<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[The Secular Librarian]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[http://secularlibrarian.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[David]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://secularlibrarian.com/author/muirnin/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[LGBTQ LC Subject Headings: 4. Culture and&nbsp;Identity]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2003001932"><b>African American bisexual men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Bisexual men, African American<br />
<b>550: </b>Bisexual men–United States<br />
<b>670: </b>Work cat.: 2003056006: King, J.L. On the down low, 2004.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2015000363"><b>African American bisexual women</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Bisexual women, African American<br />
<b>550: </b>Bisexual women–United States<br />
<b>670:</b>  StoryCorps Black LGBTQ archive, 2004-2013: <strong>|b</strong> (includes interviews with African American bisexual women)</p>
<p><a href="//lccn.loc.gov/sh2003006883"><b>African American bisexuals</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Bisexuals, African American<br />
<b>550: </b>Bisexuals–United States<br />
<b>670: </b>Work cat.: Say it loud, I’m Black and I’m proud, c2002: |b p. viii (Black gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT) people; African American GLBT)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2003003398"><b>African American gay men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay men, African American<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Two encounters [VR] 1999.<br />
<b>670:</b> Fighting words, 1999.<br />
<b>670:</b> Pettiway, Leon E. Honey, Honey, Miss Thang, 1996.<br />
<b>670: </b>91071186: Brother to brother : new writings by Black gay men, 1991.<br />
<b>670: </b>Hawkeswood, William G. One of the children, 1996.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2006003331"><b>African American gay men–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Identity (Psychology)<br />
<b>670: </b>Work cat.: Hucks, T.C. Racial and sexual orientation identity and social support as predictors of sexual risk-taking behavior among African-American men who have sex with men, 2004: |b abstr. (Gay African-Americans who affirm their sexual orientation identity feel they are perceived by other African Americans as abandoning ties to the African-American community and assuming another minority group status; whether reported racial/sexual orientation identity and social support predict sexual risk-taking behaviors among African American men who have sex with men)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh86004765"><b>African American gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Afro-American gays<br />
<b>450:</b> Afro-American homosexuals<br />
<b>450:</b> Gays, African American<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: In the life : a black gay anthology, c1986.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh85001859"><b>African American lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Afro-American lesbians<br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbians, African American<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Roberts, J.R. Black lesbians, 1981.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2008002262"><b>African American lesbians–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> N/A<em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Identity (Psychology)<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Follins, L.D. To be young, different, &amp; black, 2003: |b t.p. (an exploratory study of the identity development process of black lesbian adolescents)</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2016000681" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">African American sexual minorities</a></strong><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Sexual minorities, African American<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Sexual minorities–United States<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat: 2002023719: Black like us: a century of lesbian, gay and bisexual African American fiction, 2002.<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Voices rising: celebrating 20 years of Black lesbian, gay, bisexual &amp; transgender writing, 2007.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2012000714"><b>African American transgender people</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Transgender people, African American<br />
<b>550: </b>Transgender people–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Moodie-Mills, A.C. Jumping beyond the broom : why Black gay and transgender Americans need more than marriage equality, 2012: |b p. 2 (black gay and transgender people)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2003006884"><b>African American transsexuals</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Transsexuals, African American<br />
<b>550: </b>Transsexuals–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Say it loud, I’m Black and I’m proud, c2002: |b p. viii (Black gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT) people; African American GLBT)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2009007612"><b>Alaska Native sexual minorities</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Sexual minorities, Alaska Native<br />
<b>550: </b>Sexual minorities–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Lehavot, K. Abuse, mastery, and health among lesbian, bisexual, and two-spirit American Indian and Alaska Native women, 2007.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2014002555"><b>Arab American sexual minorities</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Sexual minorities, Arab American<br />
<b>550: </b>Sexual minorities–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat: Zaher, M. Experiences of Arab sexual minorities in the United States, 2013.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98006060"><b>Asian American bisexuals</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Bisexuals, Asian American<br />
<b>550: </b>Bisexuals–United States<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Witness aloud : lesbian, gay &amp; bisexual Asian/Pacific American writing, c1993.<br />
<strong>670:</strong> 95-163883: The very inside : an anthology of writing by Asian and Pacific Islander lesbian and bisexual women, c1994.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98006060"><b>Asian American gay men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay men, Asian American<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Witness aloud : lesbian, gay &amp; bisexual Asian/Pacific American writing, c1993.<br />
<b>670:</b> 95-163883: The very inside : an anthology of writing by Asian and Pacific Islander lesbian and bisexual women, c1994.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh95004421"><b>Asian American gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gays, Asian American<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 95-538: Asian American sexualities, c1995.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh96011701"><b>Asian American lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbians, Asian American<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Hennepin |b (Asian-American lesbians)<br />
<b>670:</b> 96-176799: Mason-John, V. Talking black : lesbians of African and Asian descent … 1995.<br />
<b>670:</b> 96-3833: The new our right to love … c1996.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005007013"><b>Asian American sexual minorities</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Sexual minorities, Asian American<br />
<b>550: </b>Sexual minorities–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Dang, A. Asian Pacific American lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, c2005: |b p. ii (APA LGBT people) p. 1 (“The lives of APA LGBT people involve a complex web of issues arising from being sexual, racial/ethnic, language, gender, immigrant, and economic minorities.”)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2004007474"><b>Bears (Gay culture)</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Otters (Gay culture)<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: The bear book, c1997.<br />
<b>670:</b> Cornell University Library database, Apr. 2, 2004: |b record for Les K. Wright papers and Bear History Project files, 1959-2000 (hdg.: Bears (Gay subculture); collection summary: documentation of a gay subculture revolving around burly, hairy men, or “bears”)<br />
<b>670: </b>Crimmins, C. How the homosexuals saved civilization, 2005: |b p. 87 (hairy gay guys– known a “bears” or “otters”)<br />
<b>680: </b>Here are entered works on gay men who refer to themselves as “bears” because they are heavier-set, hairy, older, and/or have mustaches or beards.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98004191">Bisexual parents</a></strong><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<strong>550:</strong> Parents<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: 98-30266: Kaeser, G. Love makes a family, 1999.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99013439"><b>Bisexual women–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Identity (Psychology)<br />
<b>670:</b> Bi lives, 1999.</p>
<p><b><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2011004972">Buddhist gays</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Buddhists<br />
<b> 550:</b> Gays<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat: 2011041474: Deshi. If you fall down seven times, get up eight, c2011.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2012003858"><b>Butch and femme (Lesbian culture)</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Butch-fem (Lesbian culture)<br />
<b>450:</b> Butch-femme (Lesbian culture)<br />
<b>450:</b> Femme-butch (Lesbian culture)<br />
<b>450:</b> Femme and butch (Lesbian culture)<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbian culture<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat: Loulan, JoAnn. The lesbian erotic dance: butch, femme, androgyny, and other rhythms, c1990.<br />
<b>670:</b> The persistent desire: a femme-butch reader, 1992.<br />
<b>670:</b> Butch/femme: inside lesbian gender, 1998.<br />
<b>670:</b> Encyclopedia of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender history in America, c2004 |b (femmes and butches; the origin of the terms femme and butch has been traced to working-class lesbian subcultures of the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s)<br />
<b>670:</b> Lesbian histories and cultures: an encyclopedia, 2000 |b (butch-femme, also spelled butch-fem; the butch-femme couple was particularly dominant in the U.S. lesbian community from the 1920s to early 1960s. The butch appears masculine, the femme feminine, paralleling heterosexual categories; but butches and femmes transformed heterosexual elements into a unique lesbian language of sexuality and emotional bonding)<br />
<b>670:</b> Merriam-Webster dictionary (online), viewed July 13, 2012 |b (butch: notably or deliberately masculine in appearance or manner; also used as a noun; femme (definition 2): a lesbian who is notably or stereotypically feminine in appearance and manner)<br />
<b>680: </b>Here are entered works on lesbians who assume a masculine or feminine identity or role, which may be manifested in manner or appearance.</p>
<p><b><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005004587">Catholic gay men</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Catholic men<br />
<b> 550:</b> Catholic gays<br />
<b> 550:</b> Catholic men<br />
<b> 550:</b> Christian gay men<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: 2005019193: Stevenson, T. Sons of the church, c2006.</p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh90005741">Catholic gays</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Catholics<br />
<b> 550:</b> Gays<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: Dunn, R. Listen to the stories, 1991.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2018002746"><strong>Catholic lesbians</strong></a><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Lesbian Catholics<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Lesbians<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: 86016194: A faith of one’s own : explorations by Catholic lesbians, ©1986.<br />
<strong>670:</strong> A challenge to love : gay and lesbian Catholics in the church, 1983.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2018002722">Catholic sexual minorities</a></strong><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Sexual minority Catholics<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Sexual minorities<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Dignity/Seattle. Dignity/Seattle records, 1974-2006 |b (Administrative history: Dignity/Seattle, a branch of the Dignity/USA faith community of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender Catholics, was founded in 1973 … the group continues its commitment to spiritual development, education, social justice, equality, social events, and other causes of interest to gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender Catholics.)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Our stories : being LGBT and Catholic, 2017 or 2018: <strong>|b</strong> t.p. (LGBT Catholics)</p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005004588">Christian gay men</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Christian men<br />
<b> 550:</b> Christian gays<br />
<b> 550:</b> Christian men<br />
