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Showing posts from October, 2024

Let's visibilize LGBTQ+ archives & archivists at ARCHIVES*RECORDS 2025!

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Are you working with LGBTQ archives and documents? Do you identify yourself as an LGBTQ+ archivist? Are you interested in LGBTQ+ archives & archivists research? Do you have any projects related to the subject? The SAA-DSGS Steering Committee is pleased to invite you to share the initiative leaded by colleague and Section’s member Kate Burns to work on a panel proposal for ARCHIVES*RECORDS 2025 conference trying to answer some of these questions: 1-What LGBTQ+ collections are you working to collect, process, and make accessible? 2-What challenges and benefits are you finding? 3-Do you have institutional support or are you working under the radar? 4-Have recent conservative anti-DEIA or anti-LGBTQ initiatives created a chilling effect on your projects? 5-How do you keep motivated and innovative? Why should we keep fighting the good fight to amplify LGBTQ+ voices? (Radical Women , Sponsor/Advertiser. A New Era for Women Workers, Minority Women and Lesbians. Washington State Washington

It's LGBTQ+ History Month! Know the fight for LGBTQ+ inclusion at the NYC Saint Patrick's Pride Parade

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The NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project invites us to a virtual session about LGBTQ+ presence at St. Patrick's Day Parade . The St. Patrick’s Day Parade on Fifth Avenue is the most significant expression of Irish culture and celebration in New York City. But for 25 years, beginning in 1991, the fight for LGBTQ participation was met with “high levels of madness.” This intergenerational talk will feature  historian Emma Quinn  and  activist Brendan Fay , who will discuss this decades-long campaign and the importance of Irish LGBTQ visibility in St. Patrick’s Day celebrations around the city. Amanda Davis from the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project will moderate and there will be time for Q&A from the audience. The session will be next October, 29th, at 6:30 pm EDT, and you can register at  NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project website .                            This free virtual program is part of the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project’s “The Historian & The Activist: Cross-Cultural LGBTQ

30 years of LGBTQ+ History Month

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October 3rd, 1994. A group of University of Missouri-Saint Louis (UMSL) students joined at Lucas Hall to attend the first of four sessions dedicated to LGBTQ+-themed movies. That Monday, they could see a double program with two non-fiction films: Before Stonewall (Greta Schiller & Robert Rosenberg, 1984) and Word Is Out (Nancy Adair, Andrew Brown & Rob Epstein, 1977). It was an activity driven by Rodney Wilson, a high school teacher, to celebrate a National LGBT History Month, similar to other National Heritage & History Months, and especially inspired by Black History Month, the precursor of all of them. Rodney Wilson tried October because public schools are in session, and October the 11th was stablished as the National Coming Out Day. Probably nor Rodney Wilson neither the session attendees thought then thirty years after that day the National LGBTQ+ History Month will be so alive. Here we have the session flier, kept in Wilson's personal archive and published at L