Gay hammer
Roxane Gay: The Portable Feminist Reader
In her fresh innovative anthology The Portable Feminist Reader, acclaimed author and culture critic Roxane Gay explores what feminism looks appreciate in practice. The writings selected by Gay reveal her interpretation of the feminist canon as expansive rather than definitive, and invites robust discussion and debate. Her selections include both classic and modern authors, including writings by Susan B. Anthony, Kimberlé Crenshaw, the Guerilla Girls, and many more. Conversation moderated by filmmaker Amber J. Phillips.
Amber J. Phillips is a storyteller, filmmaker, and creative director. She creates nature building narratives using warm visuals and vulnerable performances through her lens of being a chubby Black queer femme auntie from the Midwest. Amber recently released her first short film, Abundance about the limitations and radical possibilities of identity. Amber is the producer, writer, and artist of Abundance that was most recently a 2021 BlackStar Film Festival selection and won the audience award for Best Short Narrative. Amber’s written and visual work imagines a world where Black womanhood is an abundant over
The Last Deployment: How a Gay, Hammer-swinging Twentysomething Survived a Year in Iraq
Bronson Lemer. Univ. of Wisconsin, $24.95 (236p) ISBN 978-0-299-28213-4
In a chronicle of angst and self-discovery, Lemer, a member of the National Guard, describes exiting his lover and civilian life behind to serve as a gay dude in uniform under the federal "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" mandate. Lemer, whose writing has appeared in literary journals and the anthology Twentysomething Essays by Twentysomething Writers, recalls feeling like an outsider, fearful that "I'm about to be discovered, taunted, ridiculed, and kicked out." Lemer, who served in Kosovo and Iraq, tells with sensitivity and boldness of his band of unlikely brothers pining after wives and girlfriends at home and single men getting drunk from loneliness. Lemer does not gloss over the violent nature of war and death in Baghdad, displaying the valor of the men and women risking their lives. He survived seven years of service with honor and resolve, but his silence about his sexual orientation, with a feel of realistic horror, is a caustic testimony to what gays encounter in service to the nation. However, Lemer also emphasizes
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) - A 21-year-old man was bashed with a hammer and thrown onto the subway tracks in an anti-gay attack Friday morning in the Bronx, police said.
It happened at around 1:10 a.m. at the Tremont Avenue D trains terminate in Mount Hope.
Police said the victim was on the platform when the suspect approached him, yelled an anti-gay slur and hit him with the hammer.
The victim was knock in the armpit. The suspect then threw the victim onto the tracks. The victim was competent to climb back up to the platform before the train arrived. The suspect ran off.
The victim was rushed to St. Barnabas Hospital with low injuries including a trim to his eyebrow.
The incident is being investigated as a hate crime.
The invade comes as part of a spate of aggressive incidents in the subway system since Wednesday. Thursday afternooon, there was a slashing in the subway in Morningside Heights. Thursday morning, water was thrown in the face of a conductor in Brooklyn and two 15-year-olds were stabbed the Bronx. A conductor was slapped in Brooklyn Wednesday night and Wednesday afternoon a couple was attacked in Jamaica.
Web Extra: Corey Johnson on subway crime
New York Municipality Cou
Gay Hammer
(Ellen) Gay Goodpaster Davis Hammer, age 82, passed away in the care of Hospice on December 23, 2021, in Grand Junction, Colorado, after a hard-fought battle with cancer.
Born on August 12, 1939, Gay was the daughter of the late Clarence Goodpaster and Edna Goodpaster Sanders, in Lexington, Kentucky. Gay graduated from Handbook High School in Louisville, Kentucky, and attended Anderson College in Illinois.
As a fresh woman she was inspired by the civil rights movement and marched with Martin Luther King, Jr. during his visits to Kentucky in the late 1950s. A one-time meeting with Eleanor Roosevelt, also cast an indelible mark on her life’s purpose and direction.
In 1960 she married Harry Thomas (Tom) Davis, Jr. After the birth of their son, Michael, the family moved west to Denver, Colorado, and also lived for a short time in Montana. In 1967 they moved to Boise, Idaho, where daughter Linda was born.
Shortly afterward, Gay began the adventure of her lifetime by serving as the project coordinator for an ambitious new public lands plan, known as the Boise River Greenbelt. Gay fondly told the story of th