Deborah Edel | |
---|---|
Born | June 23, 1944 |
Organization | Lesbian Herstory Archives |
Deborah Edel (born June 23, 1944) is an American activist, archivist, and psychologist. She is best known for co-founding the Lesbian Herstory Archives with Joan Nestle.
Deborah Edel was born on June 23, 1944, to anthropologist May Mandelbaum Edel and philosopher Abraham Edel. She had one brother, Matthew, and after her mother's death in 1964, her father remarried philosopher Elizabeth Flower. [1] Her uncle was writer and historian Leon Edel. [2]
In the 1970s, Edel worked as a psychologist for children with learning disabilities at the Coney Island Hospital, and in 1985 began working at the Mary Macdowell Friends School in Brooklyn, New York. [3]
In 1974, she and her partner, Joan Nestle, started the Lesbian Herstory Archives after being inspired by a women's consciousness raising group of the Gay Academic Union. [4] The collections of the archive were first housed in an apartment shared by Edel and Nestle on the Upper West Side, and along with Judith Schwartz, they served as the first official coordinators of the archive. [5] The collection was moved to a brownstone in Park Slope in 1993 after it became too large for the apartment. [6]
Nestle and Edel gave a presentation on the Lesbian Herstory Archives at the controversial 1982 Barnard Conference on Sexuality. [7]
Butch and femme are masculine (butch) or feminine (femme) identities in the lesbian subculture that have associated traits, behaviors, styles, self-perception, and so on. This concept has been called a "way to organize sexual relationships and gender and sexual identity". Butch–femme culture is not the sole form of a lesbian dyadic system, as there are many women in butch–butch and femme–femme relationships.
Grace Atkinson, better known as Ti-Grace Atkinson, is an American radical feminist activist, writer and philosopher. She was an early member of the National Organization for Women (NOW) and presided over the New York chapter in from 1967-68, though she quickly grew disillusioned with the group. She left to form The Feminists, which she left a few years later due to internal disputes. Atkinson was a member of the Daughters of Bilitis and an advocate for political lesbianism. Atkinson has been largely inactive since the 1970s, but resurfaced in 2013 to co-author an open statement expressing radical feminists' concerns about what they perceived as the silencing of discussion around "the currently fashionable concept of gender."
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Mabel Hampton was an American lesbian activist, a dancer during the Harlem Renaissance, and a volunteer for both Black and lesbian/gay organizations. She was a significant contributor to the Lesbian Herstory Archives.
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The following is a timeline of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) journalism history.
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May Mandelbaum Edel was an American anthropologist known for her fieldwork among the Okanagan in Washington, the Tillamook in Oregon, and the Kiga in Uganda. Edel's linguistic research of the Tillamook serves as the only published account of the language which provided data for future linguistic publications. Edel was the first American woman anthropologist to live in an African village, and her research in Africa documented the diversity of African cultures.
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Shevy Evelyn Wallace Healey born Sewera Finkel, was an American clinical psychologist, labor organizer, sleep researcher, and activist. She was a founding member of Old Lesbians Organizing for Change (OLOC).