<b> 550:</b> Gay men<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: 2005019193: Stevenson, T. Sons of the church, c2006.</p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh96011052">Christian gays</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Christians<br />
<b> 550:</b> Gays<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: 96-37694: Yip, A.K.T. Gay Male Christian couples, 1996.</p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2006008772">Christian lesbians</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Lesbian Christians<br />
<b> 550:</b> Christian gays<br />
<b> 550:</b> Christian women<br />
<b> 550:</b> Lesbians<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: 2006039823: Taylor, J. Waiting for the call, c2007.</p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2012001156">Christian sexual minorities</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> <em>N/A<br />
</em><strong>450:</strong> Sexual minority Catholics<br />
<b> 550:</b> Sexual minorities<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: Carr, T. L. Sexual-minority Christians, 2010.</p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2007003726">Christian transgender people</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Transgender Christians<br />
<b> 550:</b> Transgender people<br />
<b> 667-68X:</b> <em>N/A</em></p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2001001920">Christian transsexuals</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Transsexual Christians<br />
<b> 550:</b> Transsexuals<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: 2001036061: Vanessa, S. Crossing over, 2001.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh96001956"><b>Cuban American lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbians, Cuban American<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Obejas, A. We came all the way from Cuba so you could dress like this?, 1994.<br />
<b>670:</b> Hennepin |b (Cuban-American lesbians)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2004001478"><b>Deaf gay men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Deaf gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Deaf men<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men<br />
<b>670:</b> Deaf Bears and Cubs Organization web site, Oct. 27, 2004 |b (for and by deaf bears and their admirers; What is a Bear? They are a sub-group of gay men that are hairy and like the same type of men that are also hairy and has [sic] facial hair)<br />
<b>670:</b> Google search, Oct. 27, 2004 |b (deaf gay men; deaf lesbians and gay men; deaf gay males; deaf male homosexuals; gay deaf men; gay deaf males)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2004001342"><b>Deaf gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay deaf people<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays with disabilities<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Eyes of desire : a deaf gay &amp; lesbian reader, 1993.<br />
<b>670:</b> Emery, D. Language of love : the personal odyssey of a deaf gay man, c1993.<br />
<b>670:</b> Rainbow Alliance of the Deaf home page, Aug. 5, 2004: |b About RAD (society of Deaf Gays and Lesbians; Deaf Gay and Lesbian citizens; Deaf Gays/Lesbians)<br />
<b>670:</b> Deaf Queer Resource Center home page, Aug. 5, 2004 |b (Deaf Queers)<br />
<b>670:</b> Deaf Gay &amp; Lesbian Center home page, Aug. 5, 2004 |b (to serve the needs of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Communities throughout the San Francisco Bay area; Deaf and Hard of Hearing LGBT individuals)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh94008099"><b>Drag balls</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Ball culture (Gay culture)<br />
<b>450:</b> House ballroom scene (Gay culture)<br />
<b>550: </b>Contests<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay culture<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Paris is burning [MP] 1990.<br />
<b>670:</b> Encyc. homosexuality, 1990: |b index (drag balls-see balls, drag)<br />
<b>670:</b> Rodgers, B. The Queen’s vernacular, 1972 |b (drag ball)<br />
<b>670:</b> Spears, R. Slang and euphemism, 1991 |b (drag-ball, drag-party)<br />
<b>670:</b> 2013010094: Gaskin, G.H. Legendary, 2013: |b CIP t.p. (house ballroom scene) summary (house ballroom community, balls)<br />
<b>670: </b>Wikipedia, March 21, 2013 |b (Ball culture, the house system, the ballroom community and similar terms describe the underground LGBT subculture in the United States in which people “walk” (i.e. compete) for trophies and prizes at events known as balls)<br />
<b>670: </b>Wiretap Magazine, June 6, 2007, viewed May 15, 2013 |b (There’s No Place Like Home: A History of House Ball Culture; drag balls developed into House Ballroom scene)<br />
<b>675: </b>Web. 3; |a NYT index; |a Dict. Am. slang; |a Ox. dict. new words<br />
<b>680: </b>Here are entered works on balls attended by gay men or lesbians dressed in clothing characteristic of the opposite sex.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh95010233"><b>Etiquette for gay men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay men–Etiquette<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men–Conduct of life<br />
<b>670:</b> Hennepin |b (Etiquette for gay men)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh97001053"><b>Etiquette for lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbians–Etiquette<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians–Conduct of life<br />
<b>670:</b> Hennepin |b (Etiquette for lesbians)<br />
<b>670:</b> 95-9321: Cohn, M. “Do what I say” : Ms. Behavior’s guide to gay &amp; lesbian etiquette, 1995.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2006003242"><b>Ex-gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Ex-homosexuals<br />
<b>450:</b> Exgays<br />
<b>450:</b> Former gays<br />
<b>450:</b> Former homosexuals<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Peebles, A.E. Sexual and spiritual identity transformation among ex-gays and ex-ex-gays, 2004: |b PDF p. viii (ex-gays, or self-identified evangelical Christians who claim to have transformed or are attempting to transform their sexual identity in order to bring it in line with their understanding of evangelical Christian theology)<br />
<b>670:</b> Cianciotto, J. Youth in the crosshairs, c2006, via WWW, Apr. 25, 2006: |b p. 3 (ex-gays) p. 8 (ex-gay and evangelical Christian right leaders)<br />
<b>670:</b> Wikipedia, Apr. 25, 2006 |b (The ex-gay movement is primarily based in the United States (though it exists in other countries such as Canada, Sweden and the United Kingdom), and is largely led by evangelical and fundamentalist Christians; the terms “ex-gay” and “former homosexual” are used to refer to people who have altered their sexual behavior and do not necessarily indicate a change in sexual orientation; ex-gays)<br />
<b>670:</b> Google search, Apr. 25, 2006 |b (ex-gays; exgays; former homosexuals, sometimes known as ex-gays; ex-homosexuals)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh85064634"><b>Female impersonators</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Cross-dressers<br />
<b>450:</b> Crossdressers<br />
<b>450:</b> Drag queens<br />
<b>450:</b> Impersonators, Female<br />
<b>450:</b> Impersonators of women<br />
<b>450:</b> Queens, Drag<br />
<b>550: </b>Actors<br />
<b>550: </b>Transgender people<br />
<b>670:</b> Wikipedia, Feb. 8, 2006 |b (“The term drag queen originates in Polari, the language of gay men in England in the early part of the last century. Drag meant “clothes”, and was also theatre slang for a woman’s costume worn by a male actor. A queen is an effeminate gay man. Another term for drag queen, female impersonator, is still used though it is often regarded as inaccurate as many contemporary drag performers are not attempting to pass as women … Some members of the lesbian, gay, and bisexual community criticize drag queens and their participation in pride parades and other public events, believing that this projects a limited and harmful image of gay people and impedes a broader social acceptance. Others see this point of view as intolerant of the diversity and history of the gay community. Still others simply regard drag as traditional fun that need not be politically analyzed.”)<br />
<b>670: </b>The drag queen anthology: the absolutely fabulous but flawless customary world of female impersonators, c2004.<br />
<b>670: </b>Moore, F. Drag!: male and female impersonators on stage, screen, and television, c1994.<br />
<b>680: </b>Here are entered works on men who impersonate women, generally for purposes of entertainment or comic effect. Works on women who impersonate men, generally for purposes of entertainment or comic effect, are entered under |a Male impersonators. |i Works on persons, especially males, who assume the dress and manner of the opposite sex for psychological gratification are entered under |a Transvestites.<br />
<b>681: </b>Notes under |a Male impersonators; Transvestites</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2002011161"><b>Female-to-male transsexuals</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> F to Ms (Female-to-male transsexuals)<br />
<b>450:</b> F2Ms (Female-to-male transsexuals)<br />
<b>450:</b> Female transsexuals<br />
<b>450:</b> FTM transsexuals<br />
<b>450:</b> FTMs (Female-to-male transsexuals)<br />
<b>450:</b> Trans men<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transgender men<br />
<b>450:</b> Transmales<br />
<b>450:</b> Transmen<br />
<b>450:</b> Transsexual males<br />
<b>450:</b> Transsexual men<br />
<b>550: </b>Transsexuals<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Bloom, A. Normal, c2002: |b p. 1 (female-to-male transsexuals) p. 14 (transsexual men) p. 34 (FTM transsexuals)<br />
<b>670:</b> Cromwell, J. Transmen and FTMs, c1999: |b p. 9 (female-to-male transpeople; female-to-male transsexuals) p. 25 (the various forms of FTM (F2M, FtM, F-t-M)) p. 115 (quote from L. Lothstein with Cromwell’s bracketed interpolation: “the female[-to-male] transsexual’s quest”)<br />
<b>670:</b> Devor, H. FTM : female-to-male transsexuals in society, c1997: |b pp. ix-xi (transsexual men) p. xi (female-to-male transsexual people)<br />
<b>670:</b> Westheimer, R.K. Encyclopedia of sex, c1994: |b p. 269 (female transsexuals)<br />
<b>670:</b> You don’t know dick : courageous hearts of transsexual men, c1997.<br />
<b>670:</b> Google search, June 8, 2006 |b (trans men; trans males; transmales)<br />
<b>670:</b> Wikipedia, Dec. 9, 2012: |b Trans man (A trans man (also trans-man or transman) is a female-to-male (FTM) transgender or transsexual person. A trans man was assigned female at birth, but identifies as male. The label of transgender male is not interchangeable with that of transsexual male although the two are often combined or mistaken for the same thing. The difference is that while transgender males identify with the male gender identity, transsexual males may intend to undergo physical changes to align their body with their gender identity. A transgender male is someone whose gender identity is male, but who does not necessarily change himself physically. … The term “trans man” is used as a short form for either identity (transsexual man and transgender man). Trans men may identify as transsexual, as transgender, neither, or both. “Transgender man” is an umbrella term that may include anybody who was assigned the female sex at birth but identifies as male.)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005020018"><b>Gay and lesbian dance parties</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay dance parties<br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbian and gay dance parties<br />
<b>550: </b>Dance parties<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays–Social life and customs<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Bollen, J. Queer kinaesthesia : on the dance floor at gay and lesbian dance parties Sydney, 1994-1998, 1999: |b p. 1 (dance parties produced by Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras, and other gay and lesbian organisations, during the mid-1990s in Sydney)<br />
<b>670:</b> Product description of Chemical palace by Fiona McGregor on Amazon.com website, viewed Mar. 25, 2005 |b (the Sydney, Australia queer dance-party culture)<br />
<b>670:</b> Ley, J. Review of Chemical palace by Fiona McGregor, via Sydney morning herald website, viewed Mar. 25, 2005 |b (Sydney’s queer dance-party scene)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh85053577"><b>Gay bars</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Bars (Drinking establishments)<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay business enterprises<br />
<b>670:</b> Encyc. of homosexuality, 1990: |b pp. 340-341 (Gay businesses; businesses directed to the gay community including bars, restaurants, bookshops, bathhouses, travel agencies, guest houses)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005020503"><b>Gay bathhouses</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Baths, Gay<br />
<b>450:</b> Gay baths<br />
<b>450:</b> Gay men’s bathhouses<br />
<b>450:</b> Gay saunas<br />
<b>450:</b> Gay steam baths<br />
<b>450:</b> Saunas, Gay<br />
<b>450:</b> Steam baths, Gay<br />
<b>450:</b> Tubs (Gay bathhouses)<br />
<b>550: </b>Bathhouses<br />
<b>550: </b>Sex-oriented businesses<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Prior, J.S. Sydney gay saunas, 1967-2000, 2004: |b p. 11 (gay sauna also variously called “gay bathhouse,” “gay baths,” “the baths,” “bathhouses,” “steam baths,” “the tubs,” “sex clubs,” and “fuck clubs”) glossary (Gay Bathhouse: a name used less frequently within Sydney for a gay sauna; Gay Sauna: a gay sex institution that emerged in Sydney during the second half of the 20th century and which was designed specifically to facilitate social and sexual encounters between men, particularly gay men. The establishment is equipped with facilities for bathing; Tubs: another name for a gay sauna)<br />
