Research and write on homosexuality during WW2

Research and write on homosexuality during WW2

What was life like for homosexuals, in Germany, during WWII? How had it changed in Europe since the early 1920s and1930s? How did the US military react to homosexuality? What were the roles of females in the US military and how did they react to lesbianism? What was McCarthyism and what role did that play in the formation early LGBTQ movement?

 Make sure your sources have some merit. If you use a link from a non-credible source such as, “The Onion” (which is satirical, by the way) you will not receive any points for the assignment that week. Suggested sites are: Major news sites such as NBC or The New York Times. You can also find many reputable sites on Facebook such as: Gaystar News, LGBTQ Nation, Pink News, Huffpost Queer Voices, and Advocate Magazine

Acceptable sources: peer reviewed articles, books and news articles from reliable sources such as major newspapers or organizations such as the Smithsonian or National Geographic and items provided in course materials.

Unacceptable sources: Wikipedia, opinion pieces, and blogs

These will be graded on length, quality of answers, specific reference to the texts, and analytical thought. So please include short quotes from the book(s), lecture material and/or videos and other readings. Think about what you want to say, organize your thoughts well, and develop and provide evidence or explanation for your assertions. There is a minimum word count of 500 words. You need to include at least three sources. These can be outside sources and/or sources from class. You do not need a source page, unless you have outside sources. If you cite my lecture just put in (Frawley, Lecture) and if you cite our textbook you can just put in (Faderman, page number).

Every paper should have three main components:

The introduction

The body and

The conclusion

You should start a new paragraph when:

• When you begin a new idea or point. New ideas should always start in new paragraphs. If you have an extended idea that spans multiple paragraphs, each new point within that idea should have its own paragraph.

• To contrast information or ideas. Separate paragraphs can serve to contrast sides in a debate, different points in an argument, or any other difference.

• When your readers need a pause. Breaks between paragraphs function as a short “break” for your readers—adding these in will help your writing be more readable. You should create a break if the paragraph becomes too long or the material is complex.

• When you are ending your introduction or starting your conclusion. Your introductory and concluding material should always be in a new paragraph. Many introductions and conclusions have multiple paragraphs depending on their content, length, and the writer’s purpose.

Sections of a Research Paper:

  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Limitations

(How much can you do in the time available?)

  • Methodology

Did you collect data? How did you go about doing your research for this paper? Did you do any experiments (if so you need to include the other parts that go with this), such a questionnaire or interviews? Did you use any other sources than our library?

  • A literature review is always good to add and since you will already have done this and so include it in. It can be part of the main body of the paper.
  • Main body of the paper
  • Conclusion

this is the book that we are reading the Gay Revolution by Lillian Faderma I Say a Little Prayer by E. Lyn Harris this is the name of the book that you need to cite From

https://books.google.com/books?id=398bDQAAQBAJ&pg=…

Answer preview :

homosexuality

Word limit : 1261