Project documents hidden history of LGBTQ life in the South
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — A new project is documenting a once-hidden history of LGBTQ people in the Deep South, with donors providing troves of information and items on gay life, systemic oppression and activism.
Historian and archivist Joshua Burford said the goal of the Invisible Histories Project is to create a uniquely Southern collection that will “give Southern history back to queer Southerners.”
While the stereotypical LGBTQ person might live openly in an urban centre and have plenty of money, he said, plenty of Southern gays live both in cities and in rural areas where they hold working-class jobs.
“If the model is always the West Village or Boy’s Town or Fire Island, then the South can never be the same as that. So we have to stop pretending like we want to be,” said Burford, engagement director of the group. “What we are is very queer and very Southern, and those two things are always overlapping.”