Hi, my name is Grace. (I also go by GVGK.)

in #introduceyourself7 years ago (edited)

Hi, my name is Grace. (I also go by GVGK.)

I'm a public history MA student at Temple University, with a keen interest in digital humanities and museum curation. I specialize in transnational queer history and politics, nascent community building, and identity construction.

I graduated summa cum laude from Temple in 2017 with a BA in history and sociology, and a minor in LGBT studies. My honors undergraduate history thesis traced the origin of queer identity politics in Germany and England in the late nineteenth century and their transference to the United States. This work, titled "'Glory of Yet Another Kind': The Evolution & Politics of First-Wave Queer Activism, 1867-1924," was awarded the Livingstone Undergraduate Research Award in the Humanities and Social Sciences.


Karl Heinrich Ulrichs staged the world’s first queer protest 150 years ago.

As an undergraduate, I worked as a research assistant for the Director of The Center for Public History at Temple, Dr. Hilary Iris Lowe. For this job, I learned how to review, digitize, and research microfilm. I also worked for renowned gay historian Jonathan Ned Katz on his grassroots LGBT history initiative OutHistory.org. Together, we developed a web-based, interactive timeline of international queer activism for the 2016 Gay American History @ 40 Conference, marking the fortieth anniversary of his seminal anthology Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the USA (1976). It is now crowdsourcing contributions.

In the summer/fall of 2016, I interned at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania (HSP), collecting and digitizing historic manuscripts and graphics, and learning how to work with archival metadata. At HSP, I curated the "'One Manly Soul': White Masculinities in Late Colonial America" exhibition in collaboration with the Digital Paxton Project. This project explored the 1763 Conestoga Massacre and subsequent pamphlet war, presenting how the Paxton Boy's atrocity typified white masculinity and its contemporary reevaluations.

This past summer and fall, I interned at the John J. Wilcox, Jr. LGBT Archives, processing approximately 5,000 pamphlets, posters, and other graphic material from the AIDS Library Graphics Collection. Through this work, I learned how to research archival materials and their provenance. In collaboration with local community leaders, elder activists, and scholars, I curated an exhibition of these materials titled "Still Fighting For Our Lives: A History of HIV/AIDS in Philadelphia," sponsored by the William Way LGBT Community Center. Using graphics, artifacts, audio and video, we were able to highlight the central role that visual culture has played in Philadelphia’s HIV/AIDS history. Local HIV/AIDS service organization Philadelphia FIGHT hosted our opening event in commemoration of the 30th anniversary of the Philadelphia AIDS Library (located at FIGHT).


"Our legacies have been doubly obscured and destroyed by homophobia and racism."

My article “Sex in the Archives: The Politics of Processing & Preserving Pornography in the Digital Age” was recently published in the eightieth issue of The American Archivist (Fall/Winter 2017). I am currently continuing my research on taboo topics and primary sources in the history of sexuality, including pornography and BDSM. It is my sincerest wish to subvert canonical conceptions of the study of identity through the use of "inappropriate" evidence and language. Rather than shying away from stigma, my work wields discomfort as a tool – used to penetrate and deconstruct elite and exclusive sites of knowledge production.

I currently serve as the Graduate Extern for Gender & Sexuality Inclusion at Temple's Office of Institutional Diversity, Equity, Advocacy and Leadership – developing campus-wide LGBTQIA+ programming for students, faculty and staff. I am also a member of the National Council on Public History’s Diversity & Inclusion Task Force. After obtaining my MA in public history, I intend to pursue my PhD in history, and become a historical consultant for film and television series. (My dream is to write and produce my own work like Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr.) I aspire to engage the needs of disenfranchised communities and encourage inclusive, meaningful dialogues through thought-provoking media and exhibitions.

I’m also a hardcore Star Trek fan – I’ve seen every episode of every series, but Deep Space Nine is my favorite.

100% of the SBD rewards from this #explore1918 post will support the Philadelphia History Initiative @phillyhistory. This crypto-experiment is part of a graduate course at Temple University's Center for Public History and is exploring history and empowering education to endow meaning. To learn more click here.

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"...to subvert canonical conceptions of the study of identity through the use of "inappropriate" evidence and language. Rather than shying away from stigma, [wield] discomfort as a tool – used to penetrate and deconstruct elite and exclusive sites of knowledge production."

Oh, Yes!

Haha! Thanks!

Welcome to Steemit @gvgktang! What an awesome introduction, fantastic to have you as part of this community. Looking forward to exploring 1918 and beyond!

Thanks so much!

Welcome To Steemit! You are really going to like it here. This is a unique place where there is no competition. Instead, we all work to build success by helping each other out. The best way to grow is to build Steem Power and vote to reward other authors.

I encourage you to take the time to search for other posts that interest you and upvote them. Also, start following authors that post good content and upvote them as well. Follow Me! Make some friends and you will be well on your way to earning some nice curation rewards and growing your following!

This is a great place to network with other people from all over the world. If you continually post great content you will grow a following in no time and start making some nice author rewards.

Best Of Luck!

Collaboration is key. Thank you!

You're so nice for commenting on this post. For that, I gave you a vote! I just ask for a Follow in return!

Welcome to steemit... am sure you will enjoy it here. Feel free to follow me @greatman4eva

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Followed you-

Your gonna be awesome in the Steemit community, if you ever need anything feel free to hit me up. I also have a few posts on my blog about getting start and tips to build your following. Good luck!!

Another academic queer Trekkie in Steemit! I just found my fav new follow.

I just finished a Voyager rewatch and, despite its last season really slipping, I do maintain it doesn’t deserve a lot of the malignment it gets and have a few suspicions about where that comes from. Not sure I have a favorite, but DS9 is so good for how dark, political and morally ambiguous it is compared to the others.

Hello there! Thank you for your awesome comment!

VOY used to be my favorite. I feel the same way about ENT...gets a bad rap.

Yes, that's why I love DS9, in addition to its reliance on heavy themes like race and religion. Plus the first queer kiss!

Thanks for resteeming my piece on Dr. Hart. Feel free to check out this one on the Black gay father of the Harlem Renaissance, Dr. Locke: https://steemit.com/history/@gvgktang/decolonizing-the-canon-the-life-of-dr-alain-leroy-locke

All best!

Hi! I'm also an academic, a queer, and an academic of queer things. Welcome to steemit!

Yay! Thanks!

Welcome!!! I am so very glad your here and life is moving for you. I hope your day is lovely!!

Wow! You are welcome to this amazing community where we share knowledge and ideas. Together we grow steemit! You can follow me @papaessel as we share knowledge and ideas together.

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