<p>The theme of this book is that locality matters. Queer lives and queerscapes are illuminated across a multiplicity of places, spaces and times: from polities to gardens, synagogues, photography collections, racial interminglings, English beaches and Florence estates. Queerness is not so much about being as becoming, celebrating difference and belonging in all its varieties.</p>
Jeffrey Weeks, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, London South Bank University, UK, Author of Between Worlds: A Queer Boy from the Valleys.
<p><i>Locating Queer Histories</i> provides an exquisitely rich, wide-ranging sampler of queer experiences. Methodologically and geographically varied, this work delivers on the promise of queer urban, regional, and provincial histories to engage us in revisiting familiar places from new perspectives, communities long omitted from history. <i>Locating Queer Histories</i> is a welcome challenge to the field and a promise of more to come.</p>
Valerie J. Korinek, A.S. Morton Professor of History, University of Saskatchewan, Canada
This is another superlative offering from the 'Queer Beyond London' team of Bengry, Cook and Oram. The scholars they have assembled treat the reader to a rich diversity of topics about the fascinating heterogeneity of queer Britain. This is a collection to be savoured.
Brian Lewis, Professor of History, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Opening up a wealth of new questions and avenues to explore, Locating Queer Histories emphasizes at its heart the profound importance of locality for histories of sex, desire and sexuality.
Journal of Contemporary History
Ranging from the mid-19th century to the present, and from Edinburgh to Plymouth, this powerful collection explores the significance of locality in queer space and experiences in modern British history.
The chapters cover a broad range of themes from migration, movement and multiculturalism; the distinctive queer social and political scenes of different cities; and the ways in which places have been reimagined through locally led community history projects. The book challenges traditional LGBTQ histories which have tended to conceive of queer experience in the UK as a comprising a homogeneous, national narrative.
Edited by leading historians, the book foregrounds the voices of LGBTQ-identified people by looking at a range of letters, diaries, TV interviews and oral testimonies. It provides a unique and fascinating account of queer experiences in Britain and how they have been shaped through different localities.
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Introduction
1. âGreat Expectations: Migrating to Edinburghâ, Alva Träbert
2. âThe North South Divide? Examining Queer Intersections between Newcastle upon Tyne and Londonâ, Gareth Longstaff
3. âSectarianism and queer lives in Northern Ireland since the 1970sâ, Sean Brady
4. âQueer Transplanting from the Himalayas to Yorkshire: Reginald Farrerâs Loves for Men and Alpine Plants (1880-1920)â, Dominic Janes
5. ââCool and Green and Lovely Beyond Anythingâ: Oxfordâs Parsonâs Pleasure 1844-1992â, George Townsend
6. âTracing Queer Black Spaces in Interwar Britainâ, Caroline Bressey and Gemma Romain,
7. âLondon Suburbs and the Co-Creation of LGBT+ Jewish Identitiesâ, Searle Kochberg and Margaret Greenfields,
8. âThe queer politics and pleasure of community resistance to Section 28 on Brighton Beach, 1988-1994â, Louise Pawley
9. âTaking Pride in Plymouthâs Pastâ, Alan Butler
10. âA âQueer Collectionâ: The English Colony in Florence, 1890 â 1940â, Rachel Hope Cleves
Notes on Contributors
Index
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Matt Cook is Professor of Modern History at Birkbeck College, University of London, UK. He is the author of Queer Domesticities: Homosexuality and Home Life in 20th-Century London (2014) and London and the Culture of Homosexuality, 1885-1914 (2003).
Alison Oram is Professor of Social and Cultural History at Leeds Beckett University, UK. She is the author of Her Husband Was a Woman!: Women's Gender Crossing and Modern British Culture (2007) and the Lesbian History Sourcebook (2001).
Justin Bengry is Lecturer in Queer History at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK. His forthcoming monograph is entitled The Pink Pound: Capitalism and Homosexuality in 20th-Century Britain.