Preface
Acknowledgments
1. The Personal as Political
The Struggle for Voice
Personal History
Part I: Philosophy
2. Philosophy
-Utilitarian Equality
-Contractualist Equality
-Liberal Political Philosophy and -Constitutional Law
Part II: Law
3. Judicial Review in the United States After World War II: Free Speech and Gay Rights as a Protest Movement
-Resisting Voice in History
-Why So Late?
-The Emergence of Arguments for Gay Rights
4. Judicial Review in the United States After World War II: Religion, Race, and Gender
Antebellum Radical Abolitionist Protest
Constitutional Struggle, the Civil Rights Movement, and Abolitionist Antiracism
-The Feminist Movement and Constitional Development
5. The Constitutional Rights to Privacy
6. Bowers v. Hardwick
7. Lawrence v. Texas
8. Sexual Orientation as a Suspect Class
-The Religion Analogy
-The Gender Analogy
-Anti-Lesbian/Gay Initiatives
-Exclusion from the Military
9. Same-Sex Marriage
Part III: Psychology
10. Psychology
-Voice, Resistance, Reaction, and Psychology
-Men, Honor, and Obligatory Violence
-Democratic Manhood
-Gay/Lesbian Resistance
Notes
Bibliography
Index of Cases
Subject Index