<b>670:</b> Encyc. of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender history in America, c2004 |b (Bathhouses; gay bathhouses)<br />
<b>670:</b> Reader’s guide to lesbian and gay studies, 2000 |b (Bathhouses. Gay bathhouses occupy a central (albeit) contested location within gay history and politics; gay baths)<br />
<b>670:</b> Hogan, S. Completely queer : the gay and lesbian encyc., 1998 |b (Baths/Bathhouses; gay-friendly baths and “saunas”; gay baths; gay men’s baths)<br />
<b>670:</b> Encyc. of homosexuality, 1990 |b (Bathhouses. In these establishments only a small area of the premises is devoted to immersion tubs and sauna rooms; the bulk of the floor space consists of cubicles which are used for resting and for consensual sexual encounters; gay bathhouses; in Europe, bathhouses–usually termed saunas there–continue to flourish)<br />
<b>670:</b> Wikipedia, July 17, 2005 |b (Gay bathhouses, also known as (gay) saunas or steam baths (and sometimes called, in gay slang in some regions, “the baths” or “the tubs”), are places where men can go to have sex with other men (note that not all men who visit gay bathhouses consider themselves “gay”))<br />
<b>670:</b> LC database, July 17, 2005 |b (ti: Gay bathhouses and public health policy)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99010524"><b>Gay clubs</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay clubs<br />
<b>450:</b> Gays–Societies and clubs<br />
<b>450:</b> Gays’ clubs<br />
<b>550: </b>Clubs<br />
<b>680:</b> Here are entered works on groups of gay people organized for a common purpose or having a common interest.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2004003132"><b>Gay conservatives</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Conservative gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Conservatives<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 2004005111: Robinson, P.A. Queer wars …, 2005 |b (gay right, gay conservatism)<br />
<b>670:</b> Google Internet search, March 3, 2004 |b (gay right, gay conservatism)<br />
<b>670:</b> WWW, March 16, 2004 |b (gay conservatives; conservative gays)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh85061777"><b>Gay couples</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Domestic partners<br />
<b>450:</b> Gay male couples<br />
<b>450:</b> Homosexual couples<br />
<b>450:</b> Same-sex couple<br />
<b>550:</b> Couples<br />
<b>670:</b> LC database, July 8, 2004 <b>|b</b> (Domestic partners; same-sex couples)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2008117800"><b>Gay couples–United States</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>667:</b> Record generated for validation purposes.<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Gay marriage, c1998</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005020372">Gay discotheques<br />
</a></strong><b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<strong>550:</strong> Discotheques<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Buckland, F. Impossible dance : club culture and queer world-making, c2002.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh90000760"><b>Gay fathers</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Fathers<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay parents<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Barrett, R.L. Gay fathers : the practitioner’s handbook, 1990.<br />
<b>670:</b> Women’s thes.<br />
<b>670:</b> IAC.<br />
<b>675:</b> Hennepin; |a Thes. soc. index terms</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh96001984"><b>Gay heroes</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Heroes<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Bernstein, S. Uncommon heroes … for gay and lesbian Americans, 1994.<br />
<b>670:</b> Hennepin |b (Heroes and heroines, Gay and lesbian)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98001886"><b>Gay men and musicals</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Musicals and gay men<br />
<b>550: </b>Musicals<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 98-15685: Miller, D.A. Place for us, 1998.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh95010435"><b>Gay men–Conduct of life</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>667-68X: </b><i>N/A</i></p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99003153"><b>Gay men–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Identity (Psychology)<br />
<b>667-68X: </b><i>N/A</i></p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2002010435"><b>Gay men–Language</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Baker, P. Polari, the lost language of gay men, 2002.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2004002160"><b>Gay men, Black</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Black gay men<br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Crichlow, W.E. A. Buller men and batty bwoys : hidden men in Toronto and Halifax black communities, 2004: |b From book jacket (“Buller Men and Batty Bwoys is a study of Black gay and bisexual men in Toronto and Halifax …”.)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005020516"><b>Gay men, White</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay white men<br />
<b>450:</b> White gay men<br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Mao, L. Gay Asian and Caucasian men in Sydney, 2002: |b p. 28 (gay White men; White gay culture) p. 39 (gay Caucasian men) p. 79 (Caucasian gay men)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99010525"><b>Gay motorcycle clubs</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Gay clubs<br />
<b>550: </b>Motorcycle clubs<br />
<b>670: </b>Leather pride!, spring 1999: |b p. 5 (Border Riders Motorcycle Club. The Pacific Northwest’s largest and oldest international gay motorcycle club)<br />
<b>670: </b>Rochester Rams, M.C. WWW home page, Nov. 11, 1999 |b (Rochester’s foremost gay motorcycle club)<br />
<b>670: </b>Long Island Ravens M.C. WWW home page, Nov. 11, 1999: |b statement of purpose (L.I. Ravens M.C. is a member of the Atlantic Motorcycle Coordinating Council (AMCC). The AMCC is an umbrella organization consisting of Gay Motorcycle/Leather clubs along the east coast of the United States and the Eastern Provinces of Canada.)<br />
<b>670: </b>Melbourne Motorcycle Tourers WWW home page, Nov. 11, 1999 |b (Victoria’s gay and lesbian motorcycle group. Melbourne Motorcycle Tourers Inc is a motorcycle club for gay males and lesbians)<br />
<b>670: </b>Yahoo!, Nov. 11, 1999 |b (category: Society and Culture &gt; Cultures and Groups &gt; Lesbians, Gays, and Bisexuals &gt; Organizations &gt; Motorcycle Clubs)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2012002437"><b>Gay ocean liner passengers</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Ocean liner passengers<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Fritscher, J. Titanic : the untold tale of gay passengers and crew, 2012.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2008004021"><b>Gay personals</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Personals<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Skins, Jan. 1989: |b p. 3 (“… read adverts from other uncut guys who want to meat us …”; “uncensored personal classified ads from uninhibited uncut guys …”)<br />
<b>670:</b> OutPersonals.com WWW site, May 21, 2008: |b home page (“Worldwide gay personals”)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2009010044"><b>Gay political refugees</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Political refugees<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 2009352067: Kagan, Michael, J.D. Nowhere to run, 2008.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh93000860"><b>Gay Pride Day</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay and Lesbian Pride Day<br />
<b>450:</b> Gay Freedom Day<br />
<b>450:</b> Gay Liberation Day<br />
<b>450:</b> GLBT Pride Day<br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbian and Gay Pride Day<br />
<b>450:</b> LGBT Pride Day<br />
<b>450:</b> Pride Day, Gay<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay pride celebrations<br />
<b>550: </b>Special days<br />
<b>670 </b>Work cat.: 92-111670: Newman, L. Gloria goes to Gay Pride, 1991.<br />
<b>670: </b>LC database, Sept. 25, 1992 |b (Gay Pride Week, Lesbian/Gay Pride)<br />
<b>670: </b>Tobin, K. Gay crusaders, 1972: |b p. 122 (Originally celebrated in New York City as Christopher Street Liberation Day, then Gay Liberation Day. Over the years the name has evolved into Gay Pride Day.)<br />
<b>670: </b>GLBTQ : an encyc. of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender &amp; queer culture, via WWW, Sept. 2, 2006 |b (Parades and Marches. Pride parades … typically held in conjunction with other gay pride events; Stonewall-anniversary marches have been held every subsequent year, and the event has evolved into New York’s annual Gay Pride Parade; among the best known summer celebrations is San Francisco’s Gay and Lesbian Freedom Day parade … Another important celebration on the North American continent is Toronto’s Lesbian and Gay Pride day, which regularly attracts almost 1,000,000 participants)<br />
<b>670: </b>Wikipedia, Sept. 2, 2006 |b (Gay pride. Brenda Howard originated the idea for a week-long series of events around what is now known as Pride Day; this became the first of the extended annual LGBT Pride celebrations that are now held around the world. In New York and Atlanta the annual day of celebration to commemorate the Stonewall Riot came to be called Gay Liberation Day; in San Francisco and Los Angeles it was called Gay Freedom Day. Both names spread as more and more cities and towns started holding similar celebrations … In the 1980s the marches began dropping “Liberation” and “Freedom” from their names, replacing them with the philosophy of “Gay Pride”)<br />
<b>670: </b>Google search, Feb. 20, 2007 |b (GLBT Pride Day; LGBT Pride Day)<br />
<b>675: </b>Britannica Micro.; |a Web. 3</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2010013029"><b>Gay pride celebrations</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Celebrations, Gay pride<br />
<b>450:</b> Gay pride festivals<br />
<b>450:</b> GLBT pride celebrations<br />
<b>450:</b> LGBT pride celebrations<br />
<b>450:</b> Pride celebrations, Gay<br />
<b>550: </b>Festivals<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Official Vancouver Pride guide, 2010: |b p. 6, etc. (celebration of Pride; Pride celebrations; Pride Parade and Festival events; Pride events; Vancouver’s Pride celebrations)<br />
<b>670:</b> OCLC, Aug. 16, 2010 |b (titles: Official 2003 Twin Cities pride guide : your official guide to the Twin Cities GLBT Pride celebrations; Gay pride celebrations; We were there : a celebration of gay pride in our bicentennial year : San Francisco and Los Angeles gay pride celebrations, 1976)<br />
<b>670:</b> Wikipedia, Aug. 16, 2010 |b (under Gay pride: the extended annual LGBT Pride celebrations that are now held around the world; under Brenda Howard: She is known as the “Mother of Pride”, for her work in coordinating the first month anniversary rally and then the “Christopher Street Liberation Day March” to commemorate the first year anniversary of the Stonewall Rebellion. Howard also originated the idea for a week-long series of events around Pride Day which became the genesis of the annual LGBT Pride celebrations that are now held around the world every June)<br />
<b>670:</b> Wockner, R. Pride celebrated worldwide, 2007, via WWW, viewed Aug. 16, 2010 |b (Cochabamba, Bolivia, saw its first pride celebration June 28 in the form of a fair in the city’s main square; annual Europride parade, held in Madrid, June 30, preceded by a four-day festival that started June 27, offered 200 cultural, sports and party events; GLBT people gathered in Duarte Park in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, on June 28 for their second annual pride rally; In Guayaquil, Ecuador, the second annual Festival of Art and Diversity brought 300 people)<br />
<b>670:</b> Pride Month resource kit for journalists, Gay &amp; Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation website, Aug. 16, 2010 |b (Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Pride events garner media coverage each summer in communities across the country … LGBT Pride celebrations typically occur in June in big cities and small towns nationwide … The majority of Pride events are held in June to commemorate the anniversary of the Stonewall Rebellion in New York City on June 28, 1969, which most historians consider to be the birth of the modern LGBT civil rights movement … In some places Pride events stretch out over a weekend or an entire week, while in other areas, Pride events occur at different times of the year altogether (particularly in parts of the country where June is especially hot) … Pride celebrations may occur over several days, or even up to a week, and they often include rallies, marches, outdoor festivals, concerts, family events, film screenings, parties, meetings, performances, workshops and other events)<br />
<b>670:</b> Google search, Aug. 16, 2010 |b (2,200,000 results for “gay pride celebrations”; 120,000 results for “pride celebrations”; 107,000 results for “LGBT pride celebrations”; 33,800 results for “GLBT pride celebrations”)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2006020042"><b>Gay pride parades</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay pride marches<br />
<b>450:</b> LGBT pride parades<br />
<b>450:</b> Pride parades, Gay<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay pride celebrations<br />
