Do you remember surreptitiously flipping through your library's card catalog to search out who you were and finding only references to "the male homosexual" or "sexuality, aberrant" and no listings at all for gender? Did you strain to hear when your parents lowered their voices to talk about "those" women who lived together in a house at the end of the block? Do you remember the closet? Do remember the Johns Committee? How about the Reagan era when access to women's, to all people's, healthcare was curtailed, people with disabilities lost access to key services, and the AIDS crisis emerged?
Those of us who survived these years can help recreate the edifices of care and activism that we once constructed for ourselves and then perhaps abandoned because they were no longer needed. It's time to reach back and get them. Our experience, the successes we had, the mistakes we made, the voices of those who were left out, and the ways we thrived can be added to the already formidable power of younger generations of queer folk as we gather together in resistance.
Co-editors Sarah Einstein and Sandra Gail Lambert are looking for creative nonfiction and poetry for an online anthology to launch shortly after President Trump is sworn into office. Tell us your stories of not only what you survived, but especially the particular mechanisms of how you found your "people" and the ways you supported and celebrated each other.
Submission Details:
- Older Queer Voices: The Intimacy of Survival
- Co-edited by Sarah Einstein and Sandra Gail Lambert
- An online anthology scheduled for release in early spring.
- Creative nonfiction and poetry. No upper or lower word limits. Previously published pieces accepted but the author must own the rights
Submit to:
olderqueervoicesATgmailDOTcom (Change AT to @ and DOT to . )
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