Tag Archives: Valerie Korinek

Read Queer History over the holidays!

{The Calgary Gay History Project is on hiatus in December. Look for new queer history content in 2025!}

Stories connect us to community. Having a shared narrative increases a sense of belonging—especially in minority communities. For 2SLGBTQ+ people, the holidays can sometimes be alienating. One antidote to this is reading stories about our “rainbow elders.” Reading queer history can help us make sense of the present as well as our place in it.

Our Past Matters Author Kevin Allen in front of Shelf Life Books

Here are a handful of reading recommendations:

Our Past Matters: Stories of Gay Calgary hit #1 on the Calgary Herald bestseller list in 2019 and has been selling well ever since. Giller Prize-winning author Suzette Mayr wrote: This book makes me proud to be a Calgarian.” We are ever so grateful for independent bookstores Pages on Kensington and Shelf Life Books, who’ve sold so many copies that we’ve lost count. You can also find Our Past Matters at Polar Peek Books in Fernie, BC.

Out North: An Archive of Queer Activism and Kinship in Canada is a fascinating exploration and examination of queer history and activism, and Canada’s visual guide to 2SLGBTQ+ movements, struggles, and achievements. Written by Craig Jennex and Nisha Eswaran, Out North was a project of The ArQuives and has lots of cool pictures interspersed with the text.

A personal favourite is Len & Cub: A Queer History. After discovering a treasure trove of old photos of this couple, authors Meredith J. Batt and Dusty Green delve into the lives of Leonard Keith and Joseph “Cub” Coates and their long-term same-sex relationship in the early 20th century. 

Valerie Korinek’s Prairie Fairies is a vitally important academic read. Prairie Fairies focuses on the queer history of the Prairies’ five urban centers: Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Regina, Edmonton, and Calgary. Korinek, with insightfulness, explores how the leading activists from these cities both informed and impacted Canadian national gay liberation debates. Korinek also finds the outlines of those who lived in prairie shadows–urban and rural–explaining how their existence added to the complex reality of queer communities.

Find these books at your favourite independent bookstore or find them for free at the Calgary Public Library.

Bonus read: Historian Sarah Worthman has uncovered Canadian queer stories from an era where sexual and gender identity was quite different. She has put together an engaging website called QUEERING THE WESTERN FRONT: A guided queer history tour of the First World War.

Happy holidays!

{KA}

National Conference—Yahoo!

MacEwan University is hosting the first National Queer and Trans+ Community History Conference, May 3-4 in Edmonton, Alberta. Registrations are open!

See you in Edmonton!

The Conference is designed to bring together 2SLGBTQ+ community members, nonprofit organizations, heritage professionals, historians, academics, emerging scholars, and students who have an interest in documenting, preserving, and celebrating diverse and intersectional queer and trans+ histories in Canada. The Conference aims to foster dialogue amongst participants and presenters to explore the latest research, programming, and community work focused on queer and trans+ histories.

Conference organizers include Dr. Kristopher Wells, MacEwan University; Dr. Jacqueline Gahagan, Mount Saint Vincent University; Dr. Valerie Korinek, University of Saskatchewan; Dr. Aaron Devor, University of Victoria; Dr. Scott de Groot, Canadian Museum for Human Rights; and graduate students JP Armstrong, York University; Erin Gallagher‐Cohoon, Queen’s University.

See you there!

{KA}

Shop local for queer history

I have lived in the Beltline for most of my adult life, which has also been central to Calgary’s queer community for more than 50 years. Additionally, most historians I know are voracious readers. Consequently, it is no surprise that my favourite Beltline store is Shelf Life Books.

Author Kevin Allen at Shelf Life Books, source: Calgary Metro

Shelf Life has an interesting queer history itself as the site of the former Parkside Continental gay bar. There is an excellent mural on the backside of the store by Kyle Simmers, that subtly evokes this history with the inclusion of the bar’s now iconic logo.

The book store has been the largest seller of my book, Our Past Matters, and has hosted yycgayhistory special events for which I am very grateful. They also stock the books of queer friends and colleagues. Pick up any book by Suzette Mayr, Vivek Shraya, or Rae Spoon and you won’t be disappointed. Sharanpal Ruprai, whom I adore as a person, writes books of poetry that sing, charm, and sizzle. They also carry more comprehensive Canadian queer history readers such as the Valerie Korinek’s Prairie Fairies and The ArQuives‘ recently published OutNorth.

In fact, all independent book stores in Calgary need our custom. Furthermore think hyperlocal—support Calgary authors by buying their books. If you need inspiration, there is no greater source than Shaun Hunter’s Calgary Reading Lists. She virtually single-handedly has created a canon of local literature, as well as a useful reader in Calgary Through the Eyes of Writers.

I am wishing all Calgarians a safe, happy, and restful holiday season. Take care of yourselves and each other—find joy in unexpected places. — Kevin

{KA}