Difference between revisions of "Hill's "Transvestites among the whites", 1943"
From OutHistory
Jump to navigationJump to searchOutHistory (talk | contribs) |
|||
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | |||
Hill's anthropological study of Navaho humor includes a section on "Humor Based on the Unfamiliar Actions of Foreigners." Hill reports that the clothing of white people is a subject for comment: | Hill's anthropological study of Navaho humor includes a section on "Humor Based on the Unfamiliar Actions of Foreigners." Hill reports that the clothing of white people is a subject for comment: | ||
+ | |||
Once during a ceremonial which was attended by an unusual number of tourists, one of the older [Navaho] men remarked, "There must be a great many more transvestites among the whites than among the Navaho because so many white women wear trousers.<ref>W. W. Hill, "... Navaho Humor," General Studies in Anthropology, no. 9 (Menasha, wts.: George Banta Publishing, 1943), p. 12. Also see Nancy Oestreich Lurl, "Winnebago Berdache," American Anthropologist vol. 55 (1953), p. 708-12.</ref> | Once during a ceremonial which was attended by an unusual number of tourists, one of the older [Navaho] men remarked, "There must be a great many more transvestites among the whites than among the Navaho because so many white women wear trousers.<ref>W. W. Hill, "... Navaho Humor," General Studies in Anthropology, no. 9 (Menasha, wts.: George Banta Publishing, 1943), p. 12. Also see Nancy Oestreich Lurl, "Winnebago Berdache," American Anthropologist vol. 55 (1953), p. 708-12.</ref> | ||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
[[Category:Hill, Willard WIlliams]] | [[Category:Hill, Willard WIlliams]] | ||
[[Category:1940-1949]] | [[Category:1940-1949]] | ||
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Navajo]] |
+ | [[Category:Transvestite]] |
Latest revision as of 14:44, 6 May 2008
Hill's anthropological study of Navaho humor includes a section on "Humor Based on the Unfamiliar Actions of Foreigners." Hill reports that the clothing of white people is a subject for comment:
Once during a ceremonial which was attended by an unusual number of tourists, one of the older [Navaho] men remarked, "There must be a great many more transvestites among the whites than among the Navaho because so many white women wear trousers.[1]
References
Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (NY: Crowell, 1976) pg. 325.
- ↑ W. W. Hill, "... Navaho Humor," General Studies in Anthropology, no. 9 (Menasha, wts.: George Banta Publishing, 1943), p. 12. Also see Nancy Oestreich Lurl, "Winnebago Berdache," American Anthropologist vol. 55 (1953), p. 708-12.