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reviews_and_ramblings ([personal profile] reviews_and_ramblings) wrote2014-02-13 11:48 am

Bruce Voeller (May 12, 1934 – February 13, 1994)

Bruce Raymond Voeller (May 12, 1934 – February 13, 1994) was a biologist and researcher, primarily in the study of AIDS.

Voeller was born in Minneapolis. When he was at school, he was assured by a school counselor that he was not homosexual, even though he had felt such feelings very early on.

Voeller graduated with a bachelor's degree from Reed College in 1956, and after winning a five year fellowship to the Rockefeller Institute, he gained a Ph.D. in biology in 1961. He eventually worked his way up to the position of associate professor in 1966 at the institute. He wrote four books while at the institute, as well as editing others' work, and writing numerous papers and articles. He married Kytja Scott Voeller, whom he met at graduate school, and they had three children.

He came out at the age of 29, and divorced from his wife in 1971. After becoming president of the New York Gay Activists Alliance, he decided it was not wide enough in its coverage. Therefore, with some friends, he founded National Gay Task Force in October 1973, of which he was the director until 1978. The Task Force established affiliation with more than 2000 gay groups, and by 1978 had over 10,000 members. He also founded the Mariposa Foundation, which specializes in sex research, and sexually transmitted diseases.

Before the 1980s, AIDS was known by various names, including GRIDD (Gay Related Immune Defense Disorder). Since this term was inaccurate, Voeller coined the term acquired immune deficiency syndrome. His partner was Richard Lucik, who was also his associate at Mariposa. Voeller died in 1994 of an AIDS related illness in California, at the age of 59.


AIDS Quilt

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Voeller

Further Readings:

Gay Power: An American Revolution by David Eisenbach
Paperback: 416 pages
Publisher: Da Capo Press (May 18, 2007)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0786719346
ISBN-13: 978-0786719341
Amazon: Gay Power: An American Revolution

The definitive history of how the gay rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s sparked an American revolution that transformed a nation.

Creating Change: Sexuality, Public Policy, and Civil Rights (Stonewall Inn Editions) by John D'Emilio, William B. Turner & Urvashi Vaid
Paperback: 544 pages
Publisher: Stonewall Inn Editions; 1st Stonewall Inn Edition, Feb, 2002 edition (April 16, 2002)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0312287127
ISBN-13: 978-0312287122
Amazon: Creating Change: Sexuality, Public Policy, and Civil Rights (Stonewall Inn Editions)

The two dozen essays assembled in Creating Change examine some of the most bitterly contested and controversial public events and public policy battles in American history. These writings, each by a leading activist or scholar, recount how a specific constituency—gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered persons, and their allies—achieved tremendous progress despite seemingly insurmountable barriers. With each of the chapters written by an activist or scholar integral to the specific area of discussion, this is a work of scholarship and a work of passion about the way the American political and cultural landscape became what it is today. It is the story of how social change is made.

Bringing Lesbian And Gay Rights into the Mainstream: Twenty Years of Progress (Sexual Minorities in Historical Context) by Steve Endean
Hardcover: 378 pages
Publisher: Routledge; 1 edition (April 27, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 156023525X
ISBN-13: 978-1560235255
Amazon: Bringing Lesbian And Gay Rights into the Mainstream: Twenty Years of Progress (Sexual Minorities in Historical Context)

A lively memoir of LGBT activist Steve Endean—one of the most influential political strategists ever to lobby Washington DC!

Bringing Lesbian and Gay Rights Into the Mainstream: Twenty Years of Progress is the spirited and provocative memoir that blows the lid off the complex machinations of state and national politics. LGBT activist Steve Endean’s autobiographical chronicle, completed shortly before his death in 1993, tells insider stories that are sometimes rousing, other times infuriating, recounting the fight for lesbian and gay rights from the trenches of the Minnesota state capital to the Washington Beltway. Readers get a clear view of the political activism of building grassroots support systems, fundraising efforts, lobbying to rally support for bills, and the election/reelection of sympathetic political representatives.

Bringing Lesbian and Gay Rights Into the Mainstream: Twenty Years of Progress dynamically recounts Endean’s activism and instrumental leadership of the LGBT movement from 1973 to just before his death in 1993. From being the first Executive Director of the Gay Rights National Lobby, founder and Executive Director of the Human Rights Campaign Fund, and founder of the Speak Out mailgram campaigns for grassroots pressure on congresspersons on G/L rights issues, the author discusses with amusing anecdotes and self-effacing humor his strategies, victories, and failures as movement leader. This lively mix of the accomplishments in those crucial years and the “dos and don’ts” of political activism is peopled with well-known and lesser-known movers and shakers on the political landscape.

More LGBT History at my website: www.elisarolle.com/, My Ramblings/Gay Classics

[identity profile] ryan field (from livejournal.com) 2012-02-13 04:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Good post Elisa. I used to write for the Gay Task Force and I wrote a few pieces on AIDS in the 1990's. I've been telling myself to get them out...they were all written in hard copy before publishing was digital...and revisit some of my older work that was published during that period. I have unopened boxes of work that go back twenty years.

I was recently referred to as an "up and coming" author, which made me smile. I was writing and getting published before there was a such a thing as m/m romance, and doing it on a typewriter with real paper.

Thanks for posting these wonderful things. I think your readers appreciate this greatly.

[identity profile] elisa-rolle.livejournal.com 2012-02-14 02:35 am (UTC)(link)
Not all the people following this blog are interested in them, but I think a few of them are and they consider these post important memento. Plus I recently had an email from a college professor teaching LGBT studies that said my blog is an important source for his students.

[identity profile] ryan field (from livejournal.com) 2012-02-14 05:44 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree. I can see how it would be important in LGBT studies. There really aren't that many places to find LGBT information so easily.

[identity profile] elisa-rolle.livejournal.com 2012-02-15 02:25 am (UTC)(link)
wikipedia is my main source, but it's so big that if you don't know what to search it's a little difficult