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English
Douglas & McIntyre
05 December 2024
As Toronto marks the fiftieth year of its first gay rights march comes this celebration of those who march with pride.

For the past fifteen years, Toronto photographer Angel Guerra has captured his city's pride parade on a human scale. In these 120 photographs, which glimpse beyond the usual media coverage, Guerra zooms in from the glorious spectacle to the small scenes and single participants, shining a light on moments of joy, strength, ferocity, resilience and love.

In 2024, Toronto will mark the fiftieth anniversary of the first Gay Pride March in 1974, when more than one hundred people gathered to march from Allan Gardens to Queen's Park, calling on lawmakers to include sexual orientation in the Ontario Human Rights Code. In the book's introduction, Lambda-awarding-winning writer Michael Rowe brings this history, and the challenges the gay community has faced since, into sharp focus.

At a time when 2SLGBTQI+ rights are under renewed threat throughout the world, Guerra and Rowe's work captures the power of a movement that contains multitudes.
By (photographer):  
Text by:  
Imprint:   Douglas & McIntyre
Country of Publication:   Canada
Dimensions:   Height: 190mm,  Width: 152mm, 
ISBN:   9781771623971
ISBN 10:   1771623977
Pages:   160
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Angel Guerra is a writer, visual artist and designer. In 2002, he founded Archetype, an art and design studio, in downtown Toronto, focusing on the cultural industries. He is the winner of the Alcuin Prize in Book Design and has been named among the country’s top five book designers by the National Post. Guerra lives in Toronto, ON. Michael Rowe is the award-winning author of three novels, two books of essays, and a book of interviews. His nonfiction has appeared in the National Post, The Globe & Mail, the Ottawa Citizen, the Huffington Post, SHARP, and The Boston Globe, among other venues. Between 2001 and 2009 he was a contributing writer to The Advocate. He won the 2008 Randy Shilts Award for his second essay collection, Other Men’s Sons (Cormorant Books, 2007), and has been a finalist for the GLAAD Media Award, the National Magazine Award, and the Shirley Jackson Award. He lives in Toronto, ON.

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