OTP 2021 Hub Programme - Leeds Museum and Gallery
OUTing the Past: Leeds Event Programme
A webinar hosted by Leeds Art Gallery
Saturday 6 February 2021
09:50-10:00 Welcome and Introduction to Outing The Past – Leeds
10:00-10:30 Beth Rees
Yes, Asexuality Does Exist: A look at asexuality then and now. Asexuality is often overlooked in LGBT+ history. This presentation would look at asexual history through time, tell the story of William Pitt The Younger (through an asexual and homoromantic lens), and talk about my experiences as an asexual/aromantic person today.
Interlude
10:40-11:10 Abtin Sadeghi
LGBT+ Health & the NHS. The presentation will include an overview of the health issues that have been particularly important to the LGBT+ community throughout the history of the NHS. This would include the role of the NHS (both positive and negative) in LGBT+ Health over the past 70 years. This will follow on to draw parallels with the current COVID pandemic and the mental and physical health issues affecting the LGBT and BAME communities.
Interlude
11:20-11:50 Katie Robinson
Being transgender. A personal story about growing up Trans in Leeds.
Interlude
12:00-12:30 Rebecca Hale and Jasmine Moore
Queer Nature: The Powerful Message of LGBTQ+ in the Natural World. LGBT History predominantly focuses on people, but the natural aspect of diversity in sexuality and gender is often still hidden. By focusing on LGBTQ+ links in nature we wanted to show how natural diversity was and how unnatural our prejudice against it was.
12:40-13:00 LUNCH
13:00-13:30 Ibtisam Ahmed
Negotiating queerness as a Commonwealth Immigrant. I specifically talk about the legacies of colonial history, which is often overlooked in the mainstream anyway, and highlights it from the perspective of being an immigrant.
Interlude
13:40-14:10 Brian Crowley
Queering Kilmainham Gaol. By focusing on the queer history of Kilmainham Gaol, this presentation explores the criminalisation of homosexuality in the 19th and early twentieth century. It focuses in particular on the prison's role in the biggest gay scandal in Ireland in the 19th century, the Dublin Castle Scandal of 1884 which saw a
fascinating intersection of politics and the judicial system.
Interlude
14:20-14:40 David Ikpo
Queer participatory visibility in Nigerian nations. Based on my own research, I show that indigenous non-heterosexuality from an African nation is important to tackle the flawed argument that queerness is not authentically Africa and authentically human.
14:30-15:00 Cheryl Morgan
Michael Dillon in Bristol. Dillon was a key figure in trans history and once described his time in Bristol as the “Darkest of Days”. While that is a little disappointing for locals, it is entirely understandable. The process of gender transition is hugely stressful for most trans people. To do it before there were support groups, or any civil rights for trans people, and to do it with World War Two raging around you, must have been incredibly difficult.
15:00-15:10 Final comments and end of the event
To register your free place at the event CLICK HERE.