<b>550: </b>Parades<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Loudes, C.M.H. Handbook on observations of pride marches, 2006: |b PDF p. 6 (During the year 2006, hundreds of Pride Marches will take place around the world) p. 38 (Pride parades)<br />
<b>670:</b> Johnston, L. Queering tourism : paradoxical performances at gay pride parades, 2005.<br />
<b>670:</b> Encyclopedia of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender history in America, 2004 |b (Pride marches and parades; marches and parades celebrating “pride” and protesting oppression; LGBT pride parades; pride parades; gay liberation parade; LGBT marches became annual events in most major U.S. cities … took the form of public parades; pride march)<br />
<b>670:</b> GLBTQ : an encyc. of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender &amp; queer culture, via WWW, Sept. 2, 2006 |b (Parades and Marches. Both parades and marches serve to render a community visible, but the purposes of the two kinds of events are different. Marches typically have the goal of effecting political or social change, whereas parades are celebratory. In practice, the distinction is not always so clear: some contingents in a parade may bear messages of political protest, and marches may have festive elements or be part of a larger program that includes concerts or picnics and similar events; pride parades; sometimes the pride celebrations are purely celebratory, but most often they are also political, the occasion for lobbying for glbtq rights or protesting injustice; gay pride marches; gay pride parades; within the last decade lesbians have begun holding “dyke marches” in such cities as Chicago and Toronto)<br />
<b>670:</b> Wikipedia, Sept. 2, 2006 |b (Gay pride parade. A pride parade is part of a festival or ceremony … to commemorate the struggle for LGBT rights and LGBT pride … The first marches were both serious and fun, and served to inspire the widening activist movement; more and more annual marches started up in other cities throughout the world. In New York and Atlanta the marches were called “Gay Liberation Marches” … in San Francisco and Los Angeles they became known as “Gay Freedom Marches” … In the 1980s there was a cultural shift in the gay movement and they dropped “Gay Liberation” and “Gay Freedom” from the names, replacing them with “Gay Pride”; gay pride march)<br />
<b>670:</b> USA today, June 24, 2006, via WWW, viewed Sept. 2, 2006 |b (article “Gay pride marches roll through European cities”; gays and lesbians took to the streets of European cities Saturday in a mass demonstration of pride; demonstrations and marches; gay pride parade)<br />
<b>670:</b> Google search, Sept. 2, 2006 |b (601,000 for “gay pride parade” and 91,200 for “gay pride parades”; 126,000 hits for “gay pride march” and 22,700 for “gay pride marches”)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2014000004"><b>Gay prisoners</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Prisoners<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat: Buffum. Homosexuality in prisons, 1972.<br />
<b>670:</b> Voice of age, June 1, 1976: |b page 2 (privacy for gay prisoners)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh00003517"><b>Gay rodeos</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Rodeos<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: International Gay Rodeo Association WWW home page, Mar. 21, 2000: |b about us (The International Gay Rodeo Association (IGRA) is an umbrella organization comprised of 20 regional Gay rodeo associations from across the United States and Canada. IGRA serves to foster the sport of rodeo and country &amp; western activities.)<br />
<b>670:</b> The L.A. Rodeo WWW home page, Mar. 21 |b (sponsored by the Greater Los Angeles Chapter of the Golden State Gay Rodeo Association)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98007854"><b>Gay skinheads</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Skinheads<br />
<b>670:</b> Healy, M. Gay skins, 1996.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh95010478"><b>Gay travelers</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Travelers<br />
<b>670: </b>Hennepin |b (Gay travelers)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2015002750" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><strong>Gay veterans</strong></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<strong>550:</strong> Sexual minority veterans<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Hogue, K.J. Better serving those who serve : California’s LGBT veterans speak out, June 2015: <strong>|b</strong> p. 4 (gay and lesbian veterans)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Fighting back : lesbian and gay draft, military, and veterans issues, ©1985.<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Forward march (Florida Gold Coast Gay, Lesbian, &amp; Bisexual Veterans). The forward march, June 1996: <strong>|b</strong> t.p. (Florida Gold Coast Gay, Lesbian, &amp; Bisexual Veterans)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh85061796"><b>Gays–Attitudes</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>667-68X: </b><i>N/A</i></p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh88007714"><b>Gays–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Identity (Psychology)<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Sell, T. Identidade homossexual e normas socials, 1987.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99004297"><b>Gays–Monuments</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>667-68X: </b><i>N/A</i></p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99004012"><b>Gays–Monuments–Netherlands</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>667-68X: </b><i>N/A</i></p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh85061797"><b>Gays–Travel</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>667-68X: </b><i>N/A</i></p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2009125713"><strong>Gays–United States–Identity</strong></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Looking queer, c1998</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh94002085"><b>Gays–Vocational guidance</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Vocational guidance for gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Vocational guidance<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Mickens, E. The 100 best companies for gay men and lesbians, 1994.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2004001343"><b>Gays with disabilities</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Gays<br />
<b>550: </b>People with disabilities<br />
<b>670:</b> LC database, Aug. 5, 2004 |b (titles: Gay men living with chronic illnesses and disabilities; Queer crips : disabled gay men and their stories; Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people with developmental disabilities and mental retardation)<br />
<b>670:</b> Forum of People with Disabilities website, Aug. 5, 2004: |b Choice (Disabled Gays and Lesbians)<br />
<b>670:</b> Regard : the National Organisation of Disabled Lesbians, Gay Men, Bisexuals and Transgender People home page, Aug. 5, 2004: |b introd. (disabled lesbians and gay men)<br />
<b>670:</b> Sociological abstracts, via CSA Internet database service, Aug. 5, 2004 |b (Gay-Disabled; crip &amp; queer; gay &amp; disabled figures; queer feminist with disabilities; disabled lesbians &amp; gay men … their experience of coming out as gay &amp; disabled)<br />
<b>670: </b>Google search, Aug. 5, 2004 |b (294 hits for “disabled gays”; 1,780 for “gay disabled”; 35 for “gays with disabilities”; 86 for “handicapped gays”; 133 for “gay handicapped”; 81 for “gay and lesbian disabled”; 140 for “disabled gays and lesbians”; 151 for “disabled gay and lesbian”; 32 for “gays and lesbians with disabilities”)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh00003702"><b>Handkerchief codes</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Bandana codes<br />
<b>450: </b>Codes, Handkerchief<br />
<b>450: </b>Codes, Hankie<br />
<b>450: </b>Codes, Hanky<br />
<b>450: </b>Flagging (Handkerchief codes)<br />
<b>450: </b>Hankie codes<br />
<b>450: </b>Hanky code<br />
<b>550: </b>Sex customs<br />
<b>550: </b>Signs and symbols<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: The unabridged hanky code, via WWW, Aug. 22, 2000 |b (“… if it is worn on the left the person is a dom (or top), worn on the right means sub (or bottom) … The different colors (and materials) have different specific meanings to indicate the wearer’s additional preferences. The hanky code is mainly used by the gay community, however some heterosexuals do use a few of them …”)<br />
<b>670:</b> Stewart, W. Cassell’s queer companion : a dict. of lesbian and gay life and culture, 1995 |b (hankie codes: Method of advertising sexual tastes in public used by gay men since the sexual heyday of the 1970s in order to facilitate cruising … It consists of a series of different coloured hankies representing different activities or attributes. They are worn in the different trouser pockets with a hankie on the left meaning I do it to you (or I am that type) and on the right meaning you do it to me (or I want that type). Predictably, gay communities were too dizzy to actually get together and agree on one series of meanings, so there are variations used.)<br />
<b>670:</b> Out in all directions, c1995: |b p. 435 (hanky codes)<br />
<b>670:</b> Deviants’ dictionary, via WWW, Aug. 22, 2000: |b codes and symbols/the hanky code (“The hanky code originated in the early 1970s primarily as a means of distinguishing more specific sexual interests when the original SM (or at least DS)-orientated leather scene was enlarging and style of dress could not be relied upon as an indicator of more esoteric sexual interests. The codes used have varied from time to time and place to place, and the many subsequently published collected versions contain numerous variants and contradictions … The general principle is to wear the appropriate colour in the back pocket of your jeans so that it is clearly showing, choosing the side according to the left-right convention described above, where left means top or active and right means bottom or passive.”)<br />
<b>670: </b>Wizard’s gay slang dictionary, via WWW, Aug. 22, 2000 |b (Hanky Codes: The handkerchief code was a way, for men to recognize each other with then meet on the streets, bar, clubs, movies, and parks. The handkerchief code used location and color, to indicate the sexual interests, of the potential sex partners.)<br />
<b>670: </b>The canonical hanky code, via WWW, Aug. 22, 2000 |b (“The Hanky Code is a traditional form of signalling to others what your sexual preferences and interests are. Gay men used this code to communicate with each other in the noisy and distracting environment of gay bars.”)<br />
<b>670: </b>Yahoo!, Aug. 22, 2000 |b (category: Society and Culture &gt; Sexuality &gt; Activities and Practices &gt; BDSM &gt; Hanky Codes)<br />
<b>670: </b>Wikipedia, Nov. 10, 2006 |b (Handkerchief code. The handkerchief code, also known as the hanky code, bandana code or flagging is a way of indicating, usually among gay male casual sex seekers or BDSM practitioners in leather subculture in the US and Canada, whether they are a top or bottom, and what kind of sex they are seeking, by wearing cotton, color-coded kerchiefs (bandanas), usually in the back pocket)<br />
<b>675: </b>Encyc. of homosexuality, 1990; |a Hogan, S. Completely queer, 1998<br />
<b>680: </b>Here are entered works on codes used primarily by gay men to indicate their preferred sexual interests and practices by the color and placement of handkerchiefs in their pockets.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2016001702" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Hispanic American bisexual men</a></strong><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Bisexual men, Hispanic American<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Bisexual men <strong>|z</strong> United States<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Kutner, B.A. Factors associated with sexual risk of HIV transmission among HIV-positive Latino men who have sex with men on the U.S.-Mexico border, 2015: <strong>|b</strong> p. 24 (Latino gay and bisexual men)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2010012312"><b>Hispanic American bisexual women</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Bisexual women, Hispanic American<br />
<b>550: </b>Bisexual women–United States<br />
<b>670: </b>Work cat.: Black Women, Gender &amp; Families, 2010: |b v. 4, no. 1, p. 63 (Acosta, Katie. “How could you do this to me?”: How Lesbian, Bisexual, and Queer Latinas Negotiate Sexual Identity with Their Families)</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2016001703" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Hispanic American gay men</a></strong><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Gay men, Hispanic American<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Gay men <strong>|z</strong> United States<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Kutner, B.A. Factors associated with sexual risk of HIV transmission among HIV-positive Latino men who have sex with men on the U.S.-Mexico border, 2015: |b p. 24 (Latino gay and bisexual men)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh91001710"><b>Hispanic American gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gays, Hispanic American<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Noticias (Gay Hispanic Caucus (Houston, Tex.))<br />
<b>670:</b> Allgo pasa!</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh91001711"><b>Hispanic American lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbians, Hispanic American<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Noticias (Gay Hispanic Caucus (Houston, Tex.))<br />
