Bibliography

Beins, A. and Enszer, J. (2013). “We Couldn't Get Them Printed,” So We Learned to Print: Ain't I a Woman? and the Iowa City Women's Press.”  Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies 34 (2), 186-221. *

Brilmyer, G. (2018). Archival Assemblages: Applying Disability Studies’ Political/relational Model to Archival Description. Archival Science 18(2), 95-118. *

Corrall, C. (2019, October 10). Remembering Forgotten Lesbian History. The Chicago Reader. https://chicagoreader.com/arts-culture/remembering-forgotten-lesbian-history/. *

Cotera, M. (2015). “Invisibility Is an Unnatural Disaster”: Feminist Archival Praxis After the Digital Turn.” South Atlantic Quarterly 114(4), 781-801.

Duff, W. and Harris, V.. (2002) Stories and Names: Archival Description as Narrating Records and Constructing Meanings. Archival Science 2, 263-285. *

Dunham, E. and Flores, X. (2014). Breaking the Language Barrier: Describing Chicano Archives with Bilingual Finding Aids. The American Archivist 77(2), 499-509.

Foote, K. (1990). To Remember and Forget: Archives, Memory, and Culture. American Archivist 53(3), 378-392. *

Hodson, S. (2004). In Secret Kept, In Silence Sealed: Privacy in the Papers of Authors and Celebrities. The American Archivist 67(2), 194-211. *

Iacovino, L. (2010). Rethinking Archival, Ethical and Legal Frameworks for Records of Indigenous Australian Communities: A Participant Relationship Model of Rights and Responsibilities. Archival Science 10, 353–72. *

Ketelaar, E. (1995). The Right to Know, the Right to Forget? Personal Information in Public Archives. Archives and Manuscripts 23, 8-17.

Kucharski, E. (2017, June 15). Print Thrives in the Lesbian Community. Between the Lines.  https://pridesource.com/article/81823-2/. *

Lavender Woman: Organization, Inducted 2017. (2017). The Chicago LGBT Hall of Fame. http://chicagolgbthalloffame.org/lavender-woman/. *

Streitmatter, R. (1995). Unspeakable: The Rise of the Gay and Lesbian Press in America. Faber and Faber. *

Sutherland, T.  (2017). Making a Killing: On Race, Ritual, and (Re)Membering in Digital Culture. Preservation, Digital Technology & Culture, 32-40.

Wakimoto, D.,  Bruce, C. and Partridge, H. (2013). Archivist as Activist: Lessons from Three Queer Community Archives in California. Archival Science 13(4), 293-316. *

Whitt, J. (2008). Women in American Journalism: A New History. University of Illinois Press. *

Wood, S., Carbone, K., Cifor M., Gilliland, A, and Punzalan, R. (2014). Mobilizing Records: Re-Framing Archival Description to Support Human Rights. Archival Science 14 (3–4), 397-419. *

Wooten, A.  (2009, June 4). Lakeview was almost Girlstown: Feminists and gays cope with the ‘70s. The Chicago Tribune, page TAB-12. *

Yakel, E. (2003). Archival Representation. Archival Science 3(1), 1-25. 

Zimmerman, B., and Haggerty, G.E. (2021). The Encyclopedia of Lesbian and Gay Histories and Cultures. Routledge. *

 

Works cited in the text of this digital archive are marked with an asterisk (*)

Archival Sources

The Joseph A. Labadie Collection at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.

The LGBT Collection of Independent Voices on Jstor.

The Queer Zine Archive Project

Front Page Images

Banner Image: 

The Gay Liberator: No. 43, February-March 1975, cover.

 

Browse Button:

The Gay Liberator: No. 43, December 1974 - January 1975, pg 1.

 

About the Authors Button:

The Gay Liberator: No. 38, June 1974, cover.