Prof. Karen B. Hanna (Connecticut College) will discuss her research, featured in CUNY FORUM Volume 6:1, into the KDP (Katipunan ng mga Demokratikong Pilipino) organization, from 1973 to 1986, and the exploration and views of sexuality during that era by its members. The KDP was arguably the most militant anti-imperialist national organization in the Filipina/o American community during the 1970s, fighting for civil rights and antiwar movements in the United States and democracy and national liberation in the Philippines and beyond. The KDP was also unique compared to other groups in the Third World Left in that its LGBT members occupied leadership positions. In fact, it was the only Asian American organization in the 1970s that allowed gay or lesbian members. But what was it like to be LGBT in the KDP? How did LGBT members navigate homophobia and heteropatriarchy in the Third World Left, racism in the gay liberation movement, and the emerging AIDS crisis? Through original oral histories conducted with KDP members from 2015-2018, Hanna offers a glimpse of how activists negotiated and expressed emerging sexual identities while maintaining revolutionary political commitments in the KDP.
Being Gay in the KDP: Politics in a Filipino American Revolutionary Organization (1973 to 1986)
Author Bio
Presented By: Karen Buenavista Hanna
Karen Buenavista Hanna is an Assistant Professor of Gender, Sexuality, and Intersectionality Studies at Connecticut College. Hanna earned her Ph.D. in Feminist Studies from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her essays have been published or are forthcoming in numerous journals and anthologies including CUNY FORUM, Amerasia Journal, Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy, American Quarterly, Hyphen Magazine, and the Pilipinx Radical Imagination Reader.
The child of immigrants from the Philippines and Thailand, Hanna is a former New York City public school and pre-GED teacher and community organizer. She is currently completing a book manuscript, which examines the formation and evolution of a new Filipino anti-imperialist left in the United States during and after the Marcos dictatorship in the Philippines.