
C. Winter Han Racial Erotics: Gay Men of Color, Sexual Racism, and the Politics of Desire
Leah DeVun The Shape of Sex
Howard Chiang Transtopia in the Sinophone Pacific
2023 Darieck Scott Keeping It Unreal: Black Queer Fantasy and Superhero ComicsWinner [45]
Mairead Sullivan Lesbian Death: Desire and Danger between Feminist and QueerFinalist [46]
Marlon B. Ross Sissy Insurgencies: A Racial Anatomy of Unfit Manliness
Vivian L. Huang Surface Relations: Queer Forms of Asian American Inscrutability
Jafari S. Allen There’s a Disco Ball Between Us: A Theory of Black Gay Life
2024 Erin L. Durban The Sexual Politics of Empire: Postcolonial Homophobia in HaitiWinner [47]
Jennifer Dominique Jones Ambivalent Af inities: A Political History of Blackness and Homosexuality after World War IIFinalist [48]
Christoph Hanssmann Care without Pathology: How Trans- Health Activists Are Changing Medicine
Margot Canaday Queer Career: Sexuality and Work in Modern America
Travis S. K. Kong Sexuality and the Rise of China: The Post-1990s Gay Generation in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Mainland China

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Lambda Literary Awards are awarded yearly by the United States-based Lambda Literary Foundation to published works that celebrate or explore LGBT themes. The awards are presented annually for books published in the previous year. The Lambda Literary Foundation states that its mission is "to celebrate LGBT literature and provide resources for writers, readers, booksellers, publishers, and librarians—the whole literary community."

The Lambda Literary Award for Gay Fiction is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation to a work of fiction on gay male themes. As the award is presented based on themes in the work, not the sexuality or gender of the writer, women and heterosexual men may also be nominated for or win the award.

The Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation to a work of fiction on lesbian themes. As the award is presented based on themes in the work, not the sexuality or gender of the writer, men and heterosexual women may also be nominated for or win the award.

The Lambda Literary Award for Drama is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation to an LGBT-related literary or theatrical work. Most nominees are plays, or anthologies of plays; however, non-fiction works on theatre or drama have also sometimes been nominated for the award.

The Lambda Literary Award for Debut Fiction is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation to a debut work of fiction on LGBT themes. Formerly presented in two separate categories for gay male and lesbian debut fiction, beginning the 25th Lambda Literary Awards in 2013 a single award, inclusive of both male and female writers, was presented. The award was, however, discontinued after the 28th Lambda Literary Awards in 2016.

The Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation to a gay-themed book of poetry by a male writer.

The Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Poetry is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation to a lesbian-themed book of poetry by a female writer. At the first two Lambda Literary Awards in 1989 and 1990, a single award for LGBT Poetry, irrespective of gender, was presented. Beginning with the 3rd Lambda Literary Awards in 1991, the poetry award was split into two separate awards for Lesbian Poetry and Gay Poetry, which have been presented continuously since then except at the 20th Lambda Literary Awards in 2008, when a merged LGBTQ poetry award was again presented for that year only.

The Lambda Literary Awards are awarded yearly by the US-based Lambda Literary Foundation to published works that celebrate or explore LGBT themes. The organization is considered to be one of the main promoters of new and emerging LGBT writers.

The Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Memoir/Biography is an annual literary award established in 1994, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, to a memoir, biography, autobiography, or works of creative nonfiction by or about lesbians. Works published posthumously and/or written with co-authors are eligible, but anthologies are not.

The Lambda Literary Award for Bisexual Literature is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, that awards books with bisexual content. The award can be separated into three categories: bisexual fiction, bisexual nonfiction, and bisexual poetry. Awards are granted based on literary merit and bisexual content, and therefore, the writer may be homo-, hetero-, or asexual.

The Lambda Literary Award for Transgender Literature is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, that awards books with transgender content. Awards are granted based on literary merit and transgender content, and therefore, the writer may be cisgender. The award can be separated into three categories: transgender fiction, transgender nonfiction, and transgender poetry, though early iterations of the award included categories for bisexual/transgender literature, transgender/genderqueer literature, and transgender literature.

The Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Romance is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, to a novel, novella, or short story collection "by a single author that focus on a central love relationship between two or more characters", not including anthologies. The submission guidelines mention several sub-genres are included, " including traditional, historical, gothic, Regency, and paranormal romance".

The Lambda Literary Award for Anthology is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, that awards "[c]ollections of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry" with LGBT content. The award has been included since the first Lambda Literary Award ceremony but has included different iterations.

The Lambda Literary Award for Gay Memoir/Biography is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, to a memoir, biography, autobiography, or works of creative nonfiction by or about gay men. Works published posthumously and/or written with co-authors are eligible, but anthologies are not.

The Lambda Literary Award for Nonfiction is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, that awards LGBT-themed nonfiction books whose intended audience is "general readers, as opposed to those targeted primarily to scholarly audiences." Anthologies and memoirs are not included as they have their own categories.

The Lambda Literary Award for Mystery is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, to a mystery novel by or about people in the LGBT community. Prior to 2021, the award was separated into separate categories for Gay and Lesbian Mystery.

The Lambda Literary Award for Erotica is an annual literary award established in 2002 and presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation that awards books with LGBT characters and "whose content is principally of an erotic nature." "Anthologies, novels, novellas, graphic novels, memoirs, and short story collections" are eligible for the award.

The Lambda Literary Award for Gay Romance is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, to a novel, novella, or short story collection "by a single author that focus on a central love relationship between two or more characters, not including anthologies. The submission guidelines mention several sub-genres are included, " including traditional, historical, gothic, Regency, and paranormal romance".

References

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