User talk:Jnk

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OutHistory’s featured exhibits are curated by scholars in the field of LGBTQ history, 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

Photos and biographs of 115 openly gay or lesbian people elected to public office in the U.S., 1974-2004.


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Lesbian Theater

Curated by Mimi McGurl

Lesbian theatre history with an emphasis on New York’s WOW Café and Theatre, starting in 1980.


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The Pre-Gay Era in the USA

Curated by C. Todd White

Homosexual rights activists, organizations, and publications in the U.S. from the 1950s to 1969.


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Postcards: Masculine Women and Feminine Men

Images from the collection of Marshall Weeks

Postcards reflecting concerns about "masculine" women and "sissy boys," dating to the early-twentieth-century.


Colonial America: The Age of Sodomitical Sin

Curated by Jonathan Ned Katz

The founding era of what became the United States, 1607-1776.



Queer Youth - On Campus and in the Media

Curated by Sharon Ullman

Activism on college and high school campuses and representations of queer youth in the media, 1947-2007.



Chicago

Curated by John D’Emilio

The LGBTQ history of a particular city.



People of African Descent

Curated by Tavia Nyong’o

Documents and images referring to LGBTQ people of African descent and African Americans, in particular.



Transgender

Curated by XXXXXXXXXX, with the assistance of Tey Meadow

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Native Americans

Curated by XXXXXXXX

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JNK is storing this here: from notes in GAH or GLA

MERRYMOUNT About 1626, according to William Bradford, Thomas Morton and the other male settlers at Merrymount were guilty of "great licentiousness." The men's consorting with Indian women is mentioned, along with "worse practices" associated with ancient Roman feasts. Bradford said that Morton and his men "set up a maypole,drinking and dancing about it many days together, inviting the Indian women for their consorts, dancing and frisking together like so many fairies, or furies, rather; and worse practices. As if they had anew revived and celebrated the feasts of the Roman goddess Flora, or the beastly practices of the mad Bac-' chanalians." Subject for research: It would be interesting to know just what feasts and "beastly practices" Bradford had in mind; see his Of Plymouth Plantation, pp. 204-06; Oaks, 'Things Fearful,' " p. 269.


Hello Jonathan,

I'm just editing this page to show you what happens when somebody modifies your discussion page.

I have also figured out how to alphabetize category entries by last name. You simply add this snippet of text above the category:

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kolbe, Jim}}

Let me just mention that the link text donesn't necessarily need to be the same as the article title. I can link to Jim Kolbe's article for example by typing [[Jim Kolbe|Jim Kolbe's article]] (text before vertical bar is what it links to, text after the vertical bar is what it says on the page). You can also automatically sign your name when you write something on the discussion pages (like I did below) by typing four tilde characters (~~~~). The will turn into a signature stamp when you save or preview.

Ebukva 12:30, 8 November 2007 (PST)

I was here. JNK Jnk 12:58, 19 November 2007 (PST)


Hello and welcome to OutHistory.org.

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Ebukva 14:31, 10 January 2008 (PST)