<b>670:</b> Allgo pasa!</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2008008424"><b>Hispanic American sexual minorities</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Sexual minorities, Hispanic American<br />
<b>550: </b>Sexual minorities–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Tal como somos [VR] 2008: |b container (Latino GBT men and women; Latino and gay, bisexual, or transgender)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99003844"><b>Homomonument (Amsterdam, Netherlands)</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Gays–Monuments–Netherlands<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 97-135278: Kiebders, P. Het homomonument, 1987: |b t.p. (Homomonument) p. 10, etc. (Homomonument unveiled, Sept. 6, 1987 in Amsterdam; monument honors persecuted gays and lesbians)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh97000544"><b>Indian gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gays, Indian<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Two-spirit people<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 97003475: Brown, L.B. Two spirit people, 1997.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh97000545"><b>Indian lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbians, Indian<br />
<b>550: </b>Indian gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Indian women<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 97-3475: Brown, L.B. Two spirit people, 1997.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2009007613"><b>Indian sexual minorities</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Sexual minorities, Indian<br />
<b>550: </b>Sexual minorities<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Lehavot, K. Abuse, mastery, and health among lesbian, bisexual, and two-spirit American Indian and Alaska Native women, 2007.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2007005480"><b>Intersex people–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Intersex identity<br />
<b>450: </b>Intersexed identity<br />
<b>450: </b>Intersexual identity<br />
<b>550: </b>Gender identity<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Preves, S.E. Intersex and identity : the contested self, c2003.<br />
<b>670:</b> Google search, July 12, 2007 |b (intersex identity; intersexual identity; intersexed identity)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2003011286"><b>Italian American gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gays, Italian American<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Hey paesan! : writing by lesbians and gay men of Italian descent, c1999.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2003011287"><b>Italian American lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbians, Italian American<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Hey paesan! : writing by lesbians and gay men of Italian descent, c1999.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2019000135"><strong>Jewish bisexuals</strong></a><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Bisexual Jews<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Bisexuals<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Nesiʻah le-ḥerut = A journey toward freedom : a liberation haggadah for lesbian, gay, &amp; bisexual Jews and their loved ones, 1997</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2003011466"><b>Jewish gay men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay Jewish men<br />
<strong>450:</strong> UF Gay Jews<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men<br />
<b>550: </b>Jewish gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Jewish men<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Kosher meat, 2000.<br />
<b>670:</b> Found tribe : Jewish coming out stories, 2002: |b intro. p. 1 (“For many years, Jewish gay men have often felt isolated from their religious background …”)<br />
<b>670:</b> Mendelsohn, D. The elusive embrace : desire and the riddle of identity, 1999.<br />
<b>670:</b> Mass, L. Confessions of a Jewish Wagnerite : being gay and Jewish in America, 1994.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh89003905"><b>Jewish gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Gays<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Twice blessed, 1989.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh96007024"><b>Jewish lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Jewish gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Jewish women<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Jewish lesbian Chanukah, c1979.<br />
<b>670:</b> Telling Bobbeh Meisehs : notes on identity and the creation of Jewish lesbian culture, c1982.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2008007442"><b>Jewish sexual minorities</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Sexual minority Jews<br />
<b>550: </b>Sexual minorities<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: The Hillel LGBTQ resource guide, c2007: |b p. iv-v (LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer) Jewish students; Jewish LGBTQ students) p. viii (Queer Jewish college students) p. 22 (LGBTQ Jews)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2009010821"><b>Jewish transgender people</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Transgender Jews<br />
<b>550: </b>Jewish sexual minorities<br />
<b>550: </b>Transgender people<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 2009052064: Balancing on the mechitza, c2009</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005005283"><b>Jewish transsexuals</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Transsexual Jews<br />
<b>550: </b>Transsexuals<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Nashim, 2004: |b no. 8, p. 165 (Krawitz, Cole. A Voice from Within: A Challenge for the Conservative Jewish Movement and its Gay/Lesbian Activists)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99013466"><b>Leather bars</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Leather clubs (Bars)<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay clubs<br />
<b>550: </b>Leather lifesetyle<br />
<b>670:</b> Chicago’s gay &amp; lesbian bar list, via WWW, Aug. 27, 1999 |b (leather bars)<br />
<b>670:</b> Yahoo! search, Aug. 27, 1999 |b (Leather bar; leather and fetish bar; leather and levi bar; levi/leather/uniform bar; leather and Levis club; Levi/Leather bar)<br />
<b>670:</b> Lexis-Nexis academic universe. News. General news, via WWW, Aug. 27, 1999 |b (leather bar; leatherbars)<br />
<b>670:</b> Cell Block WWW home page, Aug. 27, 1999 |b (Chicago’s premier leather bar)<br />
<b>670:</b> Daddy’s WWW home page, Aug. 27, 1999 |b (Welcome to Daddy’s, San Francisco, the Castro’s best leather bar)<br />
<b>670:</b> Loading Dock San Francisco WWW home page, Aug. 27, 1999 |b (San Francisco’s premier leather/fetish bar)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99014422"><b>Leather clubs (Organizations)</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Leather/Levi clubs (Organizations)<br />
<b>450: </b>Levi/leather clubs (Organizations)<br />
<b>550: </b>Clubs<br />
<b>550: </b>Leather lifestyle–Societies, etc.<br />
<b>670:</b> Leather pride!, fall 1999: |b cover (Northwest club resource list; leather/SM/fetish/bear/kink community club) spring 1999, p. 6 (leather/SM/bears club)<br />
<b>670:</b> Yahoo!, Dec. 9, 1999 |b (leather club; leather and Levis club; leather and BDSM clubs; leather/motorcycle clubs; Levi/leather club; leather and motorcycle-oriented clubs; leather/levi social club; leather/denim/motorcycle club; leather/levi club; club for gay/lesbians who love the leather lifestyle; leather/uniform social club; Levi, leather, and uniform club; gay friendship club for men in the leatherscene)<br />
<b>670:</b> San Francisco leather/motorcycle clubs, via WWW, Nov. 11, 1999 |b (leather and motorcycle clubs)<br />
<b>670:</b> TLC [VR] : year with a leather club, 1995 |b (Tarheel Leather Club)<br />
<b>670:</b> Long Island Ravens M.C. WWW home page, Nov. 11, 1999 |b (Motorcycle/Leather clubs along the east coast of the United States and the Eastern Provinces of Canada)<br />
<b>670:</b> Leather Knights, Dallas WWW home page, Nov. 11, 1999 |b (a pansexual club; though not a motorcycle club, the common bond of leather brings both women and men together)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh94001921"><b>Leather contests</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Leather lifestyle–Competitions<br />
<b>550: </b>Contests<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 93070456: Baldwin, G. The leather contest guide, c1993.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh94000992"><b>Leather lifestyle</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Leather life style (Sexuality)<br />
<b>550: </b>Lifestyles<br />
<b>550: </b>Sadomasochism<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 93070456: Baldwin, G. The leather contest guide, 1993.<br />
<b>670:</b> Hennepin |b (Sadomasochism (Leather sex))<br />
<b>670:</b> Random House.<br />
<b>675:</b> Sexual nomenclature, 1976.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2001007148"><b>Lesbian bars</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Gay bars<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 2001005957: The girls in the back room, 2001.<br />
<b>670:</b> Google WWW site, Oct. 12, 2001 |b (2610 hits on the phrase “Lesbian bars”)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh85076154"><b>Lesbian couples</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550:</b> Gay couples<br />
<strong>667-68X:</strong> <em>N/A</em></p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2009129542"><b>Lesbian couples–United States</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550:</b> Gay couples<br />
<strong>667:</strong> Record generated for validation purposes.<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Cancer in two voices, [1996]</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2010012672">Lesbians couples as parents</a></strong><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Lesbian-couple parents<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Lesbian mothers<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Same-sex parents<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: 92053818: Burke, P. Family values : two moms and their son, c1993.<br />
<strong>670:</strong> LC database, July 29, 2010 |b (94168528: Valentine, J. Two moms, the Zark, and me, 1993; 89085230: Newman, L. Heather has two mommies, c1989; 96033855: Greenberg, K.E. Zack’s story : growing up with same-sex parents, c1996 (summary note: An eleven-year-old boy describes life as part of a family made up of himself, his mother and her lesbian partner))<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Lesbian families’ challenges and means of resiliency, c2006: <strong>|b</strong> table of contents (lesbian couples with children; lesbian parents)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Powalski, K. Parents’ gender has no impact, 2010, via Orlando sentinel website, viewed July 29, 2010 <strong>|b</strong> (heterosexual and same-sex couples are equally good parents; study comparing heterosexual couples to lesbian couple parents)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Human reproduction, v. 24, no. 3 (2009), via WWW, viewed July 29, 2010: <strong>|b</strong> PDF p. 507 (lesbian-couple parents)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh96003496"><b>Lesbian heroes</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Gay heroes<br />
<b>550: </b>Women heroes<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 9472287: Uncommon heroes : a celebration of heroes and role models for gay and lesbian Americans, 1994.<br />
<b>670:</b> Hennepin |b (Heroes and heroines, Gay and lesbian)<br />
<b>680:</b> Here are entered works on lesbians who have performed courageous acts or are admired for bravery, great deeds, or noble qualities. Works on principal female characters of literary works who are lesbians are entered under |a Lesbian heroines in literature.<br />
<b>681:</b> Note under |a Lesbian heroines in literature</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2004003370"><b>Lesbian culture</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Gay culture<br />
<b>670:</b> LC database, May 21, 2004.<br />
<b>670:</b> WWW, May 21, 2004.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh85076155"><b>Lesbian mothers</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbian parents<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay parents<br />
<b>550: </b>Mothers<br />
<b>670:</b> Conlin, S.M. The ongoing “coming out” process of lesbian parents, 2001.<br />
<b>670:</b> LC database, Jan. 9, 2005 |b (lesbian parents)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2007000722"><b>Lesbian motorcyclists</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Women motorcyclists<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 2006009231: Hard road, easy riding : lesbian biker erotica, c2006.<br />
<b>670:</b> Google search, Feb. 2, 2007 |b (lesbian motorcyclists; lesbian bikers)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh94008014"><b>Lesbian vampires</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Vampire lesbians<br />
<b>550: </b>Vampires<br />
<b>667-68X: </b><i>N/A</i></p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh97001374"><b>Lesbians–Conduct of life</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>667-68X: </b><i>N/A</i></p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh94004083"><b>Lesbians–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> N/A<br />
