Best to write history in the streets anyway.
Susan Stryker
@susanstryker.bsky.social
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Trans Studies||Historian||Filmmaker||Settler on Ramaytush Ohlone Land||When Monsters Speak: A Susan Stryker Reader @dukepress.bsky.social||susanstryker.net||Clayman Institute for Gender Research, Stanford University
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Sadly, no. As you note, events are fast and publishing is slow, academic publishing even more so. The pace and extent of change is breathtaking right now. Publishing is waaay behind. All the best analysis I see is in online journalism and commentary.
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Thanks! 😊 Fully revised and updated 3rd ed. Will be out in February!
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I knew Camille, remember when she wrote that piece and have always loved it and tried to emulate her freedom.
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The new @lastweektonight.com piece on juvenile incarceration featured several @ProPublica stories.
First up was our 2021 investigation with @wpln.bsky.social about young Black kids in Tennessee jailed for a crime that doesn't exist:
www.propublica.org/article/blac...
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Sorry it landed hard on you. 🫶
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I always vacillate: quote the bile or just allude to it, but since Trans History is for a general audience, I decided it was important for cis folks to see what gets pointed at us. Of course, they see it all the time now.
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Sadly, being SF based, recently returned from 2 weeks in nyc, and no plans to be back before summer, not very likely—but break a leg!
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Be on the lookout for monstrous figures bounding towards you across the glacier.
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American Historical Association (AHA) and Organization of American Historians (OAH) finally issued a formal statement on the censoring of history on govermentment websites and other resources: www.historians.org/news/aha-oah...
AHA–OAH Joint Statement on Federal Censorship of American History
The American Historical Association (AHA) and the Organization of American Historians (OAH) have released a joint statement condemning federal censorship of American history.