“We’re here, we’re queer, get used to it”: Struggles and Stories to Be Heard for Today and Tomorrow
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“We’re here, we’re queer, get used to it”: Struggles and Stories to Be Heard for Today and Tomorrow
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Air date: |
Thursday, June 8, 2023, 2:00:00 PM Time displayed is Eastern Time, Washington DC Local |
Views: | Total views: 192 (131 Live, 61 On-demand) |
Category: | History |
Runtime: |
01:02:18 |
Description: | Starting with two documents in the archival collections of the NLM, Dr. Sell will examine how early sexual and gender minority (SGM) Americans worked to normalize the presence of SGMs in society. Ralph Werther (1874-?) hoped that his writings might render “nature’s step-children” lives more tolerable and he “offered no apology” for their publication. Specifically, he hoped to repeal laws under which SGMs were incarcerated, put a stop to a continuous string of murders of these stepchildren, and save “hundreds” of these “melancholy sexual intermediates from suicide.” In addition to these objectives, Allen Bernstein (1913-2008) gives further justification for his writings stating that “travelers returning from strange adventure in far ends of the world owe civilization a report.” But Werther and Bernstein struggled, often unsuccessfully, to get their writings published and into libraries such as the Army Medical Library, the predecessor institution of the NLM. In this talk, Dr. Sell will examine their struggles and stories, and those of other SGM writers, including those working today. |
Author: |
Randall Sell, ScD, Professor, School of Public Health, Department of Community Health and Prevention, Drexel University |
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CIT Live ID: |
48680 |
Permanent link: |
https://videocast.nih.gov/watch=48680 |
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