<b>550: </b>Identity (Psychology)<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 94-22150: Cameron, E. Defiant desire, 1994.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh86001736"><b>Lesbians–Travel</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b><em>N/A</em><br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Places of interest to women, 1981.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2013002418"><b>Lesbians, Black</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Black lesbians<br />
<b>550: </b><em>N/A</em><br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Black Lesbian &amp; Gay Centre Project newsletter, April/May 1991: |b page 7 (BLGC definition of black: all lesbians and gay men descended (through one or both parents) from Africa, Asia and Latin America)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh85064636"><b>Male impersonators</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Cross-dressers<br />
<b>450: </b>Crossdressers<br />
<b>450: </b>Drag kings<br />
<b>450: </b>Impersonators, Male<br />
<b>450: </b>Impersonators of men<br />
<b>450: </b>Kings, Drag<br />
<b>550: </b>Actresses<br />
<b>550: </b>Transgender people<br />
<b>670:</b> Wikipedia, Feb. 8, 2006 |b (“Drag kings are female bodied or identified performance artists &#8211; usually lesbians or transmen &#8211; who dress in masculine ’drag’ as part of their routine … The term drag king is sometimes used in a broader sense, to include female-bodied people who dress in traditionally masculine clothing for other reasons. This usage includes women temporarily attempting to pass as men and women who wish to present themselves in a masculine gender role without identifying as a man.”)<br />
<b>680:</b> Here are entered works on women who impersonate men, generally for purposes of entertainment or comic effect. Works on men who impersonate women, generally for purposes of entertainment or comic effect, are entered under |a Female impersonators. |i Works on persons, especially males, who assume the dress and manner of the opposite sex for psychological gratification are entered under |a Transvestites.<br />
<b>681:</b> Notes under |a Female impersonators; Transvestites</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2006002132"><b>Male-to-female transsexuals</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> M-Fs (Male-to-female transsexuals)<br />
<b>450: </b>Male transsexuals<br />
<b>450: </b>MTFs (Male-to-female transsexuals)<br />
<b>450: </b>Transsexual women<br />
<b>450: </b>Trans-women<br />
<b>450: </b>Transwomen<br />
<b>550: </b>Transsexuals<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Lewins, F.W. Transsexualism in society : a sociology of the male-to-female transsexuals, 1995.<br />
<b>670:</b> Westheimer, R.K. Encyclopedia of sex, c1994: |b p. 268-269 (male-to-female sex change treatment and surgery, male transsexuals)<br />
<b>670:</b> Sexuality : the essential glossary, 2004: |b entry for transsexual (term refers to both FTMs and MTFs; transwoman)<br />
<b>670:</b> Bullough, V.L. Human sexuality : an encyclopedia, 1994: |b p. 590, etc. (transsexualism; male-to-female (M-F) and female-to-male (F-M); title words in bibliography: male-to-female transsexuals, male transsexualism)<br />
<b>670:</b> Wikipedia, Dec. 9, 2012: |b Trans woman (A trans woman (sometimes trans-woman or transwoman) is a transgender person with a female gender identity. The label of transgender woman is not interchangeable with that of transsexual woman, although the two are often combined or mistaken for the same thing. A transsexual woman is someone who was assigned male at birth but whose gender identity is that of a woman; transsexual women may undergo physical changes to align their body with their gender identity (known as transition). Transgender is an umbrella term that includes different types of gender variant people (including transsexual people) so transgender women could, for example, refer to either a woman who was assigned male at birth, identifies as a woman, but does not wish to undergo physical changes, or a transsexual woman. … Some trans women who feel that their gender transition is complete prefer to be called simply “women,” considering “trans woman” or “male-to-female transsexual” to be terms that should only be used for people who are not fully transitioned.)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh91001712"><b>Mexican American gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gays, Mexican American<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Noticias (Gay Hispanic Caucus (Houston, Tex.))<br />
<b>670:</b> Allgo pasa!</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh90006058"><b>Mexican American lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Chicana lesbians<br />
<b>450: </b>Lesbians, Mexican American<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Chicana lesbians : the girls our mothers warned us about.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh99013078"><b>Middle-aged gay men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men<br />
<b>550: </b>Middle-aged gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Middle-aged men<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 99055639: Kooden, H. Golden men, 2000.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98007796"><b>Middle-aged gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Gays<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 98050303: Isensee, R. Are you ready? 1999.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh90005798"><b>Middle-aged lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians<br />
<b>550: </b>Middle-aged gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Middle-aged women<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Lesbians at midlife, 1991.<br />
<b>670:</b> Hennepin |b (Middle-aged lesbians)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh96010654"><b>Minority gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Ethnic gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 96-45891: Ethnic and cultural diversity among lesbians and gay men, c1997.</p>
<p><b><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh91004211">Mormon gays</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Mormons<br />
<b> 550:</b> Gays<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: Peculiar people, 1991.<br />
<b> 675:</b> Hennepin</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98007820"><b>Minority lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Ethnic lesbians<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians<br />
<b>550: </b>Minority gays<br />
<b>550: </b>Minority women<br />
<b>670: </b>Work cat.: 98-54363: Muñoz, E.M. Disidentifications, 1999.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2016002249" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><strong>Museums and sexual minorities</strong></a><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Sexual minorities and museums<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Sexual minorities<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Olivo, S. Rocking the boat : exhibition methods of storytelling the experience of gender &amp; sexuality in museums, 2015: <strong>|b</strong> abstr. (emerging models for telling/sharing stories of female-identified and LGBTQ experience in museum exhibition. Keywords: museum, critical museology, exhibition, storytelling, identity, feminist standpoint theory, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersectionality, narrative, interpretation, language, education, authenticity) p. 32 (representation of the LGBTQ experience in museums)</p>
<p><b><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2009009639"> Muslim gay men</a><br />
</b><b style="font-size:inherit;">450:</b><span style="font-size:inherit;"> Gay Muslim men<br />
</span><b style="font-size:inherit;">550:</b><span style="font-size:inherit;"> Gay men<br />
</span><b style="font-size:inherit;">550:</b><span style="font-size:inherit;"> Muslim gays<br />
</span><b style="font-size:inherit;">550:</b><span style="font-size:inherit;"> Muslim men<br />
</span><b style="font-size:inherit;">670:</b><span style="font-size:inherit;"> Work cat.: 2009503647: Naït-Balk, Brahim. Un homo dans la cité, c2000.</span></p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2009010809">Muslim gays</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Muslims<br />
<b> 550:</b> Gays<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: 2009503647: Naït-Balk, Brahim. Un homo dans la cité, c2000.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2018001970">Muslim lesbians</a></strong><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Lesbian Muslims<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Lesbians<br />
<strong>670:</strong>  Work cat.: Habib, Samra. We have always been here, 2019 (CIP): <strong>|b</strong> publisher’s notes (“A queer Muslim searches for the language to express her truest self, making peace with her sexuality, her family, and Islam”)<br />
<strong>670:</strong>  Muslim American Leadership Alliance WWW site, viewed July 23, 2018 <strong>|b</strong> (My journey as a lesbian Muslim)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2016001615" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><strong>Neopagan gays</strong></a><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Gay neopagans<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Gays<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Neopagans<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat: Extra pages (Rowan Tree Church). Extra pages, 1979-: <strong>|b</strong> caption (The Unicorn provides these Extra pages to aid communication between gay and lesbian Pagans)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2018003006"><strong>Older transgender people</strong></a><br />
<strong>450:</strong>  Transgender older people<br />
<strong>550:</strong>  Older people<br />
<strong>550:</strong>  Transgender people<br />
<strong>670:</strong>  Work cat.: Chamberlain, C. The needs of older gay, lesbian, and transgender people, 2002: |b p. i (elderly gay, lesbian, and transgender people)<br />
<strong>670:</strong>  Martinez, J. Examining the complex relationship between attachment, depression and anxiety in the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender elderly compared to heterosexual cisgender elders, 2016.<br />
<strong>670:</strong>  Smith, J.L. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender elderly and the need for more specialized training for aging service professionals, 2012.<br />
<strong>670:</strong>  Madland, E.D. The strengths and challenges reported by older transgender adults, 2003.<br />
<strong>670:</strong>  Sullivan, K.M. The experience of senior housing for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender seniors, ©2011.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2004011615" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Older transsexuals</a></strong><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transsexual older people<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Older people<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Transsexuals<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Chamberlain, C. The needs of older gay, lesbian, and transgender people, 2002: <strong>|b</strong> p. i (elderly gay, lesbian, and transgender people)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> LC database, Dec. 17, 2004 |b (older LGBT adults)<br />
<strong>681:</strong> Example under Sexual minorities.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98006062"><b>Pacific Islander American bisexuals</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Bisexuals, Pacific Islander American<br />
<b>550: </b>Bisexuals–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Witness aloud : lesbian, gay &amp; bisexual Asian/Pacific American writing, c1993.<br />
<b>670:</b> 95-163883: The very inside : an anthology of writing by Asian and Pacific Islander lesbian and bisexual women, c1994.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh96001124"><b>Pacific Islander American gays</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gays, Pacific Islander American<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Cut sleeve, c1991: |b opening title frame (lesbians &amp; gays of Asian/Pacific ancestry)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98006583"><b>Pacific Islander American lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbians, Pacific Islander American<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> The very inside : an anthology of writing by Asian and Pacific Islander lesbian and bisexual women, c1994.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005007012"><b>Pacific Islander American sexual minorities</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Sexual minorities, Pacific Islander American<br />
<b>550: </b>Sexual minorities–United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Dang, A. Asian Pacific American lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, c2005: |b p. ii (APA LGBT people) p. 1 (“The lives of APA LGBT people involve a complex web of issues arising from being sexual, racial/ethnic, language, gender, immigrant, and economic minorities.”)</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh90005864">Parents of gays</a></strong><br />
<strong>450:</strong> Parents of gay men<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Gay men<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Gays<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: 2002421858: Ley, J. No ordinary child, 2002.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2013001034">Parents of intersex children</a></strong><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<strong>550:</strong> Intersex children<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat: Die Grenzen der elterlichen Sorge bei intersexuell geborenen Kindern, 2012.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2004011607" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Parents of sexual minority youth</a></strong><br />
