"I totally support the politics of coming out, but at the same time, I'm critical of the assumption that one's identity has to be the major driving force that determines one's politics."
For the final episode of our season, Angela Davis joins us to talk about why her incarceration was crucial in shaping her political journey, why we must challenge the notion that there is only one important revolutionary struggle, and why she supported the LGBTQ+ movement long before she discovered her own queerness.
Click here to listen to our recent interview where the historian Hugh Ryan breaks down the queer history of The Women's House of Detention.
LGBTQ&A is hosted by Jeffrey Masters and produced by The Advocate magazine, in partnership with GLAAD. A condensed transcript of each week's interview is posted on The Advocate's website. Follow us on Twitter: @lgbtqpod
And for more, check out: lgbtqpodcast.com
Ian Alexander: Is Coming For Your Gender Norms
Jennifer Finney Boylan: Oprah's Place in Trans History
Joel Kim Booster: See You at the Circuit Party
Karina Samala: We Need Chosen Families
Jacob Tobia: Will Change How You Think About Gender
Zach Stafford: What Is The Future Of LGBTQ Media?
Buck Angel: Let's Talk About Masturbation
Mary Lambert: All I Know of Love Is Hunger
Tre'vell Anderson: Here to Critique
Grace Bonney: After Design*Sponge
Alexei Romanoff: The 1967 Black Cat Protest
DeRay Mckesson: Out of the Quiet
Wrabel: Hello, My Name Is Needy.
Jake Shears & Ira Madison: LIVE From the Big Queer Pod Fest
Chani Nicholas: Doesn't Care If You Hate Astrology
Sonya Passi: We Need to Talk About Domestic Violence
River Gallo: Intersex Bodies Are Healthy Bodies
Arisce Wanzer: Gets Candid About Sex and Dating
Alaska Thunderfuck: Squishy Human Drag Thing
Fran Tirado: A Wink of Faggotry
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