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Explore the complexities of sexual identity in Latin America, from cultural norms to legal status, violence, and organizing efforts. Learn about famous GLBT Latin Americans and ongoing activism in the region.
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GLBT Identity in Latin America Pamela Hayes- Bohanan, MLS James Hayes-Bohanan, Ph.D. Safe College Coalition Latin American & Caribbean Studies GS 358: Geography of Latin America
Overview • Sexual identity in Latin America • Implications for GLBT persons • Legal status • Violence • Organizing
Caveats • As with any regional geography, we acknowledge a tension between defining formal regions and eschewing stereotypes • We are both Latin Americanists, but we have had less involvement with GLBT issues in Latin America than in the United States • Feel free to ask questions!
Sexual Identity in Latin America • Marianismo – hyperfemininity • Pure • Submissive to father, brother, and spouse • Lacks sexual desire • Mary or Malinche • Virgin or Whore • Machismo – hypervirility • Physical strength • Bold sexual advances toward women • Great sexual prowess • Self-confidence • Bravery • Public and private spaces • After Steven Bocchi
Implications for GLBT Persons • Duality of male homosexual activity • Lesbians as anathema – so unlikely as to be invisible • Importance of transexual appearance • Confusion among “gay,” “transvestite,” and “transgendered”
Legal Status • Banning of homosexual acts – some countries might overturn • Legal protections for homosexual persons • Police harassment • Civil partnership
Violence • Relation to machismo • Public and private space • Amor Bandido – Bruno Barreto
Violence in Guatemala • No law against homosexuality • No protection, either • Police detain on the basis of “scandalous behavior” • Authorities engage in rape, theft, beatings, and killings of homosexual people • In a generally violent society, homosexuality is used to dismiss or diminish acts of violence • Anthropologist Myrna Mack killed by death squad in 1990 • U.S. Nun Diana Ortiz kidnapped and tortured by army in 1989 • Guatemala City Bishop Juan Gerardi, murdered in 1998
Famous GLBT Latin Americans • Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz – (Mexico) nun, poet, mystic • Manuel Puig – Argentina • Reinaldo Arenas – Cuba • Gabriela Mistral – Chile • Héctor Bianciotti – Argentina • Daniel Torres – Puerto Rico • Luis Rafael Sánchez – Puerto Rico • Virgilio Piñera – Cuba • Fernando Vallejo – Colombia • Jamie Bayly - Peru
Organizing • No Stonewall in Latin America • Mexico • Argentina • Central America
Mexico • Movement roughly concurrent with Stonewall • Frente Homosexual de Acción Revolutionaria (gay) • Grupo Lambda de Liberación Homosexual (lesbian) • OIKABETH (both) – now defunct – saw lesbianism as a political (socialist) choice • First pride march 1978 • The 2002 Pride March had 30,000 participants • The June 21, 2003 march had 30 floats and 80,000 participants. Even a PAN candidate set up a booth.
Argentina • 1969: El Grupo Nuestro Mundo – formed by communist who had been ejected from the party – bombarded media with gay liberation message • 1971: Frente de Liberación Homosexual • 1976: Group dissolved after most FLH members exiled or killed during the Isabel Peron administration • 1983: Groups such as Comunidad Homosexual Argentina reemerge, following Dirty War • 1996: Constitution of Buenos Aires amended to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation
Central America Guatemala has no organizations, though gay-rights groups were formed in Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and El Salvador during the 1980s. Belize has little violence against gays, but neither does it have an open gay-rights movement.
Current Organizing and News • Resource Center for the Americas: http://www.americas.org/