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Unfinished Lives: Reviving the Memories of LGBTQ Hate Crimes Victims

paperbackJanuary 20, 2011
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ISBN-13: 9781608998111 ISBN-10: 1608998118
Publisher
Resource Publications (CA)
Binding
paperback
Published
January 20, 2011
Weight
1.0 lbs
Dimensions
22.90×1.90×15.20 cm

About this book

Unfinished Lives: Reviving the Memories of LGBTQ Hate Crimes Victims by Sprinkle, Stephen V. paperback edition. ISBN: 9781608998111.

Synopsis: Over 13,000 Americans have been murdered in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries because of their sexual orientation and gender presentation. In Unfinished Lives: Reviving the Memory of LGBTQ Hate Crimes Victims, Stephen Sprinkle puts a human face on the outrage and loss suffered when people die from anti-gay hatred. Beginning with new developments in the story of Matthew Shepards murder in Laramie, Wyoming, Sprinkle tells the stories of fourteen representative LGBTQ victims whose lives were savagely cut short due to homophobia and transphobia. These are stories about people who could be your neighbor, classmate, co-worker, or friend - real, everyday people whose love was foreclosed, relationships brutally terminated, and future contributions stolen from us by outrageous, irrational hatred. Told lovingly yet unflinchingly, Unfinished Lives lifts the stories of these LGBTQ victims from undeserved obscurity, allowing their memory to live again. Relying on personal interviews and visits to the locations where these people lived, loved, and died, Sprinkle records the raw emotions, powerful movements for social change, and unexpectedly hopeful communities that arise from the ruins of those people whose only "offense" was to live as they were born to be. Part portraiture, part crime narrative, and part ethnography, Unfinished Lives is poised to change the conversation on hate crimes in the United States. Endorsements: "Unfinished Lives cries out to be read . . . It speaks to the systematic denigration of LGBTQ people in the United States . . . and it offers hope that the cycles of abuse and hatred and violence can be broken-one person, one family, one community at a time." -from the Foreword by Harry Knox Director of the Religion and Faith Program Human Rights Campaign, Washington, DC "In telling these stories that trouble the soul about the hateful murders