Pride
Pride, in the LGBT context, refers to events such as marches, parades, and festivals celebrating the fact that LGBT people are now proclaiming themselves as proud to be lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender, rather than, as in previous generations, being ashamed or attempting to hide it. A measure of the success of this movement is that festivals in various towns and cities across the UK can now just call themselves "Brighton Pride" and so on, without needing to spell out in the title that they are gay or LGBT events.
The first Gay Pride March in London was on the 1st of July 1972 and was organised by GLF. The date was chosen to be the nearest Saturday to the Stonewall riots of 1969.[1] The numbers taking part are estimated to be between 200-700 people. There had been a small march and rally the previous year, but it had not called itself a Pride march.Pride festivals have grown across the UK and now take place in many towns and cities each year.[2]. The large Pride events have become a showcase for large commercial organisations and institutions to advertise their support for lgbt issues. But in becoming commercialised the original grass roots pride origins and ethos have been lost. Such that Simon Edge wrote in 2023 that Pride has become 'a bloated month of pinkwashed flummery, of re-imagined company logos, empty sloganeering and corporate parade float sponsorships' [3].
See also
References
- ↑ Out of the Shadows, P61.
- ↑ http://pinkuk.com/events/ Pink UK: List of Gay prides and events in the UK
- ↑ Simon Edge former editor of Capital Gayhttps://unherd.com/2023/06/pride-is-no-place-for-homosexuals/ (accessed 2.6.2023)