Регулярный аудит сайта – это неизменная часть работы любого оптимизатора. Один из наиболее удобных инструментов для этого – эта программа. Разберемся, как в ней работать.
During the 1960s and 70s, the lines between "gay," "transgender," and "gender non-conforming" were fluid. The term "transgender" wasn't widely used; activists used words like "transvestite" or "drag queen," but their demands were radical. While mainstream gay organizations like the Mattachine Society sought to convince society that homosexuals were "just like everyone else," trans activists and drag queens were demanding the right to be different.
Rio watched in silence, then took off their own bandana, tied it around Marlowe’s wrist. “For the road ahead,” they said.
An umbrella term used by LGBTQ+ historians to describe women (and non-binary people) who are attracted to other women, encompassing lesbians, bisexuals, and pansexuals.
The relationship between the transgender community and broader LGBTQ culture is complex—a sibling rivalry between those who share blood but fight over the remote. There is trauma, betrayal, and rejection. But there is also history, joy, and an unbreakable political alliance.
Marlowe had come to Provincetown every autumn since her transition, not for the boisterous summer crowds, but for the silence after. She came to walk the dunes where the Pilgrims first stumbled ashore, and where, centuries later, queer exiles had built a kingdom of resilience. This year, she had brought a cardboard box—unmarked, taped shut with old packing tape—and she placed it on the porch table beside a mug of cold tea.