Edward Carpenter (1844-1929): Difference between revisions

From LGBTQIA+ Archives Wiki
No edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Edward Carpenter (1844-1929) was a queer socialist who wrote one of the earliest publications supporting LGBTQ rights titled "The Intermediate Sex" which inspired discussions on the topic by prominent advocates like [[Emma Goldman (1869-1940)]]. Edward Carpenter shares a burial place with his life partner, George Merrill, in England.
Edward Carpenter (1844-1929) was a queer socialist who wrote one of the earliest publications supporting LGBTQ rights titled "The Intermediate Sex" which inspired discussions on the topic by prominent advocates like [[Emma Goldman (1869-1940)]]. Edward Carpenter shares a burial place with his life partner, George Merrill, in England.


== Published Books ==
=== Articles ===
* [[Walt Whitmans Children, Indianapolis Journal (Article, September 1902)]]
 
=== Published Books ===
* [[The Intermediate Sex (1908)]]
* [[The Intermediate Sex (1908)]]


== Cited In ==
=== Cited In ===
* [[Sex Equality: A Solution Of The Woman Problem Hardcover (1907)]], Dr. Emmet Densmore
* [[Homosexual Life (1925)]], William J. Fielding
* [[Homosexual Life (1925)]], William J. Fielding
=== Gallery ===
<gallery>
File:1902-09-28-indianapolis-journal-walt-whitmans-children.png
File:1906-08-18-evening-star-days-with-walt-whitman.png
</gallery>
* The Indianapolis Times (1902), Edward Carpenter discusses Walt Whitman's life and describes "his expressions of live toward men and toward women put practically on an equality."
* The Evening Star (1906), newspaper advertisement for Edward Carpenter's published book "Days With Walt Whitman" (1906)

Latest revision as of 06:31, 11 January 2023

Edward Carpenter (1844-1929) was a queer socialist who wrote one of the earliest publications supporting LGBTQ rights titled "The Intermediate Sex" which inspired discussions on the topic by prominent advocates like Emma Goldman (1869-1940). Edward Carpenter shares a burial place with his life partner, George Merrill, in England.

Articles

Published Books

Cited In

Gallery

  • The Indianapolis Times (1902), Edward Carpenter discusses Walt Whitman's life and describes "his expressions of live toward men and toward women put practically on an equality."
  • The Evening Star (1906), newspaper advertisement for Edward Carpenter's published book "Days With Walt Whitman" (1906)