Difference between revisions of "Maureen Duffy"

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She was born in [[Worthing]], [[Sussex]], but her family came from [[Stratford, London|Stratford]] in [[East London]] and she moved  there at the age of 14 when her mother died. She took a degree at [[King's College, London]] and taught in Naples and London. She won her first poetry prize at the age of 17, with a poem printed in ''Adam'' magazine; soon followed by publication in ''|The Listener'' and elsewhere.<ref name="Authors6">British Library. "Maureen Duffy interviewed by Sarah O’Reilly, Authors’ Lives, 2007-2009". ''British Library Sound & Moving Image'' Catalogue reference C1279/03: Track 6  21.01.08.</ref> She later edited a poetry magazine called ''the sixties'' (1960-61).
 
She was born in [[Worthing]], [[Sussex]], but her family came from [[Stratford, London|Stratford]] in [[East London]] and she moved  there at the age of 14 when her mother died. She took a degree at [[King's College, London]] and taught in Naples and London. She won her first poetry prize at the age of 17, with a poem printed in ''Adam'' magazine; soon followed by publication in ''|The Listener'' and elsewhere.<ref name="Authors6">British Library. "Maureen Duffy interviewed by Sarah O’Reilly, Authors’ Lives, 2007-2009". ''British Library Sound & Moving Image'' Catalogue reference C1279/03: Track 6  21.01.08.</ref> She later edited a poetry magazine called ''the sixties'' (1960-61).
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Maureen Duffy was the first gay woman in British public life today to be open about her sexuality.<ref name="gardiner2013">Gardiner, Jill (2013), "A life of herding words", interview with Maureen Duffy in ''Diva'' magazine. London. November 2013: 27.</ref>
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She came out publicly in her work in the early 1960s"<ref name="hennegan">[[Alison Hennegan]], "...and out the other side" interview with Maureen Duffy in ''Gay News'', No. 128. London. October 1977: 20</ref> and made public comments before the decriminalisation of male homosexual acts in 1967.<ref>See the television programme [http://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/gay_rights/12008.shtml "''Late Night Lineup'' - "Man Alive"], 14 June 1967, BBC Archive website.</ref> In 1977 she published ''The Ballad of the Blasphemy Trial'', a broadside against the trial of the ''[[Gay News]]'' newspaper for "blasphemous libel".<ref name="freethinker">[http://www.pinktriangle.org.uk/glh/214/duffy.html ''The Freethinker'', August 1977], accessed 4.10.13.</ref>
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In 1980 she became the first President of the Gay Humanist Group from 1980 (now [[GALHA]]). At the TUC conference in 1988, as President of the Writers' Guild, she successfully proposed a motion deploring the passing of [[Section 28]] "as an infringement of the basic right to free speech and expression".<ref name="glh">''Gay & Lesbian Humanist'' Volume 8, No. 2, Winter 1988/9: 4.</ref>
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In 1991, she took part in ''Saturday Night Out'', on BBC 2, saying that progress in gay rights since her earliest TV appearances had been more limited than she had hoped. In 1995 she was chosen by ''Gay Times'' as one of the 200 most influential lesbian and gay people in Britain.<ref name="gaytimes">1995 May ''Gay Times'': 96.</ref> She was also included on the ''Independent on Sunday''′s Pink List in 2005<ref name="ios2005">''Independent on Sunday'' 26.06.05: 10,11.</ref> In 2014, she received an Icon Award for Outstanding Lifetime Achievement from ''Attitude'' magazine.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
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Revision as of 18:56, 23 February 2016

Maureen Duffy (born 1933) is a novelist, poet, playwright, nonfiction author and activist.

She was born in Worthing, Sussex, but her family came from Stratford in East London and she moved there at the age of 14 when her mother died. She took a degree at King's College, London and taught in Naples and London. She won her first poetry prize at the age of 17, with a poem printed in Adam magazine; soon followed by publication in |The Listener and elsewhere.[1] She later edited a poetry magazine called the sixties (1960-61).

Maureen Duffy was the first gay woman in British public life today to be open about her sexuality.[2] She came out publicly in her work in the early 1960s"[3] and made public comments before the decriminalisation of male homosexual acts in 1967.[4] In 1977 she published The Ballad of the Blasphemy Trial, a broadside against the trial of the Gay News newspaper for "blasphemous libel".[5]

In 1980 she became the first President of the Gay Humanist Group from 1980 (now GALHA). At the TUC conference in 1988, as President of the Writers' Guild, she successfully proposed a motion deploring the passing of Section 28 "as an infringement of the basic right to free speech and expression".[6]

In 1991, she took part in Saturday Night Out, on BBC 2, saying that progress in gay rights since her earliest TV appearances had been more limited than she had hoped. In 1995 she was chosen by Gay Times as one of the 200 most influential lesbian and gay people in Britain.[7] She was also included on the Independent on Sunday′s Pink List in 2005[8] In 2014, she received an Icon Award for Outstanding Lifetime Achievement from Attitude magazine.

References

This article is a stub. You can help the UK LGBT History Project by expanding it.
  1. British Library. "Maureen Duffy interviewed by Sarah O’Reilly, Authors’ Lives, 2007-2009". British Library Sound & Moving Image Catalogue reference C1279/03: Track 6 21.01.08.
  2. Gardiner, Jill (2013), "A life of herding words", interview with Maureen Duffy in Diva magazine. London. November 2013: 27.
  3. Alison Hennegan, "...and out the other side" interview with Maureen Duffy in Gay News, No. 128. London. October 1977: 20
  4. See the television programme "Late Night Lineup - "Man Alive", 14 June 1967, BBC Archive website.
  5. The Freethinker, August 1977, accessed 4.10.13.
  6. Gay & Lesbian Humanist Volume 8, No. 2, Winter 1988/9: 4.
  7. 1995 May Gay Times: 96.
  8. Independent on Sunday 26.06.05: 10,11.