OutHistory

OutHistory
OutHistory
OutHistory logo
Screenshot of OutHistory.org homepage
Screenshot of OutHistory.org homepage
URL OutHistory.org
Slogan Fight Against Forgetting!
Commercial? No
Type of site Wiki
Registration Required to edit or create content
Available language(s) English
Owner Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies (CLAGS)
Created by Jonathan Ned Katz
Launched 2004
Alexa rank increase 1,083,779 (August 2011)[1]
Current status Online

OutHistory.org is a website in development about gender and sexual history, a site that aspires to encourage us to think deeply and critically about historical evidence and what it means to understand LGBT and heterosexual life in the perspective of society and time. OutHistory is designed to help us ask and begin to answer questions about the gendered and sexual actions and feelings of people within social structures over time. OutHistory includes elements of an almanac, archive, article, bibliography, book, encyclopedia, library, and museum, but it is not identical to any one of these. It's a history website -- on it, time is of the essence.

OutHistory.org is produced by the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies (CLAGS), located at the City University of New York Graduate Center.[2] The site was founded and directed by Jonathan Ned Katz and the OutHistory Project Director for CLAGS is Lauren Gutterman. The site was designed and developed by Cidamon, A New York based web design and development company, using Open-source MediaWiki software. The content of OutHistory.org is provided by volunteers. While the site went live in 2004, the official launch of the current OutHistory.org took place October 21, 2008.[3]

Contents

Site Producer

OutHistory is produced by The Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies (CLAGS), under the guidance of its director, Sarah E. Chinn. CLAGS is an institute at the City University of New York Graduate Center. The site's Director and initiator is Jonathan Ned Katz. The site's Coordinator is Lauren Gutterman.[3]

Content

This first prototype of OutHistory.org focuses on a number of featured Exhibits on LGBTQ history in the United States, and includes a variety of other content. But the future possibilities of this site are as wide as the world, and as open as all of us can collectively imagine. For example, Jonathan Ned Katz dreams that this site will eventually contain the largest, freely accessible, annotated bibliography on the subject of LGBTQ and heterosexual history. A user's ability to survey such a bibliography according to specific time frames and particular key words would give that person an overview of a history that will take many, many more years to document, detail, and publish.

Contributors

The content of this site is volunteered by and solicited from authors, curators, editors, researchers, independent and institutionally-based scholars, and collectors named on their entries. Inspired by Wikipedia, OutHistory.org also encourages all its users to discuss the site and each article.

Also inspired by Wikipedia, and as an experiment in history by the people, we encourage users to provide the site with documents, data and citations, articles, photos, administrative aid, and any kind of assistance they can. Users of OutHistory can help OutHistory make history. With the participation of users this site will grow, develop, and be institutionally supported over the long-run.

Collaborations

OutHistory is interested in collaborating with other LGBTQH history sites, archives, newspapers, magazines, museum projects, and art galleries, as well as interested researchers. As of August 29, 2008, OutHistory is collaborating with The Windy City Times (Chicago) and ChicagoGayHistory.org, and historian John D'Emilio is publishing original essays on Chicago gay history in this newspaper and on both websites.

OutHistory has also partnered with Arcus Foundation to award recipients of the LGBTQ Local Histories Contest for excellent contributions to OutHistory on local history topics.[4]

A collaboration between OutHistory and WikiQueer allows for history related content to be transcluded from OutHistory to WikiQueer.

Governance

Staff

OutHistory has a group of staff, mostly volunteer, overseeing fiscal and support operations.

  • Coordinator: Lauren Gutterman
  • Founder, Co-Director: Jonathan Ned Katz, Independent Scholar and Author
  • Co-Director: Daniel Hurewitz, Assistant Professor, Hunter College, NYC
  • Co-Director: Karen Miller, Associate Professor of Urban Studies and History, LaGuardia Community College

Board of Advisors At Large

The Advisory Board's primary responsibilities are advising on the site's content, contributing, as time permits, to that content, editing content, and suggesting and encouraging contributors. The board makes macro policy decisions (for example, about what kinds of materials the site should solicit and publish, and about the overall structure of the site). Like editorial boards and boards of directors, the Advisory Board does not make executive decisions about site production, budgeting, staffing, or the day-to-day running of the site.

History of OutHistory.org

In the 1980s, while working as secretary to the contract director of a major educational publisher, Jonathan Ned Katz first learned to use a computer, and fantasized that this huge, multi-floor office was actually a "gay history factory," and that the hundreds of people working busily in cubicles were actually researchers, paid to dig up forgotten bits of the LGBTQ past. The present LGBTQ history website is the realization of Katz's history factory dream.

In 2003, a friend of Katz's, Barbara Todd Kerr, who worked as a producer at Mediapolis, a website development company, introduced him to Mediapolis founder and director Carl Pritzkat. Katz asked Pritizkat if his company would create, pro bono, a website on LGBTQ history. Prtizkat suggested the name OutHistory.org and began developing the site, to which Katz began to add content.

In 2004, while Katz was teaching at Yale University, the first version of OutHistory.org went on line, featuring a detailed, original biography of a Yale major donor, the lawyer John William Sterling and his live-in companion of 40 years, James Bloss. (That biography now appears on the present OutHistory.org.)

