This essay considers the events of the campaign to add protection against discrimination on the basis of gender identity and expression in DeKalb, Illinois in September 2000 in terms of queer theory and public argument by isolating a set of episodes that bring the reader closer to the experiences of transgender citizens who act in a public culture.
ABSTRACT In September 2000, the Community Members Against Discrimination (CMAD), a grassroots LGBT organization in DeKalb, Illinois, convinced their city council to add protection against discrimination on the basis of gender identity and expression. Written as an autoethnography, this essay considers the events of the campaign in terms of queer theory and the study of public argument by isolating a set of episodes that bring the reader closer to the experiences of transgender citizens who act in a public culture. The author also explores his own responsibilities as a scholar of communication, an activist, and a member of the LGBT community.