Program Type:
TalkAge Group:
AdultsProgram Description
Event Details
Something Queer at the Library
Safe harbor to explore LGBTQ+ literature
Queer Germany 1860s-1930s: The Foundation of a Modern Movement
While in the United States, LGBTQ+ politics are largely thought of as originating in the latter half of the 20th Century, much of the framework for the way LGBTQ+ people would be understood and campaign for their rights was laid a century earlier in the German-speaking world. Join librarian Samuel for a look at the German Homosexual Emancipation Movement of the late 1800s and early 1900s, a thriving cultural, scientific, and political movement that had lasting impacts around the world before being violently suppressed by Nazi persecution.
No prior reading is required for this event, but if you are interested in exploring the topic on your own in advance, here are some recommendations from our collection:
Nonfiction:
Christopher and His Kind, 1929-1939 by Christopher Isherwood
Homintern : How Gay Culture Liberated the Modern World by Gregory Woods
Weimar Germany: Promise and Tragedy by Eric D. Weitz
Fiction:
Jews, Queers, Germans by Martin Duberman
The Most Dazzling Girl in Berlin by Kip Wilson
Graphic Novels:
Berlin: Book 1, City of Stones by Jason Lutes
Berlin: Book 2, City of Smoke by Jason Lutes
Berlin: Book 3, City of Light by Jason Lutes
Movies and TV:
Babylon Berlin also on Hoopla
This talk is rescheduled from March 2025.
For disability or translation accommodations, please email library@santafenm.gov or call the Library.