![]() the general public through the LGBTQ Oral History Digital Collaboratory. The oral histories were donated to the University of Victoria Libraries Transgender Archives and The ArQuives: Canada’s LGBTQ2+ Archives in 2020.įounded in 2014, LGBTQ History Digital Collaboratory is funded by the Social Science & Humanities Research Council of Canada. This is a historical community gay history project that Ive been working to. This hub acts as a growing resource for oral histories practitioners and the public. LGBTQ digital oral history is an emerging field built by dedicated activists, historians, and archivists across the web. The oral history project team consisted of: Elspeth Brown (PI), Aaron Devor (Collaborator), Evan Taylor (Interviewer), and Elizabeth Holliday (Project Assistant and Editor). LGBTQ History Digital Collaboratory Oral History Hub. The Collaboratory is the largest oral history project in North America, bringing together 200 interviews and connecting life stories with new methodologies in digital history, collaborative research, and archival practice. Why has sexual self-disclosure become so important to gay, lesbian, and queer historical research And what does the dependence on oral history methods tell us. The interviews were collected in 2019-2020. The Trans Activism Oral History project’s purpose was to record elders’ history of activism on behalf of trans people and communities in order to establish and preserve trans-specific and trans-positive primary source historical narratives for future generations. The collection consists of video and audio interviews with leading Trans activist elders from across North America. The Trans Activism Oral History collection was a project of LGBTQ History Digital Collaboratory. The Oral History Hub, a project of the LGBTQ Digital Collaboratory at the University of Toronto, provides a diverse list of completed and current LGBTQ oral.
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