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The Declaration of Independence states that it is self-evident that
we are all created equal. Millions of people in the US, however,
are deprived of basic rights merely because they aren't
heteronormative. Believing that it's impossible to deny the
humanity of anyone once you look into their eyes, iO Tillett Wright
embarked on an ambitious project to photograph the faces of people
across the country who identify as anything other than 100%
straight or cisgender. This enormous undertaking-10,000 people from
all fifty states, shot over a nearly ten-year period-is presented
in its entirety in this awe- inspiring book. In these pages readers
will encounter faces of every complexion, lined with age or
punctuated with piercings, smiling broadly or deadly serious. While
some faces are famous, most are familiar. They may look like your
grandmother, your neighbor, your mail carrier, or your doctor. Each
of these images tells a personal story. And each of these stories
has the power to transform stereotypes into complex views of a
multifaceted group of people. Self Evident Truths asks fundamental
questions about identity and freedom while proving that the
concepts of sexuality and gender are not black and white. They are
10,000 beautiful, bold, and unapologetic shades of queer.
I WAS BORN, SEPTEMBER 1985, IN THE VORTEX OF THE LOWER EAST SIDE OF
NEW YORK: THERE WERE FEW RULES OF LIFE AND ZERO CONTRAINTS ON
BEHAVIOUR. IF YOU WERE NOT ECCENTRIC, YOU WERE WEIRD. It was a
tenement building at the centre of the drug-addled, punk-edged,
permanent riot that was iO's corner of the Lower East Side of New
York City in the '80s and 90's. There iO grew up - or rather
scrabbled up - under the broken wing of a fiercely protective, yet
wildly negligent mother. Rhonna was a showgirl, actress, dancer,
poet. A widow by police murder, she was also an addict. She doted
and obsessed over iO, yet lacked an understanding that a child
needs food and sleep and safety. Unfolding in animated, crystalline
prose, an emotionally raw, devastatingly powerful memoir of one
young person's extraordinary coming of age - a tale of gender and
identity, freedom and addiction, rebellion and survival in the
1980s and 1990s, when punk poverty, heroin and art collided in the
urban bohemia of New York's Lower East Side. Darling Days is also a
provocative examination of culture and identity, of the instincts
that shape us and the norms that deform us, and of the courage and
resilience of a child listening closely to their deepest self. When
a group of boys refuse to let the six-year-old play ball, iO
instantly adopts a new persona, becoming a boy named Ricky, a
choice the parents support and celebrate. It is the start of a
profound exploration of gender and identity through the tenderest
years, and the beginning of a life invented and reinvented at every
step. Alternating between the harrowing and the hilarious, Darling
Days is the candid, tough, and stirring memoir of a young person in
search of an authentic self as family and home life devolve into
chaos until iO escapes to Germany and then England to become an
amazingly talented, exciting, edgy artist and wonderful writer.
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