Exhibits

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OutHistory’s featured exhibits are curated by scholars in the field of LGBTQ history or presented by knowledgeable researchers or collectors. They provide a focused look at a few, particular aspects of this history. If you are interested in helping us expand the range of queer histories covered in future exhibits, please email outhistory@gc.cuny.edu.


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Out and Elected in the U.S.A

Photographed, Researched, and Written by Ron Schlittler

Between April 1998 and November 2002, Ron Shlittler traveled across the United States interviewing and photographing people who were openly gay or lesbian and who had at some time been elected to public office in the U.S. This exhibit showcases Schlittler's remarkable historical work, and provides information on 115 elected officials.


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Lesbian Theater

Curated by Mimi McGurl

This exhibit focuses on lesbian theatre history with an emphasis on the story of New York’s WOW Café and Theatre. This exhibit provides a wealth of primary sources from the personal papers of the founders of the theatre. If you have any additional photographs, programs, or other materials about WOW, please let us know or add that information to our database.


Queer Youth - On Campus and in the Media

Curated by Sharon Ullman

This queer youth exhibit focuses on activism on college and high school campuses as well as representations of queer youth in the media. This exhibit was researched by Bryn Mawr and Haverford students for a class on the History of Sexuality in America. Topics range from the Gay Straight Alliances to the Gay Liberation Front, to hate crimes perpetrated against at-risk youth in the second half of the twentieth century. If you are a teacher or student at another college or university, please tell us about the history of LGBTQ organizing on your campus.


The Pre-Gay Era in the USA

Curated by C. Todd White

This exhibit features homosexual rights organizations and publications in the U.S. from the 1950s to 1969. It provides exciting primary sources such as articles from ONE and Tangents magazines, a complete inventory of ONE’s Blanche M. Baker Library as it was in 1965, biographical profiles of key activists of the era, images of covers of pulp novels from the 1950s and ’60s, and a complete index of the contents of ONE, Mattachine Review, and The Ladder.


Chicago

Curated by John D’Emilio

The first of what we hope will be many exhibits concentrating on the history of a particular city, town, or geographical area, this exhibit presents some important documents LGBTQ Chicago, from 19XX through 2008.


People of African Descent

Curated by Tavia Nyong’o

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Colonial America: The Age of Sodomitical Sin

Curated by Jonathan Ned Katz

The years from 1706 to 1776 are, of course, the founding era of what became the United States, years that historian Jonathan Ned Katz calls "The Age of Sodomitical Sin." In the early years of this era, in these American colonies, the penalty for sodomy was death, and a number of executions are documented. Why was sodomy, usually conceived of as anal intercourse between men, thought of as treason against the state, and punished so harshly? And what do we know of sexual and intimate relationships between women in these years? This exhibit presents or references all the original documents that Katz collected in his books Gay/Lesbian Almanac and Gay American History, as well as evidence discovered since those publications.


Transgender

Curated by XXXXXXXXXX, with the assistance of Tey Meadow

This exhibit presents documented accounts of people whose ways of acting and dressing, and whose identifications did not conform with the dominant gender and sexual norms of their time. Asking how each of these people perceived and named themselves, and how others responded to them, provides insights into the changing social and historical organization of gender and sexuality through the examination of particular lives.


Native Americans

Curated by XXXXXXXX

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Postcards: Masculine Women and Feminine Men

Images from the collection of Marshall Weeks

A collection of forty colorful, amusing postcards dating to the early-twentieth-century reflect that era's popular culture, and its concerns about "masculine" women, "feminine" men, "fairies" and "sissy boys." For viewers today these postcards are entertaining and revealing of an era.