Emory’s Rose Library will celebrate LGBT History Month with the return of its popular drag show, a booth at Atlanta’s Pride Festival and an open house of artifacts that document Atlanta’s LGBTQ+ history, arts and culture.
Since 2005, the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library has been collecting and providing public access to a growing collection of materials that document LGBTQ+ communities in Atlanta, the state and the South. These collections and related speakers and programs help people understand more about the LGBTQ community, the struggles they have faced, and the impact they have made on those around them and society in general.
“At these events, we’ll be able to share information on the collections Rose holds, including the papers of Jon Arge, DeAundra Peek, Dr. Jesse R. Peel, Rebecca Ranson, Royce Soble and the records of the Atlanta Gay Men’s Chorus, the Southeast Arts, Media andamp; Education Project, and Trikone Atlanta, to name just a few,” says Randy Gue, assistant director of collection development and curator of Political, Cultural and Social Movements Collections at the Rose Library.
Gue says being part of the Atlanta Pride Festival and other events allows the Rose Library to be involved in the communities where it collects and to share its LGBTQ+ collections with a wider audience.
“These events represent ways for us to show our support, to celebrate our distinctive holdings, and connect users, students, faculty and staff to these communities,” Gue says. “The Rose Library drag show, for example, began as a way to highlight Atlanta’s long and distinguished history of drag entertainment. I hope folks who join us in October will see how the lasting historical value of materials in LGBTQ+ collections connect to the vibrant, diverse and fun group that congregates in Piedmont Park each year for Atlanta Pride.”
Rose Library’s LGBTQ+ History Month activities — and a related exhibit at Oxford College Library — will take place in various sites throughout October 2024.
LGBTQ+ History Month open house
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1-3 p.m., Rose Library (Robert W. Woodruff Library, Level 10)
Outreach archivist Gaby Hale will discuss related items on display in the Rose Library. This will be the second of Rose’s newly launched Miscellaneous Monthly open house series.
Rose Library’s annual drag show
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 7 p.m., Rose Library (Robert W. Woodruff Library, Level 10)
Drag queens put on an entertaining show that celebrates the library’s LGBTQ+ collections. This event is free and open to the public.
Rose Library booth at the 2024 Atlanta Pride Festival
Saturday, Oct. 12, and Sunday, Oct. 13, Piedmont Park
The Rose’s 2024 festival booth will be on Oak Hill between the 12th Street Gate and the Meadow 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday and 1-5 p.m. Sunday. Panels from the AIDS Memorial Quilt will be on display at Oak Hill 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday.
International Pronouns Day button-making activity
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Robert W. Woodruff Library lobby
Make a button to declare your identity or your support as an ally or to convey another positive message at this popular event. Free and open to Emory students, faculty and staff. Co-sponsored by Emory Libraries Preservation Department.
Atlanta’s 1990s LGBTQ+ and Arts Scene: A talk with artist Royce Soble and curator Randy Gue
Saturday, Oct. 26, 1-2 p.m., Robert W. Woodruff Library, Jones Room
Photographer and multimedia artist Royce Soble, whose work documents Atlanta’s LGBTQ+ community and arts scene in the 1990s, will be in conversation with Randy Gue, Rose Library’s curator of Political, Cultural and Social Movements. Soble’s photographs, journals and other digital materials are archived in the Rose Library’s collections. Registration for this event can be found with other Emory Homecoming events, and you don’t have to be an alumnus to register.
“Forbidden Loves and Secret Lust: Selections from the Golden Age of Queer Pulp Fiction”
This related exhibition will be on view in the Oxford College Library lobby beginning mid- to late-October. Previously shown in 2022 in the Rose Library’s exhibition space, the display examines the explosion of queer pulp novels printed from 1952-1968.
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