When not touring and educating about homophobia in women's basketball, Robinson is involved with a number of creative projects.
Sponsored by
The History Project
(Boston, MA), Miscegenations is a new media project that seeks to raise
awareness, educate, and inspire activism about historical relationships
between anti-miscegenation and anti-same sex marriage laws in the
United States.
The American Heritage dictionary defines miscegenation as
"cohabitation, sexual relations, or marriage involving persons of
different races." In post-civil war U.S. history, anti-miscegenation
laws were created by individual states primarily to prohibit black and
white, women and men from marrying, though the effects of these laws
have been far reaching.
In 2004, Massachusetts became the first state to allow same sex
marriages. In 2006, the Massachusetts Supreme Court upheld a 1913 law
barring same sex couples from marrying in Massachusetts, if they
were/are from states with laws already prohibiting their marriage. This
law was originally intended to bar interracial, heterosexual couples
from marrying in Massachusetts if their own state prohibited their
marriage, though it now operates to prevent Mitt Romney's personal
nightmare of Massachusetts becoming the "Las Vegas of same sex
marriage."
In
Miscegenations, real-life interracial, same sex couple
Lea Robinson and Elizabeth Whitney present a multimediated account of
the social repercussions of relationships that cross boundaries of
race, sexuality, and gender identity. Using historical research as well
as their personal experiences, they narrate these cultural
transgressions that not only expose the questionable foundations of
"American Family Values," they also promise to recreate them entirely.
www.miscegenations.com