In 2005, a grant of $5,000 from the Zebra Fund via the Funding Exchange, facilitated by program officer Marcia Gallo through the generosity of the late Joan R. Heller and her partner, Dr. L. Diane Bernard, encouraged Katz to investigate the various commercial and non-commercial ways to go about funding a much more complex site and supporting it over the long run.

The grant also encouraged Katz to formulate an agenda to discuss the development of the site and to call a meeting of interested people. About a dozen people, mostly archivists, met at his house on February 4, 2006. Richard Wandell, founder and director of the National Museum and Archive of Lesbian and Gay History, in New York City, ended a long and useful discussion by suggesting that Katz needed to draft a complete vision statement for the website.

Katz wrote a vision statement and submitted it to the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies, then directed by Paisely Currah. The CLAGS board voted to support the project for two years if funding for it could be secured. Before the CLAGS board voted, Katz met with Urvashi Vaid, director of the Arcus Foundation, discussed the website proposal, and received an encouraging response. Katz drafted a proposal to Arcus and Sara Ganter, then the development director of CLAGS redrafted it and submitted it to Arcus. At the end of 2006, that foundation approved a grant of $50,000 a year for two years (2007-2008) to develop the site.

CLAGS hired a first Project CoordinatorIn for the site, James Arnette, and in June 2007 an OutHistory advisors meeting was attended by about twenty women and men. Other advisors agreed to join an email advisory committee. After investigating various website development companies CLAGS hired Cidamon.com to do that work, and the present prototype is the result. After Arnett, Lynley Wheaton was hired as Project Coordinator and in June 2008 Lauren Gutterman took over the position.

OutHistory.org officially went on line on October 21, 2008, and was celebrated at a party at the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community Center in New York City. A second OutHistory Advisors' Meeting was held on February 4, 2009, during the annual conference of the American Historical Association, in New York City.

Awards and Recognition

OutHistory was awarded the 2010 Allan Berube Prize in Public History by the Committee on LGBT History of the American Historical Association.

Funding

Past Support

In 2005, a grant of $5,000 from the Zebra Fund via the Funding Exchange, through the generosity of the late Joan R. Heller and her partner, Dr. L. Diane Bernard, encouraged Jonathan Ned Katz to investigate how to go about funding and establishing a complex LGBTQ history site and supporting it over the long run.

The development of OutHistory.org by CLAGS was funded by a two-year grant (2007-2008: $50,000 a year) from the Arcus Foundation. The Arcus Foundation agreed to support OutHistory's "Since Stonewall Local Histories Contest" from March 1, 2009 through December 31, 2010, with a grant of $55,000 for those 22 months.

The 2007 OutHistory Advisors' Meeting was catered thanks to a donation by Florent Morellet of Restaurant Florent.

The Mulberry Group, Inc., contributed $1,500 in 2008.

A number of individuals contributed in 2008 and 2009.

Future Support

CLAGS is seeking other sources of financial support to make sure that OutHistory.org continues into the future. If you can help, please go to the Donate section of the site.

External Links

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Jonathan Ned Katz — This article is about the historian. For the queer studies professor, see Jonathan D. Katz. For the actor, see Jonathan Katz. For the technology writer, see Jon Katz. Jonathan Ned Katz (born 1938) is a historian of human sexuality who has focused …   Wikipedia

  • John William Sterling — (May 12, 1844 July 5, 1918) was a philanthropist, corporate attorney, and major benefactor to Yale University.BiographyJohn William Sterling was born in Stratford, Connecticut. He graduated from Yale University with a B.A. in 1864 and was… …   Wikipedia

  • LGBT history — Gay Liberation monument in New York City LGBT history refers to the history of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) peoples and cultures around the world, dating back to the first recorded instances of same sex love and sexuality of… …   Wikipedia

  • Christopher Street Day — Members of the Cologne CSD 2006 Dancers on a float …   Wikipedia

  • Charles Woodcock — reads in Nizza to queen Olga von Württemberg in the arm chair and two ladies in waiting Charles Burger Woodcock, created Freiherr Woodcock Savage, later Charles Woodcock Savage (1 May 1850 – 26 June 1923) was a New Yor …   Wikipedia

  • John William Sterling — (* 12. Mai 1844 in Stratford, Connecticut, USA; † 5. Juli 1918 auf der Estevan Lodge in Québec, Kanada) war ein US amerikanischer Jurist, Philanthrop und der wichtigste Gönner der …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Dale McCormick — Maine State Treasurer In office January 1997 – January 2005 Succeeded by David Lemoine Member of the Maine Senate from the 18th district …   Wikipedia

  • Martha Shelley — (born 1943 ) is a lesbian activist, feminist, writer, and poet. Contents 1 Life and early work 2 Gay Liberation Front 3 Feminism 4 Works and publications …   Wikipedia

  • Murray Hall (politician) — Murray Hall was a New York City bail bondsman and Tammany Hall politician made famous upon his death in 1901, when it was revealed that he had been a female bodied person living as a man.[1] Born Mary Anderson, Hall passed as a man for nearly 25… …   Wikipedia

  • Jackie Biskupski — (* 11. Januar 1966 in Hastings, Minnesota) ist eine US amerikanische Politikerin. Nach ihrer Schulzeit studierte Biskupski an der Arizona State University Rechtswissenschaften. Nach dem Ende ihres Studiums war sie in der Autoversicherungsbranche… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”