Category:Historiography
Studying the History of LGBTQ History
The historiography of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer history is the self-reflexive study of the processes by which knowledge of LGBTQ history is hypothesized and theorized, empirically researched, and analyzed, interpreted, written, cited, published, and received over time and in different societies.
The historiographer examines the history of LGBTQ history, and analyses the implications of naming and conceptualizing a specifically LGBTQ history, as opposed to, for example, a "homosexual" (and "heterosexual") history, a history of "same-sex (and different-sex) sexual relations," a history of "same-sex (and different-sex) love or "intimacy," or a history of "queer" (and "normal") sexuality.
The historiographer examines historians' explicit and implicit starting assumptions, and the implications of those assumptions for their work in LGBTQ history. The historiographer studies how a historian's definition -- in the present, at a specific point in time, in a particular society -- of a specific past object of study affects how that historian understands and presents her/his findings about the LGBTQ past.
The historiographer of LGBTQ history touches on such elements as authorship, sources, evidence, bias, perspective, interpretation, judgment, causation, style, and audience.
Interconnections in LGBTQ history among gender, race, class, ethnicity, religion, and politics have also been major areas of concern to historiographers, as have connections between the history of sexual and gender terminology and the social-historical organization of sexual and gender behaviors and identities.
Historiography is often broken down topically, such as the historiography of a particular nation state, for example, the history of LGBTQ life in the United States, or within the Islamic nations, or in China, or the historiography of particular cities or geographic regions. The rise of globalism and of newly perceived deep interconnections between countries and nations is leading to a new stress on international LGBTQ history.
Historiographers study different approaches or genres of history, such as LGBTQ economic history, oral history, political history, or social history.
Beginning in the 1970s and 1980s, and the coming out of independent scholars and academy-based historians, a body of writing on on LGBTQ historiography has begun to emerge.[1]
For specific problems in LGBTQ historiography, see the following list:
Alienation and Intimacy in LGBTQ History
Claiming in LGBTQ History (claiming the homosexuality of creative, famous, or "positive" figures)
Essentialism in LGBTQ History (see also Social Construction and LGBTQ History)
Evidence in LGBTQ and Heterosexual history
Internationalism and Nationalism in LGBTQ History
Intersectionality in LGBTQ History
Periodization in LGBTQ History
The Personal and Political in LGBTQ History
Power in LGBTQ and Heterosexual History
[[Sexuality in LGBTQ History
Social Construction and LGBTQ History (see also Essentialism in LGBTQ History)
References
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Pages in category "Historiography"
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