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Dr Gillian Murphy

May 15th, 2024

LGBTQI+ symbols and their meanings

0 comments | 3 shares

Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

Dr Gillian Murphy

May 15th, 2024

LGBTQI+ symbols and their meanings

0 comments | 3 shares

Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

The LGBTQI+ community has created their own language of colours and symbols. In this guest blog for the People’s History Museum Gillian Murphy, Curator for Equality, Rights and Citizenship at LSE Library, explores the symbols created through activism, logo competitions, resistance, and community.

Well, of course, a symbol can mean anything you want it to mean.

– Come Together, Issue 12, 1971.

The use of symbols and colours is an important way for groups to convey messages, communicate with others, and to build a visual identity. During the 1970s, LGBTQI+ people were encouraged to come out and, in doing this, they often wore badges with distinctive symbols, reinforcing the belief that no longer would they be invisible. This blog looks at some of the symbols that can be found in LGBTQI+ collections.

The gender symbols for male and female are traditionally derived from astrological signs and mythological meanings representing Mars (god of war with shield and spear) and Venus (mirror of Venus, goddess of love and beauty) respectively.

From the first issues of Come Together, the short-lived newspaper produced by the Gay Liberation Front (GLF) from late 1970, double male and double female gender symbols were used on the front covers to represent gay men and lesbians.

A Come Together leaflet and a purple Gay Liberation Front badge with a raised fist containing a violet.

By Issue 8 of Come Together for August 1971, the more recognisable symbol of GLF was used and early photographs of GLF members show them wearing badges with this design.  The badge is purple with a white clenched fist (a widely recognised symbol of resistance) with a purple flower and white male / female symbols in its palm. GAY LIBERATION FRONT in white capitals is printed around the top edge.

A Jupiter GLF badge advertised in Come Together. A flyer for a GLF disco in which the 'O' of 'disco' contains a Jupiter symbol. Two red and green GLF Jupiter badges.

Towards the end of 1971, a new GLF badge was advertised in Come Together (Issue 11), available for the price of 5p.  This badge showed the symbol of the planet Jupiter (or Jove).  It was an alternative to the symbol of Mars and Venus and the gender binary as it represented the qualities of good nature and joviality.  The fist was added later.  A short article in Issue 12 of Come Together provided more information about the choice of the symbol for Jupiter explaining that it was one of the more mysterious and powerful planets concerned with a higher life, in the same way that GLF was. The new design can be seen in a number of ephemeral pieces in the LSE Library archive.

A white badge with a pink triangle that says 'London Gay Teenage Group'. A purple banner with a pink triangle that says 'Gays Against Fascism'.

The downward pointing pink triangle, the symbol used to identify LGBT+ people in Nazi concentration camps during World War II, was reclaimed in the 1970s by different LGBT+ groups and campaigns. You can see the pink triangle in the badge of the London Gay Teenage Group and Gays Against Fascism banner, pictured above.

A wooden cross with a paper pink triangle attached to the centre which says 'Stop crucifying queers'. A white badge which says 'Sectioned 28' with a pink triangle below. A white badge with a pink triangle which says 'The Hall-Carpenter Archives BM Archives, London, WC1N 3XX.'

The pink triangle was also used by the radical, non-violent, direct action group OutRage! The wooden cross pictured above has a pink triangle with the words “Stop Crucifying Queers” written on it as part of their campaign to highlight the Vatican’s condemnation of homosexuality in the 1990s.

The pink triangle is seen above on the homemade badge for the campaign to repeal Section 28 of the Local Government Act 1988, and as the logo for the Hall-Carpenter Archives, set up in the 1980s…

A white badge with a downwards facing triangle filled with lots of smaller pink, grey, and black triangles. Text reads 'Pride 69 89'.

…and used on badges for gay pride in the 1970s and 1980s.  The logo on the badge above for pride 1989 was designed by the See Red Women’s Workshop collective to mark 20 years since the Stonewall riots in New York.

A newspaper featuring the upwards triangle logo which says 'Action = Life'. The headline is 'In solidarity lies our strength...AIDS and South Africa.' Beside this is a leaflet with the upwards triangle which says 'Fight Back Fight AIDS Act Up.'

The direct action group ACT-UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power), set up in March 1988 in New York, adopted the triangle pointing upwards as its logo. Act-Up London produced its first newsletter Action News in May 1989 and you can see the logo on these items, pictured above.

Front cover of Pa'fuera! newspaper. A black badge with a lambda inside a pink triangle with the words 'Campaign for Homosexual Equality.'

The lower case lambda, the eleventh letter of the Greek alphabet, was chosen by the American gay activist, Tom Doer, to be the logo for the Gay Activists Alliance in New York in 1970. The lambda symbol has different meanings. In chemistry, it denotes a catalyst or change, and it is probably in this sense that it was picked by Doer.

The International Gay Rights Congress was held in Edinburgh in December 1974 and formally recognised the lambda as the symbol for lesbian and gay activism. The lambda features on badges, banners, and newsletters such as Pa’fuera! (Out!), pictured above, the newsletter of the Communidad de Orgullo Gay (Gay Pride Community) of San Juan in Puerto Rico.

On the badge above for the Campaign for Homosexual Equality, the lambda can be seen inside the pink triangle.

A black badge with a labrys inside a pink triangle which says 'Lesbian Strength 1985'. A leaflet featuring an illustration of a lambda with two double venus symbols on each blade which says 'Camden Lesbian Day.'

The double-headed axe or labrys pictured above was an important symbol of the Minoan religion in ancient Crete and associated with goddesses. In the 1970s, the labrys became a symbol of women’s empowerment, particularly for lesbians.

A page showing submissions for a bisexual logo with an option to vote for your favourite. The front cover of Bi-monthly magazine showing the winning entry, a yin-yang style divided circle with a symbols representing both Venus and Mars.

During the mid 1980s, the London Bisexual Group ran a logo competition asking members to submit their ideas for a Bisexuality Pride symbol. Above is a page from their newsletter Bi-Monthly with some of the entries.

The winning logo was designed by John Barker from Yorkshire and featured on following issues of Bi-Monthly.

A Black Lesbian and Gay Centre flyer which features a logo which appears like two statues in the shape of a mixed Venus and Mars symbol.

In 1985, the Black Lesbian and Gay Centre Project was set up to explore the possibility of securing a permanent centre in London, which became a reality in 1992. The See Red Women’s Workshop designed a very distinctive logo for the group as seen on the flyer above.

Find out more about LGBT+ collections at LSE Library and about the history of the Hall-Carpenter Archives.

Read about the history of the symbol of the raised fist.

This post was originally published by the People’s History Museum

 

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About the author

Gillian Murphy

Dr Gillian Murphy

Gillian Murphy is Curator for Equality, Rights and Citizenship at LSE Library.

Posted In: LGBTQ+ History | LSE Library

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