The preservation of transgender history is essential to ensuring that the stories and experiences of trans people are not forgotten. The Digital Transgender Archive (DTA) has taken on the vital task of gathering and protecting this history, bringing together documents, images, and materials that reflect the rich and diverse experiences of transgender people across time and place.
By making these resources accessible, the DTA facilitates explorations of the often-hidden or erased narratives of trans communities. From personal stories to institutional records, these materials provide a window into the challenges and triumphs faced by trans individuals, while also celebrating the resilience and diversity of these communities.
Preserving this history is also about ensuring that future generations can learn, understand, and be inspired by the stories of those who came before them.
Explore more about how these efforts are safeguarding trans history, and why it matters, on JSTOR Daily.
Image: A man in drag and a man in male clothes looking into each other’s eyes, via Digital Transgender Archive.
sorry for disappearing for months, i still make silly pixel paintings i promise
get wallpapers ★ twitter ★ art prints (35% off ^^)★ support me
stonepaste tiles, islamic c. 1700s.
Learned a bit about lead-cooled fission reactors the other day. Apparently you can like. Brick a lead-cooled nuclear reactor. If your core cools down or you spring a leak to air, the lead can solidify and Sorry but your reactor is now a solid brick. Of lead. Lol
I get why the tapeworm one got popular, since it's the most high quality one I've made (so far) since I draw it myself (while also tracing over the EIAL cover)
God Speed (1900)
— by Edmund Leighton
Wheat Fields at Auvers Under Clouded Sky (1890) by Vincent van Gogh
👀
not enough love for this line tbh