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 (*)

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.