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On the Racial Ramifications of Historical Method On the Racial Ramifications of Historical Method
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Racial Identifications and the Politics of History Racial Identifications and the Politics of History
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Notes Notes
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2 Historical Methods and Racial Identification in U.S. Lesbian and Gay History
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Published:September 2016
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Abstract
This chapter interrogates how “whiteness” shaped the ways in which the early chroniclers of gay and lesbian history considered the relationship between race and sex. It looks at several core features of the U.S. gay and lesbian past as it was constructed in historical writing between 1976, when the first book in the field came out, and 1989, when the first anthology was released. These publications mark the period of the field's initial formation and thus frame inquiry into basic assumptions and strategies that shaped the field at that important moment. Here the chapter argues that many of these early historians examined the experiences of people of color but often failed to see how their “whiteness” shaped their investigation of the past.
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