"The book is highly readable, and complex arguments are explained with clarity. A major feature of the book is its deliberate reflexivity where the author uses his personal experiences and community involvements to illuminate his growing understanding of, and contributions to, queer history."

Jeffrey Weeks, London South Bank University, London

Writing Queer History introduces and surveys the ways in which historians and others have researched and written about the lesbian, gay and queer past. It pinpoints some of the key themes, issues and questions they have sought to address, looks at the kinds of sources they have used and suggests ways in which queer theory since the early 1990s has shifted approaches and perspectives for historians.

Section One gives an overview of uses and accounts of the queer past from the late 19th century to the present. Section Two explores key questions and themes that have exercised historians by focusing on key texts ranging from the Medieval to the contemporary. Section Three focuses in further on different kinds of source material, examining specific archives to demonstrate how we might understand the past through particular documents, artifacts, voices and images. Finally, the author describes how his work has been shaped by his own biography, changing academic fashion, new theoretical perspectives and the particularities of archive collections.

The book shows how histories of queer life have implications for the broader understanding of culture, society and politics, as well as demonstrating how queer history writing has been influenced and shaped by activist and community groups and by scholars working in and across different disciplines. Rich in case studies and including practical guidance on approaching queer history, Writing Queer History is an invaluable text for those studying the history of sexuality, gender history, the history of the emotions and historiography.

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Introduces and surveys the ways in which historians and others have researched and written about the lesbian, gay and ‘queer’ past.

1. Introduction: What is Queer History?
Section I. Histories
1. From Sexologists to Sociologists
2. Activism and Community Histories: From the GLF to LGBT History Month
3. Theorists: From Foucault Forward
4. Into the Academy
Section II. Approaches
5. Dealing with Labels and Anachronism
6. Explaining Change over Time
7. Researching Intimate Lives: Subjectivity, Desire and Emotion
8. Analysing Space
9. Thinking through National and Inter-national Frameworks
10. Looking through (non) ‘Western’ Eyes
11. Exploring Intersections and Multiple Identifications
12. Finding the Queer Past through the Queer Arts
13. Becoming Reflexive
14. Writing the Recent Past
15. Broadening Audiences: Community and Public History
Section III. Archives and Sources
16. Diaries, Memoirs and Letters
17. Places and Things
18. The Law and the Press
19. Sexology and Medicine
20. ‘Public’ Opinion
21. Fliers, Minutes and Ephemera
22. Art, Photography and the Moving Image
23. Literature and Autobiography
24. Oral History
25. The Internet
Conclusion: Self Reflections
Index

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Introduces and surveys the ways in which historians and others have researched and written about the lesbian, gay and ‘queer’ past.
Offers a clear and concise overview of the ways in which we can approach the lesbian, gay and queer past, examining different approaches and methodologies and how these have evolved over time

The Writing History series publishes accessible overviews of particular fields in history, focusing on the practical application of theory in historical writing. Books in the series succinctly explain central concepts to demonstrate the ways in which they have informed effective historical writing. They analyse key historical texts and their producers within their institutional arrangement, and as part of a wider social discourse. The series' holistic approach means students benefit from an enhanced understanding of how to negotiate the contours of successful historical writing.

Series editors: Stefan Berger (Ruhr University Bochum, Germany), Heiko Feldner (Cardiff University, UK) and Kevin Passmore (Cardiff University, UK)

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781474247528
Publisert
2026-02-19
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
440 gr
Høyde
228 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
26 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
296

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Matt Cook is Senior Lecturer in History and Gender Studies at Birkbeck, University of London, Director of the Raphael Samuel History Centre and an editor of History Workshop Journal. He is the author of London and the Culture of Homosexuality, 1885 – 1914 (2003) and Queer Domesticities: Homosexuality and Home Life in Twentieth Century London (2014); lead author and editor of A Gay History of Britain (2007) and co-editor of Queer 1950s (2012, with Heike Bauer) and Queer Cities, Queer Culture (2014, with Jennifer Evans).