LGBTQ History and the Internet

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LGBTQ and Heterosexual History on the Web: A History

OPEN ENTRY: This entry is open to collaborative creation by anyone with evidence, citations, and analysis to share, so no particular, named creator is responsible for the accuracy and cogency of its content. Please use this entry's Comment section at the bottom of the page to suggest improvements about which you are unsure. Thanks.

This is a stub, an entry with no, little, or incomplete text that users are encouraged to add to if they have data, documentation, citations, or constructive suggestions. Tip: first research what has already been written and create the bibliography (don't reinvent the wheel).



Introduction

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Subjects to Discuss in this Entry

Citizen historians

Citizen-history

Community-based archives, libraries and their websites

Community-based historians

Community-based history

Community-based history projects

Community-based researchers

Community-based scholars

Community-based website administrators

Community-funded history making

Community-supported history

History by the community

History by the people

History from the bottom up

LGBTQ History by LGBTQ People

Participatory historians

Participatory history making

Wikipedia and LGBTQ History

Timeline on the Subject of this Entry

Format: year, month, day: Sentence about what happened.


Primary Sources

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Secondary Sources

Author/editor Last Name, First name. Title. Place of Publication. Publisher's name. Date of Publication.

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Narrative History

Usually it is better to write this after the above entries are filled in a bit.


Creators of this Entry Listed Alphabetically by Last Name (optional)

References



Categories:

Carefully filled out categories help users find this entry and the data in it.