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Throughout the twentieth century, New Mexico's LGBTQ+ residents
inhabited a wide spectrum of spaces, from Santa Fe's nascent
bohemian art scene to the secretive military developments at Los
Alamos. Shifting focus away from the urban gay meccas that many out
queer people called home, Wide-Open Desert brings to life a vibrant
milieu of two-spirit, Chicana lesbian, and white queer cultural
producers in the heart of the US Southwest. Jordan Biro Walters
draws on oral histories, documentaries, poetry, and archival
sources to demonstrate how geographic migration and creative
expression enabled LGBTQ+ people to resist marginalization and
forge spaces of belonging. Significant figures profiled include
two-spirit Dine artist Hastiin Klah, literary magazine editor Spud
Johnson, ranchera singer Genoveva Chavez, and Cherokee writer
Rollie Lynn Riggs. Biro Walters explores how land communes, art
circles, and university classrooms helped create communities that
supported queer cultural expression and launched gay civil rights
activism in New Mexico. Throughout, Wide-Open Desert highlights
queer mobility and queer creative production as paths to political,
cultural, and sexual freedom for LGBTQ+ people.
Throughout the twentieth century, New Mexico's LGBTQ+ residents
inhabited a wide spectrum of spaces, from Santa Fe's nascent
bohemian art scene to the secretive military developments at Los
Alamos. Shifting focus away from the urban gay meccas that many out
queer people called home, Wide-Open Desert brings to life a vibrant
milieu of two-spirit, Chicana lesbian, and white queer cultural
producers in the heart of the US Southwest. Jordan Biro Walters
draws on oral histories, documentaries, poetry, and archival
sources to demonstrate how geographic migration and creative
expression enabled LGBTQ+ people to resist marginalization and
forge spaces of belonging. Significant figures profiled include
two-spirit Dine artist Hastiin Klah, literary magazine editor Spud
Johnson, ranchera singer Genoveva Chavez, and Cherokee writer
Rollie Lynn Riggs. Biro Walters explores how land communes, art
circles, and university classrooms helped create communities that
supported queer cultural expression and launched gay civil rights
activism in New Mexico. Throughout, Wide-Open Desert highlights
queer mobility and queer creative production as paths to political,
cultural, and sexual freedom for LGBTQ+ people.
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