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Avery Dame-Griff - Our “tired old flame queens:” Studying and Archiving Trans Histories of the Digital Age at Central Branch - Greater Victoria Public Library

Avery Dame-Griff - Our “tired old flame queens:” Studying and Archiving Trans Histories of the Digital Age

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

5-6:30pm

Central Branch - Greater Victoria Public Library

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Event Description

LGBTQ2+Community EventsLearning & Workshops
FREE DOWNTOWN TALK Tuesday, June 9, 2026 5:00 PM - 6:30 PM PDT Central Branch - Greater Victoria Public Library 735 Broughton, Victoria, BC & Online (Zoom) REGISTRATION REQUIRED Register HERE for IN-PERSON attendance: https://www.surveymonkey.ca/r/AveryDame-Griff Register HERE for ONLINE attendance: https://uvic.zoom.us/meeting/register/G-WzUnKyRsWVFIEfOs1p2Q Like all social movements, internal debate has been a hallmark of formal transgender organizing since its beginning. Who “belongs” within communities? What should we call ourselves? What are the most effective political tactics for reaching the public and policy makers? With the rise of the internet, though, discussions previously confined to letter columns and in-person committee meetings moved online. There, posts meant for like-minded audiences not only spread far beyond their immediate context but also have a much longer and more visible afterlife with the rise of search engines. Arguments made in the heat of the moment—especially when made with an old name or company email attached—can come back to haunt posters long after. In this talk, Dame-Griff will explore how historians and archivists can adapt to these changes through the case study of an early 2000s multi-year flame war between two transgender activists and well-known posters on Usenet, an early decentralized network online. What began in the transgender-specific corners of Usenet soon sprawled far beyond to involve mentalists, magicians, and eventually the American Tea Party movement. As this case shows, contextualizing born-digital communication at the local, network, and community level is key to both historical research and archival preservation, particularly when determining access restrictions—including if such objects should be preserved at all. Avery Dame-Griff is a Lecturer in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Gonzaga University and author of The Two Revolutions: A History of the Transgender Internet (NYU Press, 2023). He founded and serves as primary curator of the Queer Digital History Project (queerdigital.com), an independent community history project cataloging and archiving pre-2010 LGBTQ spaces online.
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