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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Fantasia_Fair
rdf:type
yago:YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity yago:Event100029378 yago:PsychologicalFeature100023100 yago:Abstraction100002137 yago:WikicatTransgenderEvents yago:WikicatLGBTEventsInTheUnitedStates dbo:SocietalEvent
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Fantasia Fair
rdfs:comment
Fantasia Fair (also known as FanFair) is a week-long conference for cross-dressers, transgender and people held every October in Provincetown, Massachusetts, a small Portuguese fishing village and largely gay and lesbian tourist village on the very tip of Cape Cod. This annual event is the longest-running transgender conference in the United States and it provides a week for attendees to experiment with gender-role identities and presentations in a safe and affirming community. The goal of the conference is to create a safe space in which crossdressers, transgender and transsexual people, and nonbinary-gendered people are accepted without judgement, can interact with their peers, and can advocate for their rights. In November, 1980 the event was featured in an article by D. Keith Mano in
dcterms:subject
dbc:Provincetown,_Massachusetts dbc:Transgender_in_the_United_States dbc:Cross-dressing_culture dbc:Transgender_events dbc:Non-binary_gender dbc:LGBT_events_in_Massachusetts
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dbr:Virginia_Prince dbr:The_Transgender_Archives_at_the_University_of_Victoria dbc:Transgender_in_the_United_States dbr:Gender dbr:Androgyny dbc:Provincetown,_Massachusetts dbr:LGBT dbr:Gender_studies dbr:D._Keith_Mano dbr:Transgender dbr:Transvestism dbr:Nancy_Ledins dbc:Transgender_events dbc:Cross-dressing_culture dbr:Trans_women dbr:Gender_questioning dbr:Heterosexual dbr:Human_services dbr:Provincetown,_Massachusetts dbr:Genderqueer dbr:Transsexual dbc:Non-binary_gender dbr:Masculinity dbr:Cross-dressers dbr:First_Universalist_Church_(Provincetown,_Massachusetts) dbr:Sexual_orientation dbr:Trans_men dbc:LGBT_events_in_Massachusetts dbr:List_of_LGBT_events dbr:Ari_Kane dbr:Cross-dressing dbr:History_of_transgender_people_in_the_United_States
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dbo:abstract
Fantasia Fair (also known as FanFair) is a week-long conference for cross-dressers, transgender and people held every October in Provincetown, Massachusetts, a small Portuguese fishing village and largely gay and lesbian tourist village on the very tip of Cape Cod. This annual event is the longest-running transgender conference in the United States and it provides a week for attendees to experiment with gender-role identities and presentations in a safe and affirming community. The goal of the conference is to create a safe space in which crossdressers, transgender and transsexual people, and nonbinary-gendered people are accepted without judgement, can interact with their peers, and can advocate for their rights. In November, 1980 the event was featured in an article by D. Keith Mano in Playboy magazine and has in ensuing years has continued to generate publicity. At its inception in 1975, Fantasia Fair was ten days long and considered an event for heterosexual cross-dressers. Most of the programs focused on personal presentation, and the registration fee, which included housing, was expensive. By the 1990s, however, the nature of the attendees had more diverse, including trans men and trans women, cross-dressers, and genderqueer people of every sexual orientation. Fantasia Fair's parent organization was the Outreach Institute for Gender Studies (originally the Human Outreach and Achievement Institute), founded in 1975. Since 2000 the parent organization has been Real Life Experiences, a nonprofit corporation which makes annual awards to transgender pioneers at a banquet held during the Fair. Many Fantasia Fair events are open to the public for free or at low cost. These include six daily keynote addresses, a dinner with entertainment, and the Fantasia Fair Fashion and Follies shows. A number of scholarships are awarded annually. Many documents regarding Fantasia Fair, from its inception until current day, are archived in the Rikki Swin Collection in the University of Victoria Transgender Archives, in the Joseph A. Labadie Collection at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and online at the Digital Transgender Archive.
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wikipedia-en:Fantasia_Fair