Tag Archives: Gay history

Queer History on CKUA’s ArtBeat

Last week’s post got more attention than usual due to its sensational content.  Let’s hope that the events of last week were an anomaly.  I have since fully recovered from the shock…

Wrapping up my AMAAS job this week, I have now retreated to the mountains for a bit of R&R, but I wanted to feature Megan Clark’s ArtBeat feature on CKUA concerning gay history research in Calgary.  She talks to Jonathan Brower, of Third Street Theatre, and myself about the stories we are gathering.  It seems like a good launching point for my year of Calgary gay history.  Also, I believe we will see some of Jonathan’s research popping up here on the Calgary Gay History Website this summer.

You can listen: here

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Thanks Megan!

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F@$%ing Faggot 2014

This week’s post is a bit of a departure from the standard queer history snippet.  I am not keen on the word “faggot” especially used as an insult.  We have not repatriated it like “queer,” and I wonder if in a generation I would feel the same way about “faggot” as many of our elders do about “queer” having a permanent taint.

Until this week, however, I had not heard that insult thrown at me for a good long time – perhaps not since the 90s.  Yet I was verbally assaulted with “f@$%ing faggot” TWICE in the last few days: Monday on the C-Train and Tuesday on a downtown street.  Both times I stood there in disbelief after the parting verbal blow was delivered.  It seemed so unlikely to have happened, that it took me a long moment to process – no witty or angry retorts – just stunned silence.

There is a national congratulatory theme in some of my queer history presentations, when we compare how far Canada has come in 45 years with respect to human rights after the decriminalization of homosexuality in 1969.  Now I am having a rethink of tone.

In April, I met Scott Jones on an anti-homophobia panel at Knox Presbyterian Church.  He suffered a physical homophobic attack last year in Nova Scotia that left him in a wheelchair.  He is transforming his tragedy into a public anti-homophobia campaign – called “Don’t Be Afraid” – but the fact of his attack is appalling.

dont be afraid

I have no immediate remedy for homophobia and transphobia in Canada – or Calgary for that matter.  However, these events have redoubled my commitment to the Calgary Gay History Project.  We have an immediate need to get our history recorded and our archives preserved.

To this end, my job at the Alberta Media Arts Alliance (AMAAS) is quickly wrapping up this month.  AMAAS is a great organization:  I enjoyed the work, the camaraderie, and it was very good to me.  But, I am leaving to devote more time to Calgary’s queer history – my new priority.  It is my hope that we will be able to incorporate more volunteers into the project, as we aspire to create a history community.

Finally, support your local queer organizations, like Third Street Theatre, whose fundraiser is tomorrow night.  Queer non-profits and community groups do a lot of heavy lifting when it comes to social change.  We obviously have further to go…

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New Gala, Next Walk & Queer Archive Donation

Calgary queer history readers and/or party aficionados might be interested in Third Street Theatre’s inaugural “Stars of the Stage & Screen” gala & costume party on Friday, June 27th at the Arrata Opera Centre at 8pm.

All money raised goes to the next production season of Third Street Theatre – Calgary’s only queer theatre company that challenges stereotypes and gives a voice to a marginalized LGBTQ community.  Tickets and info: here.

We will be reprising our Beltline Gay History Walk on Saturday, July 26th from 7:00-8:30 PM as part of Historic Calgary Week.  Come out to learn about meaningful spots in our communities history including the location of Calgary’s first gay bar, Club Carousel.  The walk will start and finish at CommunityWise (the Old Y) at 223 12 Ave. SW.  Usually we head to a Beltline Pub afterwards for more conviviality.  Everyone is welcome!

Finally, I had lunch this week with an old colleague and friend of mine, Shelagh Anderson, the former publisher of QC Magazine, who now lives in Nova Scotia with her wife and daughter.  She donated a complete collection of the Calgary based queer periodical which ran for about 3 years beginning in 1995 for the archives we are building.  As a bonus: many of the covers are signed by the subjects of the cover story.  Thank you Shelagh!

QC Covers

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