Greta Schiller and Rober Rosenberg directed the 1984 film "Before Stonewall." The film depicted the LGBTQ+ community's historical context before the Stonewall Riots in New York City in 1969, regarded as the beginning of the LGBTQ+ privileges development. The film has numerous interviews with LGBTQ+ activists and community members. The film also includes photographs and video footage from the events discussed in the film. It accurately depicts the interactions of people who were significant to the LGBTQ+ people group during a time when society looked down on them and condemned them. The LGBTQ+ community's individual stories and encounters prior to the Stonewall riots are the film's focus, which depicts the difficulties of both emerging and being …show more content…
Before the Stonewall riots in 1969, LGBTQ+ people were mainly shut out of mainstream culture and lacked access to many public forums for meaningful discussion or debate. The documentary "The Queen" (1968), which follows a drag queen beauty pageant in New York City, captures this. Even if the pageant gives LGBTQ+ people a place to gather and celebrate their identity, it is evident that they are still primarily ostracized in society. However, since the Stonewall riots, a noticeable change has occurred in how LGBTQ+ people are perceived publicly. The riots raised awareness of the problems affecting the LGBTQ+ community and sparked the creation of organizations and advocacy groups. The documentary "Before Stonewall" (1984), which details the lives of LGBTQ+ people before the riots, reflects this. The movie demonstrates how LGBTQ+ people had little opportunity to participate in public discourse and were invisible in mainstream …show more content…
She makes the case that social hierarchies can persist because dominant groups frequently have more access to public discourse and decision-making processes. In order to remedy this, Fraser suggests the concept of a "politics of recognition," which entails appreciating and acknowledging the experiences and viewpoints of oppressed groups while ensuring that they receive an equal opportunity to participate in public debate and decision-making. This theory of the public sphere emphasizes the need to build inclusive public spheres that enable democratic dialogue and debate among all members of society, regardless of their social or economic status, as well as the significance of recognizing the diversity of perspectives and experiences within