<strong>450:</strong> <em>N/A</em><br />
<strong>550:</strong> Sexual minority youth<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Making sense, c2003: <strong>|b</strong> t.p. (parents, families, and friends of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender young people) p. 2 (this booklet is written primarily for parents of gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender young people who live in Victoria)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> LC database, Dec. 14, 2004 <strong>|b</strong> (parent’s guide to understanding your gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, or questioning son or daughter)</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2016000194">Parents of transgender children</a></strong><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<strong>550:</strong> Transgender children<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Whittington, H. Raising Ryland, 2016: <b>|b</b> title page (our story of parenting a transgender child) p. 4 of cover (her experiences as the parent of a transgender child)</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2016000194">Parents of transsexuals</a></strong><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<strong>550:</strong> Transsexuals<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Fourth genre, 2004: <b>|b</b> v. 6, no. 2 (Raz, Hilda. Stock)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> PubMed services web site, Oct. 25, 2005 <b>|b</b> (parents of transsexuals; sexual pathology occurring within families)</p>
<p><b><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2012000889">Presbyterian gay men</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Presbyterian men<br />
<b> 550:</b> Christian gay men<br />
<b> 550:</b> Presbyterian gays<br />
<b> 550:</b> Presbyterian men<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: Link, G.J. Out, thank God!, ©1996: <b>|b</b> t.p. (George J. Link, the Gay Deacon) p. 4 of cover (has served as an Elder, Deacon, and active member of the Presbyterian Church (USA) for nearly 40 years, the past 10 years at Central Presbyterian Church in Eugene; &#8220;George wrote this book because he cares about honoring the gift God made him as a gay man and honoring the church that he loves&#8221;)<br />
<b> 670:</b> Glaser, C. Uncommon calling : a gay man’s struggle to serve the Church, c1988.</p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2012000888">Presbyterian gays</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Presbyterians<br />
<b> 550:</b> Gays<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: Link, G.J. Out, thank God!, c1996: <b> |b</b> t.p. (George J. Link, the Gay Deacon) p. 1 (Especially hurtful for George has been the lack of full acceptance of the Presbyterian Church, USA, which he has loved and faithfully served for nearly four decades) p. 4 of cover (Deacon at Central Presbyterian Church in Eugene, Or.)</p>
<p><b> <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2007008279">Protestant gays</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> Gay Protestants<br />
<b> 550:</b> Gays<br />
<b> 670:</b> Work cat.: 2002550263: Graesslé, I. Unterwegs zu neuen Horizonten, 2001.</p>
<p><b><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh00003610">Puerto Rican lesbians</a></b><br />
<b>450:</b> Lesbians, Puerto Rican<br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians<br />
<b>550: </b>Puerto Rican women<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Romo-Carmona, M. Living at night, 1997.<br />
<b>670:</b> Spinsters Ink WWW home page, June 3, 2000: |b catalogue/previous publications/Living at night (“Erica García, a young, working-class Puerto Rican lesbian, searches for her niche in the world, despite the pressures of satisfying the expectations of family, lovers, and friends.”)<br />
<b>680:</b> Here are entered works on Puerto Rican lesbians living outside Puerto Rico. Works on lesbians living in Puerto Rico are entered under |a Lesbians–Puerto Rico.<br />
<b>681:</b> Note under |a Lesbians–Puerto Rico</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98004651"><b>Radical Faeries (New Age movement)</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Faeries, Radical (New Age movement)<br />
<b>450: </b>Fairies, Radical (New Age movement)<br />
<b>450: </b>Radical Fairies (New Age movement)<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men–Religion<br />
<b>550: </b>New Age movement<br />
<b>670:</b> sf93-94661: RFD, spring ’98: |b p. 2 (articles often explore … radical faerie consciousness)<br />
<b>670:</b> The gay almanac, 1996: |b p. 344, under 1979 (the Radical Faeries are est. when Harry Hay, a pioneer of gay liberation, organizes a 1st gathering of approx. 200 men in the Arizona desert; the Faeries)<br />
<b>670:</b> Encyc. of homosexuality, 1990: |b p. 384, under Fairy (in the late 1970s a quasi-religious movement began on the west coast of the U.S. under the rubric of fairy spirituality; inspired by the ideas of Harry Hay, this trend emphasized the concept that male homosexuals who will acknowledge their difference (“fairies” or “faeries”) have special insights; this movement is part of a larger complex of New Age religious phenomena that are characteristic of the western U.S., though they also enjoy some following elsewhere)<br />
<b>670:</b> Letter from S. Berman, Hennepin, May 16, 1997 |b (Radical Faeries is an est. hdg. in Hennepin catalog)<br />
<b>670:</b> Gay spirit, 1987: |b p. 260 (“radical fairies,” a nationwide, grass-roots movement of gay men seeking alternatives within their own subculture and society at large; fairie-identified men; loosely organized faction of gay men)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh97006641"><b>Rural gay men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men<br />
<b>550: </b>Rural men<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 97-37553: Smith, J.D. Rural gays and lesbians, 1997.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh97006642"><b>Rural lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550:</b> Lesbians<br />
<b>550:</b> Rural women<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 97-37553: Smith, J.D. Rural gays and lesbians, 1997.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2019004561"><strong>Rural sexual minorities</strong></a><br />
<strong>450:</strong> <em>N/A</em><br />
<strong>550:</strong> Sexual minorities<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Where we call home : LGBT people in rural America, 2019: <span style="color:#0000ff;"><strong>|b</strong></span> p. iii (LGBT people in rural areas; LGBT people living in rural communities; National surveys of rural areas show that between 3% and 5% of the rural population identifies as LGBT)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Boso, L.A. Urban bias, rural sexual minorities, and the courts, 2013, via eScholarship.org, viewed May 17, 2019.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005008637"><b>Sexual minorities–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550:</b> Identity (Psychology)<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Kephart, C.M. Identity development and acculturation processes in gay, lesbian, and bisexual youth, 2003: |b abstr. (identity development as a sexual minority individual)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2011003177"><b>Sexual minorities–Population</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> GLBT population<br />
<b>450:</b> LGBT population<br />
<b>450:</b> Sexual minority population<br />
<b>550:</b> Population<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Gates, Gary J. How many people are lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender?, 2011: <strong>|b</strong> exec. summary (estimate of the size of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) population; estimates of the size of the LGBT population in the United States)<br />
<b>670:</b> OCLC, June 20, 2011 <strong>|b</strong> (in titles: sexual minority population in Flanders; lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender populations; the LGBT population; the lesbian, gay, bisexual &amp; transgender (LGBT) population; LGBT population in Serbia; LGBT populations in Wisconsin; Chicago’s aging LGBT population; survey of the GLBT population of Ottawa; the GLBT population of Herodston, USA)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2006006214"><b>Sexual minorities–United States</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b><i>N/A</i><br />
<b>667-68X:</b> <i>N/A</i></p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2007005097" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Sexual minorities with disabilities</a></strong><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<strong>550:</strong> People with disabilities<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Allen, J.D. Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people with developmental disabilities and mental retardation, c2003.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2014001993"><b>Sexual minority men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Male sexual minorities<br />
<b>450: </b>Men sexual minorities<br />
<b>550: </b>Men<br />
<b>550: </b>Sexual minorities<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat: Graham, L. F. Examining the psychosocial health of black sexual minority men, 2010.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2006000228"><b>Sexual minority parents</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Parents<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Bell, M. Families, partners, children, and the European Union, 2003: |b PDF p. 18 (children where one or more of the parents are lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender; LGBT parents)<br />
<b>670:</b> Resources for GLBT parents, via PFLAG Phoenix web site, Jan. 7, 2006: |b home page (parents who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgendered)<br />
<b>670:</b> Quick facts on sexual minority parents and their children, via WWW, Jan. 7, 2006.<br />
<b>670:</b> Google search, Jan. 7, 2006 |b (LGBT parents; LGB parents; LGB parents and parents-to-be; GLBT parents; GLB parents; sexual minority parents; sexual minority parents/guardians; sexual-minority parents)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2015002362"><b>Sexual minority political refugees</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Political refugees<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Envisioning LGBT refugee rights in Canada, 2015: |b p. 5 (LGBT asylum seekers and refugees; The terms lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT) are used throughout this project and are used by many activists and human rights workers internationally. Others may use “queer” or “sexual minorities” as umbrella words.) p. 6 (LGBT refugees) p. 10 (Canada acknowledges persecution on the grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity as grounds for refugee protection)<br />
<b>670:</b> Envisioning LGBT refugee rights in Canada, 2012: |b title page (LGBT asylum seekers and refugees) p. 3 (LGBT asylum seekers; LGBT refugees)</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2015002751" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Sexual minority veterans</a></strong><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Veterans<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Hogue, K.J. Better serving those who serve : California’s LGBT veterans speak out, June 2015: <strong>|b</strong> p. 4 (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) veterans)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> OCLC, Nov. 11, 2015 <strong>|b</strong> (in title: sexual minority women veterans; LGBT veterans; LGBT service members and veterans; lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender veterans; lesbian, gay, bisexual, intersex and transgender veterans; gay, lesbian and bisexual veterans)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2009007614"><b>Sexual minority women</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Female sexual minorities<br />
<b>450: </b>Women sexual minorities<br />
<b>550: </b>Sexual minorities<br />
<b>550: </b>Women<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Lehavot, K. Abuse, mastery, and health among lesbian, bisexual, and two-spirit American Indian and Alaska Native women, 2007.<br />
<b>670:</b> Mental health issues for sexual minority women, 2003.<br />
<b>670:</b> OCLC, Aug. 13, 2009 |b (titles: Passionate friendships among adolescent sexual-minority women; Feasibility study of a computer-based intervention to enhance emotion regulation in a sample of sexual minority women; Trauma, stress, and resilience among sexual minority women; Minority stress, resilience, and sexual functioning in sexual-minority women; Predictors of sexual minority women’s career commitment)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98007522"><b>South Asian American gays</b></a><br />
<b>450</b>: Gays, South Asian American<br />
<b>550: </b>Gays |z United States<br />
<b>670:</b> Julpari, c1996.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2018002395" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><strong>Transgender men</strong></a><br />
<strong>450:</strong> F to Ms (Transgender men)<br />
<strong>450:</strong> F2Ms (Transgender men)<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Female-to-male transgender people<br />
