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Charlene Cothran

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Charlene E. Cothran is an American journalist and the publisher of the magazines Venus (named after her friend Venus Landin, who was killed by an Ex-Girlfriend in 1993)[1] and the defunct Kitchen Table News (not to be confused with the feminist, activist publishing company Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press).

Cothran founded Venus between 1994[2] and 1995[1] in Atlanta, Georgia. Cothran, a former Lesbian and Gay rights activist, tailored Venus to the interests of LGBT people of African descent, especially African-American Lesbians.

Following a religious conversion to Christianity in 2006,[2] Cothran changed the editorial policy of Venus, and began to promote what is popularly called the Ex-gay movement through the magazine. Cothran claims that her target audience remains the same. Cothran's abrupt renunciation of her activist political views in favor of evangelical proclamations sparked a campaign by the gay community resulting in the loss of advertising revenue.[2]

Today I am celibate. Again, I don’t say I will never have a man in my life, I’m not saying I will never be married to a man. Who knows what the Lord has in store for me. But there is one thing I can say and one thing I will go on record and say—I will never be entangled with the bondage of lesbianism again.

— April 2007 interview[1]

Cothran went on to form The Evidence Ministry, Inc., an evangelical mission encouraging Gays to renounce homosexuality.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Cothran, Charlene (9 April 2007). "Interview With Ex-gay Charlene Cothran" (Interview). Interviewed by Clay Cane. Clay Cane. Archived from the original on 9 July 2012.
  2. ^ a b c Cothran, Charlene (23 March 2007). "The Rebirth of Venus". Christianity Today (Interview). Interviewed by Amy Tracy. Christianity Today International. Following the issue featuring my testimony, the gay political machine pressured my ad agency to drop us. ... By Monday afternoon, several thousand dollars' worth of advertising were canceled. My business pretty much died that week.
  3. ^ "About: Our Founder". Evidence Ministry. Retrieved 28 October 2024.
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