Canadian Dimension - For people who want to change the world Subscribe Now!
Articles

Archive for articles filed in 'Gay and Lesbian Issues'

Review: Getting Past Identity: A Fresh Look at Issues in Transsexuality

Katherine M. Poole | Posted on Thursday, November 6th, 2008

Canadian Dimension magazine, November/December 2008 issue

Sex Change, Social Change: Reflections on Identity, Institutions, and Imperialism

by Viviane Namaste
Women’s Press, 2005
(Keep reading…)

When it comes to gay rights, is Cuba inching ahead of USA? ( DeWayne Wickham)

Posted on Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

USA Today
February 27, 2007

By Havana ˜ Years before George W. Bush proclaimed his support for a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriages in the United States, the ideologically rigid government of Fidel Castro made a big move in the opposite direction. (Keep reading…)

Rockers in a Straight Man’s World (Erin Millar)

Posted on Thursday, September 7th, 2006

Canadian Dimension Magazine, September/October 2006 Issue

Galaxy is a very good band that happens to be made up of a trio of two lesbians and a bisexual. Vocalist/guitarist Katie Stelmanis explains: “I’m totally fine with being a gay band and having that label, just as long as people know that we’re just as good, if not better, than all the other rock bands.” Katie and her collaborator, Emma McKenna (vocals and guitar), understand the importance of identifying with a specific community while fighting their way through Toronto’s crowded indie scene, but they don’t always agree when it comes to how being gay women affects playing rock music. (Keep reading…)

Staging Queer Difference: Marketing Diversity in Toronto (John Grundy)

Posted on Thursday, July 1st, 2004

July / August 2004 Issue

Queer Pride organizing in Toronto has undergone a radical transformation. According to Gary Kinsman, a former Pride organizer and a Professor of Sociology at Laurention University, early Pride events mixed pleasure with politics: “Pride Day was consciously used as a day to build a movement, a day to build community organizations and to get people involved in political campaigns.” In more recent years, however, Pride organizing reflects a very different set of priorities. While a number of political groups are still involved in the weeklong festival, and while many people derive a sense of community from the parade, Pride events are no longer organized to advance queer social movement politics. Pride planners, along with local officials and business elites, seem much more concerned with reorganizing the event to bolster the local tourist industry. (Keep reading…)

The Freedom to Choose: Gay Marriage and its Radical Others (Dennis Pilon)

Posted on Thursday, January 1st, 2004

January/February 2004 Issue

Two major claims are made among gay and lesbian critics of the idea of gay marriage. The first is that the support of gay marriage represents a kind of assimilation to straight values and ideals. The second is that the widespread acceptance of gay marriage would threaten the existence of a separate gay and lesbian community. While there is some truth in the criticisms made from these two perspectives, they fail to come to terms with the reasons why some gay people might want to get married. What is more, they narrow the lived reality of marriage, failing to recognize that the practice has been multiple and varied. In our real lives, as opposed to our sociological categories, marriage has offered a host of ways for two people to be together. (Keep reading…)

Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Peace? Why We Need Queer Critiques of Gay Marriage (Susan Thompson)

Posted on Thursday, January 1st, 2004

January/February 2004 Issue

When Toronto began issuing gay-marriage licenses on June 10, 2003, WorldNetDaily quoted Toronto attorney Michael Lershner as saying “The argument’s over. No more political discussion, we’ve won, the Charter won, it’s a great day for Canada.” Lershner had good reason to celebrate. Justices in three provinces had just redefined marriage as being between “two persons” instead of ” a man and a woman,” giving gay and lesbian couples across the country (and visiting citizens of the United States and elsewhere) legal grounds to apply for marriage licenses. (Keep reading…)

Top of page