How ACT UP Changed the Face of AIDS and Activism
October 19, 2023
October marks LGBTQ History Month, and this week on At Liberty we are honoring the legacy of LGBTQ activism throughout the AIDS epidemic.
Throughout the late 鈥80s and early 鈥90s, AIDS claimed the lives of thousands of New Yorkers per year, with city, state, and national governments doing little to address the crisis. In response to government inaction and homophobia, a group of New York City activists founded ACT UP, a grassroots, queer-led protest movement to urge action, call for change, and stand in the gap as thousands of queer people died. Due to their dogged persistence, steadfast unity in diversity, and pointed demonstrations, ACT UP achieved lasting victories in medical treatment, health care access, and more.
Today, in classrooms across the country, this history has largely gone untold. In our broader public discourse, the AIDS epidemic in the U.S. and the subsequent movement that rose to fight for LGBTQ lives is often overlooked. Enter Sarah Schulman, a novelist, journalist, playwright, and AIDS historian, who is fighting to ensure that we remember.
Schulman is the author of 20 books, her latest being 鈥淟et the Record Show: A Political History of ACT UP, New York 1987-1993,鈥 which documents the people and tactics behind ACT UP鈥檚 success. Sarah is also the co-director of the ACT UP Oral History Project. She joins us today to share her expertise and remember the movement.
In this episode
Kendall Ciesemier
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This Episode Covers the Following Issues
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LGBTQ Rights
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HIV/AIDS and Discrimination
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Transgender People and Health Care
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Medical and Mental Health Care
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Mobilization
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Drug Law Reform
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Human Rights and Racial Justice
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Human Rights and Women's Rights
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Gay-Straight Alliances
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Religion-Based Discrimination Against LGBTQ People
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HIV
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Transgender Rights
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Prisoners' Rights
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Civil Liberties
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Criminal Law Reform
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Human Rights
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LGBTQ Youth
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Using Religion to Discriminate
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Religious Liberty
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