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Finding Queer Stories in Archives - Seminar Series 2021

Finding Queer Stories in Archives - Seminar Series 2021

By Broken Futures

Broken Futures is a community-based queer heritage project, and over the past year through our history group we've trained volunteers in archival and genealogical research to recover the lives of men charged for gross indecency and buggery between 1861-1967. This has uncovered important findings and questions, so join us for our seminar series as we talk all things queer heritage with fantastic academics and independent researchers.

The Broken Futures project is delivered by Support U, the LGBT+ wellbeing charity in the Thames Valley, and is funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund.



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Local History Matters with Dr Claire Keenan from British Assoc for Local History and Tim Allsop from Queer Rural Connections

Finding Queer Stories in Archives - Seminar Series 2021May 13, 2021

00:00
28:48
Local History Matters with Dr Claire Keenan from British Assoc for Local History and Tim Allsop from Queer Rural Connections
May 13, 202128:48
Prof Katherine Harloe - Professor of Classics and Intellectual History at the University of Reading

Prof Katherine Harloe - Professor of Classics and Intellectual History at the University of Reading

In this episode, the team talk to Prof Katherine Harloe, Professor of Classics and Intellectual History at the University of Reading, about her interests in queer classics, how classics was used to conceptualise and same-sex desire in Victorian and Edwardian Britain, her role in bringing about the Broken Futures project, and the research and recording of diverse narratives.

May 06, 202127:15
Mark Stevens - Berkshire County Archivist
Apr 29, 202126:59
Dr Emily Rutherford - JRF in History at Merton College, University of Oxford

Dr Emily Rutherford - JRF in History at Merton College, University of Oxford

In this episode, the team speak to Dr Emily Rutherford (Junior Research Fellow in History at Merton College, University of Oxford) about: her interest in queer history; how men who experienced same-sex desire would have conceptualised this in Victorian and Edwardian England; the differences between elite and working-class conceptions of homosexuality, including how different sources can form our understandings of both; and her upcoming work. Follow Dr Rutherford on twitter @echomikeromeo and visit her website www.emilymrutherford.com

Apr 22, 202138:57
Dr Oliver Baldwin - British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow in Classics at the University of Reading

Dr Oliver Baldwin - British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow in Classics at the University of Reading

In this episode, the team talk to Dr Oliver Baldwin from the University of Reading's Department of Classics about: his interest in queer history; his current project Queer Tragedy; why classics is so queer; how the men in the Broken Futures project may have used their understandings of the ancient world to understand their same-sex desire; and the relevance of Oscar Wilde's famous use of 'the love that dare not speak it's name' to legitimise his relationships with other men.
This is a really accessible podcast that introduces queer classics for a first-time listener.
Apr 15, 202137:44
Prof Aleardo Zanghellini - Professor of Law and Social Theory at the University of Reading

Prof Aleardo Zanghellini - Professor of Law and Social Theory at the University of Reading

In this episode, we speak to Prof Aleardo Zanghellini from the University of Reading's School of Law. Aleardo tells us about: how law and legal theory interacts with queer heritage; how the law operated against men who had sex with men; his novel Spellbinders, a work of historical fiction centring on Edward II's same-sex desire; how more diverse queer stories, including those of women and trans people, can be found in criminal archives; and his latest work on how same-sex desire played a part in the government of Fiume.

Apr 08, 202126:02
Amy Austin - PhD Student and Researcher in Gender History at the University of Reading
Apr 01, 202134:42
Dan Vo - Co-Director of the Queer Heritage and Collections Network
Mar 25, 202135:03
Prof Peter Stoneley - Professor Emeritus of English Literature at the University of Reading

Prof Peter Stoneley - Professor Emeritus of English Literature at the University of Reading

In this episode, we ask Prof. Stoneley about the ordinary people he found serving time in Reading Gaol, how the building can seen as a site of queer heritage, the importance of queer representation in the archives, and the future of Gaol (which became unexpectedly relevant with the addition of a new Banksy on the prison's walls!).

About Peter: Peter is Professor Emeritus of English Literature at the University of Reading.  He has published books and essays on US literature, queer studies, Oscar Wilde, and dance.  He was co-lead on the HLF-funded project, "Oscar Wilde and Reading Gaol."

Department of English Literature at the University of Reading: www.reading.ac.uk/new-home/literature-homepage.aspx

Berkshire Record Office: www.berkshirerecordoffice.org.uk

Mar 18, 202133:46
Introduction - Broken Futures Team

Introduction - Broken Futures Team

Join us for the first seminar of the series, and listen in to the Broken Futures team, Amy and George as they introduce the Broken Futures project and the upcoming launch of our museum exhibitions, walking tours, toolkit and this seminar series! Find out about the archival research, history group and more.

The Broken Futures Project was funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund in 2019 and seeks to explore the history of ‘ordinary’ men* in Berkshire who were charged with buggery/indecent assault/gross indecency 1861-1967 by training community volunteers in archival and genealogical research. The project is managed and delivered by Support U, the LGBT+ support and wellbeing charity in the Thames Valley. The project is supported by our fantastic partners, Berkshire Record Office, the Museum of English Rural Life, the University of Reading and Reading Museum. Find out more by visiting www.brokenfutures.co.uk 


Mar 08, 202102:20