<strong>450:</strong> FTMs (Transgender men)<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Trans guys<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Trans males<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Trans-masculine people<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Trans men<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transgender males<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transmales<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transmen<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Men<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Transgender people<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Bridgeman, L. There is no word for it, 2011: <strong>|b</strong> unnum. prelim. p. (monologues from the trans male community) p. opp. t.p. verso (trans boys, trans men and other trans masculine people) p. iii (the trans male experience) p. x (trans men) p. 4 of cover (transgender men) p. 106 (Female to male: Shorthand description of the journey of someone assigned female at birth who now expresses a masculine identity. Also often used as a noun, short for “female to male trans person”) p. 107 (FTM, FtM, F2M: Abbreviations of “female to male”, or “female towards male”, the latter indicating that becoming unambiguously male is not the intention)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Brighton trans*formed, 2014: <strong>|b</strong> p. 156 (FTM: female-to-male. Trans man/a transsexual man. Someone assigned female at birth who intends to, is in transition towards, or has transitioned to a masculine gender) p. 159 (Transgender: An older umbrella term that encompasses various “trans” identities (and experience), including transvestite, transsexual, trans-masculine/feminine, neutral, dual and genderqueer terms)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Greatheart, M.S. The Fred Study : stories of life satisfaction and wellness from post-transition transgender men, 2010: <strong>|b</strong> p. 2 (the term “transgender (or trans) man” refers to individuals who were identified as female at birth, socialized as girls and women, and are now living as guys or men within the transmasculine gender continuum) p. 11 (trans men)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Hudson’s FTM resource guide, via WWW, Sept. 17, 2018: <strong>|b</strong> home page (female-to-male (FTM, F2M) trans men) FTM basics: terminology (F2M: see “FTM”; FTM: Short for Female-To-Male. Usually said aloud as “F to M.” The term originally was used to refer specifically to female-to-male transsexuals (and the female-to-male transition process), though in recent years it has come to be used by others who are born in female bodies and who move toward masculine or male presentation without hormones or surgery; female-to-male transsexual: A person who was born in a female body but whose gender identity is male. Also can refer to those assigned female at birth, in the case of intersex people, whose gender identity is male. Often, female-to-male transsexuals will seek hormonal and/or surgical treatment in order to live as a men in society. NOTE: The use of the term “transsexual” has fallen out of favor in recent years due to its strong links to the medicalization of trans identities. That said, there are still a percentage of trans people who prefer to identify with the term transsexual; trans man: Used to refer to those who were identified as/assigned female at birth and identify along a masculin or male spectrum)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> TransDude.com website, Sept. 17, 2018: <strong>|b</strong> home page (Transmen/FTM &#8211; transgender or transsexual people who were assigned female at birth based on genital appearance (or, in cases of intersexuality, were later assigned to the female gender) and who feel that this is not an accurate or complete description of themselves. They have a male gender identity and/or present themselves as men and desire to live in a male gender role)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> TransGuys.com website, Sept. 17, 2018: <strong>|b</strong> home page (trans men; trans guys)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Sickels, A.C. What does masculinity mean to you : trans males creating identities of possibilities, 2010.<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Plis, L.C. Negotiating lesbian and queer identities in Midwestern young adults, 2010: <strong>|b</strong> p. iii (transgender or transmale individuals) p. 13 (transmen) p. 15 (transmale identity) p. 44 (transman) p. 75 (transmale/FTM) p. 117 (transmale gender identity)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2007005144"><b>Transgender parents</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Parents<br />
<b>670: </b>LC database, July 11, 2007.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2007005095"><b>Transgender people–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Transgender identity<br />
<b>550: </b>Gender identity<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Finding the real me : true tales of sex and gender diversity, c2003.<br />
<b>670: </b>Sinnott, M. Toms and dees : transgender identity and female same-sex relationships in Thailand, c2004.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2010012320"><b>Transgender veterans</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Veterans<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Bryant, K. Transgender people in the U.S. military, 2008: |b PDF p. 1 (transgender service members and veterans; transgender military veterans) p. 7 (transgender veterans)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2018002623" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><strong>Transgender women</strong></a><br />
<strong>450:</strong> M to Fs (Transgender women)<br />
<strong>450:</strong> M2Fs (Transgender women)<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Male-to-female transgender people<br />
<strong>450:</strong> MTFs (Transgender women)<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Trans females<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Trans women<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transfemales<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transfeminine people<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transfeminine spectrum people<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transgender females<br />
<strong>450:</strong> Transwomen<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Persons<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Transgender people<br />
<strong>550:</strong> Women<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Work cat.: Frankel, A. “Do you see how much I’m suffering here?”, 2016: <strong>|b</strong> subtitle (transgender women) p. II (Transgender: gender identity of people whose birth gender does not conform to their lived and/or perceived gender; transgender person usually adopts, or would prefer to adopt, a gender expression in consonance with their preferred gender but may or may not desire to permanently alter their bodily characteristics in order to conform to their preferred gender) p. III (trans women)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Head, T. The difference between transgender and transsexual women, 2018, via ThoughtCo. website, Oct. 17, 2018 <strong>|b</strong> (Transgender and transsexual are commonly confused terms that both refer to gender identity. Transgender is a broader, more inclusive category that includes all individuals who do not identify with the gender that corresponds to the sex they were assigned at birth. Transsexual is a more narrow category that includes individuals who desire to physically transition to the gender with which they identify. All transsexual persons are transgender. However, not all transgender persons are transsexual. Transgender women are sometimes referred to as trans women. Some may also be known as male-to-female transsexuals, MTFs, transsexual women, transgirls, or tgirls)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Craggs, C. To my trans sisters, 2017: <strong>|b</strong> p. 14 (trans women; trans woman)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Carroll, L. Clinical issues and affirmative treatment with transgender clients, 2017: <strong>|b</strong> p. vi (transgender women; transfeminine spectrum persons; transfeminine spectrum people) p. 179 (transwomen) p. 180 (transfeminine persons)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Strain, G. Play with femininity, 2016: |b p. 44 (transfeminine people)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Raymond, H.F. The role of individual or neighborhood factors, 2011: <strong>|b</strong> p. 1 (transfemales)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Bouman, W.P. Risk factors and clinical correlates of the treatment pathways for people with gender dysphoria, 2018: <strong>|b</strong> abstr. (transgender females; trans females)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Fotomar, M. Exploring the lived experience of male-to-female transgender youth accessing transgender healthcare in Los Angeles, 2016: <strong>|b</strong> p. 15 (MtFs; assigned at birth a male gender but identify their gender as female) p. 20 (MTF trans persons) p. 81 (male-to-female transgender persons)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Baker, S.J. Transgender behind prison walls, 2017: <strong>|b</strong> p. 47 (M to F transgender prisoners)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Eliason, M.J. LGBTQ cultures, 2017: <strong>|b</strong> p. 17 (trans woman) p. 18 (male-to-female (also written as MTF, MtF or M2F) transgender individual is a transgender woman (“trans woman” or “trans female”; some simply identify as women)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Social work practice with transgender and gender variant youth, 2009: <strong>|b</strong> p. xiv (“transwoman” or “female-bodied” refers to male-to-female (MTF or M2F) transgender people; some note that terms such as “MTF” are subjugating language that reinforces the binary gender stereotype)<br />
<strong>670:</strong> Reclaiming genders, 1999: <strong>|b</strong> p. 204 (M2Fs; transwomen) p. 144 (m-to-fs)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh98004304"><b>Transsexual parents</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <i>N/A</i><br />
<b>550: </b>Transgender parents<br />
<b>670: </b>Work cat.: 98030266: Kaeser, G. Love makes a family, 1999.<br />
<b>670:</b> World Wide Web, July 16, 1998 |b (usage in documents retrieved by Alta Vista search: transsexual parents)</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh00002433"><b>Transsexuals–Identity</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Gender identity<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 00034803: Unseen genders, 2001.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh95004103"><b>Two-spirit people</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Bardashes<br />
<b>450: </b>Berdaches<br />
<b>450: </b>Indian men-women<br />
<b>450: </b>Two-spirits (Indians of North America)<br />
<b>550: </b>Indians of North America<br />
<b>550: </b>Indian gays<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 95019964: Trexler, R.C. Sex and conquest, 1995.<br />
<b>670:</b> American Heritage dict. |b (two-spirit: a person, especially a Native American man, who assumes the sexual identity and is granted the social status of the opposite sex. Usage note under berdache: Due to the derogatory implications implicit in the etymology of berdache, contemporary Native Americans have suggested that its scholarly use be discontinued. Among the alternatives in current use, the most widely employed is two-spirit.)<br />
<b>670:</b> LC database, June 26, 2006 |b (two-spirit people)<br />
<b>670:</b> Google search, June 26, 2006 |b (two-spirit people)<br />
<b>670:</b> Steward handbk. So. Am. Ind.: |b v. 1, p. 324, v. 4, p. 531.<br />
<b>670:</b> Web. 3 |b (Berdache (Bardash))<br />
<b>670:</b> Pueblo man-woman potters and the pottery made by the Laguna man-woman, Arroh-a-och, c2005: |b p. 72 (men-women; men who chose to dress and live as women)<br />
<b>670: </b>Roscoe, Will. The Zuni man-woman, 1991.<br />
<b>680: </b>Here are entered works on North American Indians, especially men, who assume the dress, role, and status of the opposite sex.</p>
<p><b><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2011000975">Unitarian Universalist sexual minorities</a></b><br />
<b> 450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b> 550:</b> Sexual minorities<br />
<b> 550:</b> Unitarian Universalists<br />
670: Work cat.: 2011007043: Coming out in faith, c2011.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh93006822"><b>Working class lesbians</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> <em>N/A</em><br />
<b>550: </b>Lesbians<br />
<b>550: </b>Working class women<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: 92-43240: Kennedy, E.L. Boots of leather, slippers of gold : the history of a lesbian community, 1993.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2005007811"><b>Young gay men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Gay young men<br />
<b>550: </b>Gay men<br />
<b>550: </b>Young men<br />
<b>670:</b> Work cat.: Fraser, S. Changing community, changing practice? : young gay men, HIV, and gay community, c2004: |b introd. (young gay men in Sydney) p. 7 (age range was 18-27)<br />
<b>670:</b> Savin-Williams, R.C. “&#8211;and then I became gay” : young men’s stories, 1998.<br />
<b>670:</b> Zeeland, S. Barrack buddies and soldier lovers : dialogues with gay young men in the U.S. military, c1993.</p>
<p><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/sh2006020062"><b>Young bisexual men</b></a><br />
<b>450:</b> Bisexual young men<br />
<b>550: </b>Bisexual men<br />
<b>550: </b>Young men<br />
<b>667-68X:</b> <i>N/A</i></p>
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