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The Gay and Lesbian Liberation Movement by Margaret Cruikshank
The Gay and Lesbian Liberation Movement by Margaret Cruikshank









Īlso at City College of San Francisco, Cruikshank taught an introductory women's studies course and lesbian and gay literature. This work by Cruikshank led to CCSF opening their Castro/Valencia Campus, and in 1982 she was the first woman to teach the college's lesbian and gay literature class, which she taught until 1996. She then went on to teach English at the City College of San Francisco, teaching ESL and working with CCSF faculty to incorporate gay/lesbian studies into the curriculum. From 1981-1988 she was an affiliate scholar at the Center for Research on Women at Stanford University. In August 1980 she became head of a small program of the Continuing Education department at the University of San Francisco. Upon moving to San Francisco, Cruikshank worked as resource director for the short-lived Gay National Educational Switchboard an organization that provided information through a toll-free telephone number. She was published in a wide variety of publications like Gay Community News, Motheroot Journal, The Radical Teacher, Focus, Journal of Homosexuality and The Advocate. She began writing on lesbian topics in 1975, writing under her own name and various pseudonyms. Her first publication came in 1973, a book review in the Minneapolis Tribune. She says that being publicly out as a lesbian and moving to California in the mid-70s shaped her writing. In 1977, Cruikshank moved to San Francisco. Upon her arrival at MSU she was closeted as a lesbian to the public, but by her leave in 1977, she was open to her colleagues. In 1975 she began teaching at Minnesota State University, establishing the first women's studies department at the university, serving as director. From 1969-1970, she taught at Loyola University. In the early 1970s, Cruikshank taught English at several universities in the Midwest. ĭuring the 1970s, Cruikshank played an active role in the explosion of lesbian feminist politics and culture. She received her Ph.D in Victorian literature from Loyola University in 1969, writing her dissertation on Thomas B.

The Gay and Lesbian Liberation Movement by Margaret Cruikshank

In the early 1960s she came out as a lesbian within the Minneapolis lesbian-feminist community. She says she started writing during her college years. Scholastica, obtaining her Bachelor of Arts in English in 1962. Her parents are George Patrick Cruikshank and Louise Marie Wimmer.

The Gay and Lesbian Liberation Movement by Margaret Cruikshank

Margaret Louise Cruikshank was born in Duluth, Minnesota on April 26, 1940. Cruikshank played a central role in establishing the importance of lesbian studies within both women's studies and the academy through the publication of her edited anthologies. She was one of the first American academics to be out during a time when gay rights were an unfamiliar concept. Margaret Louise Cruikshank (born 1940) is an American lesbian feminist writer and academic.











The Gay and Lesbian Liberation Movement by Margaret Cruikshank