Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3088500> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 69 of
69
with 100 triples per page.
- Q3088500 subject Q6337630.
- Q3088500 subject Q8157249.
- Q3088500 subject Q8578067.
- Q3088500 subject Q8578415.
- Q3088500 subject Q8587563.
- Q3088500 subject Q8587570.
- Q3088500 abstract "The front homosexuel d'action révolutionnaire (English: Homosexual Front for Revolutionary Action) (FHAR) was a loose Parisian movement founded in 1971, resulting from a rapprochement between lesbian feminists and gay activists. If the movement could be considered to have leaders, they were Guy Hocquenghem and Françoise d'Eaubonne, while other members included Christine Delphy, Daniel Guérin, and Laurent Dispot. It had disappeared by 1976. Surviving early activists also include painter and surrealistic photographer Yves Hernot, now living in Sydney, Australia.The FHAR are known for having given radical visibility to homosexuals during the 1970s in the wake of student and proletarian uprisings of 1968, which had given little space to the liberation of women and homosexuals. Breaking with older homosexual groups which were more hidden and sometimes conservative, they asserted the subversion of the bourgeois and hetero–patriarchal state, as well as the inversion of chauvinistic and homophobic values common of the left and extreme left.The outrageous aspect (vis-à-vis the authorities) of the male sexual encounters which were held, and the increasing prevalence of the men (which inevitably gradually obscured the feminist questions and lesbian voices), eventually brought about the group's disintegration. In its wake appeared the Groupe de libération homosexuelle (GLH) and the Gouines rouges within the Mouvement de Libération des Femmes (MLF).".
- Q3088500 wikiPageExternalLink TOUT12.html.
- Q3088500 wikiPageExternalLink 4per.
- Q3088500 wikiPageExternalLink Sibalis2.pdf.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q101244.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1035954.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1127218.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1129409.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1134368.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q130178.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1309970.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1351173.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q164597.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q167651.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q17082179.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q170912.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1779425.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q17884.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q181339.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q192821.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1979837.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q211354.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q214654.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q226418.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q22692.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q2708575.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q273593.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q2832747.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q2939911.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q295009.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q3111629.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q33487.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q33962.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q352465.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q35535.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q3573726.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q376066.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q377790.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q42240.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q4612907.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q465156.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q4688262.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q49809.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q51415.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q52090.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q6186.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q622370.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q6337630.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q6743.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q7252.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q7275.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q772288.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q8157249.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q8452.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q8578067.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q8578415.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q8587563.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q8587570.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q93200.
- Q3088500 wikiPageWikiLink Q9364.
- Q3088500 comment "The front homosexuel d'action révolutionnaire (English: Homosexual Front for Revolutionary Action) (FHAR) was a loose Parisian movement founded in 1971, resulting from a rapprochement between lesbian feminists and gay activists. If the movement could be considered to have leaders, they were Guy Hocquenghem and Françoise d'Eaubonne, while other members included Christine Delphy, Daniel Guérin, and Laurent Dispot. It had disappeared by 1976.".
- Q3088500 label "Front homosexuel d'action révolutionnaire".