#Deborah Edel
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ileaveclawmarks · 2 years ago
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Morgan Gwenwald, Butch/Fem Picnic.
Joan Nestle and Deborah Edel, the two subjects pictured here, were partners when Nestle started the Lesbian Herstory Archives project in 1974 out of their shared apartment.
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phoenix-joy · 8 months ago
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Excerpt:
Edel said the archives were founded because she and members of a group called the Gay Academic Union, which worked to make academia more accepting of LGBTQ people in the ‘70s, began talking about how difficult it was to find reliable information about lesbian history. 
“A few of us said, ‘Hey, why don’t we just start collecting our history? We’re the ones who best know what we need, what we want. Why let other people do that for us, because they’ll control our history?’” recalled Edel, who now splits her time between New Jersey and Arizona with her partner. “We were all people who really knew that our history was disappearing too quickly.”
[...]
The Lesbian Herstory Archives hosts a variety of events, such as a weekly “Lez Craft!” night on Thursdays. For its 50th anniversary, the organization is hosting a “Dyke Prom” in May at a loft in Brooklyn, though Edel noted that the event is already sold out. 
When asked about goals for the next 50 years, she said the archives have outgrown the Brooklyn space and will need to move soon.
“Fifty years is too hard to say,” Edel said. “We leave that in the hands of the next generation. I certainly won’t be around, and I’m just hoping that it still will be mission-driven so that we reflect the amazing complexity of our communities.” /endquote
Photos from article:
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talkstothemoonandstars · 8 months ago
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A lesbian archive inside a Brooklyn brownstone has documented decades of Sapphic history
Deborah Edel, one of the founders of the Lesbian Herstory Archives, the home of a lesbian history trove in Brooklyn, New York, said that sometimes when she gives tours of the archives, people will get very quiet. 
“I think, ‘Oh, am I boring them? Should I throw in a joke and try to be funny?’ she said. “Then I realize, I’m very familiar with the collection, but this for them is the first time, and they are overwhelmed by the material, by being in such an environment, by being surrounded by so much lesbian material and lesbian history, and they’re taking it all in quietly.”
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kai-zenkira · 4 months ago
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For craackships,hehe,you dont know but I have a favourite for this so step aside and let me show you my crackships. Aka my favourite male lead(therdeo lapileon() being a wife to good/bad characters. Okay,here you go
Kosair from RE x my beloved therdeo lapileon from my in laws are obsessed with me[based it because in that au kosair would neglect therdeo because kosair is too busy worrying of his little sister and hates the slave rashta while therdeo behind the scenes help rashta survive in high society and at the same time,caring for his sons. The sons are rupert from your majesty,please don't kill me and dion from how to protect the heroines older brother)
2. Dekis solon from your throne x therdeo lapileon (dekis would be caring for the man and planning an assassination to his enemies while therdeo helps his husband and cautiously looking after his own children. The children are karen from resetting lady9her hair is red due to the cursed blood),deborah from isn't it better to be a wicked villainess,Sebastian from black butler and luo binghe)
3. Rezef from the villainess is a marionette x therdeo lapileon( rezef would be possessive of therdeo since both of them are alike and wanting to keep therdeos blood curse from the public while therdeo is only holding the state affairs and just be a bird of a cage to his rezef. The children are elena from shadow queen and sung jin woo from solo leveling)
okay,what do you think of my crackships. Pretting interesting huh.
1.Not you shipping my GOAT (Therdeo) with that fraud (Kosair) [not Rashta catching strays]. I see your Kosair×Therdeo and I raise you Mckenna x Phineas
2.I vibe with it. Dekis assassinating the people spreading Lapileon blood while Therdeo is none the wiser,Therdeo thinks he is helping take down Solon enemies but little does he know. Celphius with youger (older?) siblings. <Dekis x Therdeo x Dekis's wife (hc her names Clarisse) cause he loves his wife and his husband>
3.Therdeo not wanting to leave his house in fear of his family secret getting out would make Rezef so happy.They are so toxic Yaoi but they are happy.
Celphi hates Rezef although Rezef send him to the school where Edel attends and this two are friends.
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rose---child · 5 years ago
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a joke about sailormoon bringing openness to queers lead me to this thanks wikipedia
1903 – In New York City on 21 February 1903, New York police conducted the first United States recorded raid on a gay bathhouse, the Ariston Hotel Baths. 34 men were arrested and 12 brought to trial on sodomy charges; 7 men received sentences ranging from 4 to 20 years in prison.
1906 – Potentially the first openly gay American novel with a happy ending, Imre, is published
1910 – Emma Goldman first begins speaking publicly in favor of homosexual rights. Magnus Hirschfeld later wrote "she was the first and only woman, indeed the first and only American, to take up the defense of homosexual love before the general public.
1912 – The first explicit reference to lesbianism in a Mormon magazine occurred when the "Young Woman's Journal" paid tribute to "Sappho of Lesbos[7] "; the Scientific Humanitarian Committee of the Netherlands (NWHK), the first Dutch organization to campaign against anti-homosexual discrimination, is established by Dr. Jacob Schorer.
1913 – The word faggot is first used in print in reference to gays in a vocabulary of criminal slang published in Portland, Oregon: "All the faggots [sic] (sissies) will be dressed in drag at the ball tonight".
1917 – The October Revolution in Russia repeals the previous criminal code in its entirety—including Article 995.[8][9] Bolshevik leaders reportedly say that "homosexual relationships and heterosexual relationships are treated exactly the same by the law."
1919 – In Berlin, Germany, Doctor Magnus Hirschfeld co-founds the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft (Institute for Sex Research), a pioneering private research institute and counseling office. Its library of thousands of books was destroyed by Nazis in May 1933
1921 – In England an attempt to make lesbianism illegal for the first time in Britain's history fails
1922 – A new criminal code comes into force in the USSR officially decriminalizing homosexual acts. 
1923 – The word fag is first used in print in reference to gays in Nels Anderson's The Hobo: "Fairies or Fags are men or boys who exploit sex for profit."
1923 – Lesbian Elsa Gidlow, born in England, published the first volume of openly lesbian love poetry in the United States, titled "On A Grey Thread."
1923 – The word fag is first used in print in reference to gays in Nels Anderson's The Hobo: "Fairies or Fags are men or boys who exploit sex for profit." 1923 – Lesbian Elsa Gidlow, born in England, published the first volume of openly lesbian love poetry in the United States, titled "On A Grey Thread." 1923 – The word fag is first used in print in reference to gays in Nels Anderson's The Hobo: "Fairies or Fags are men or boys who exploit sex for profit."1923 – Lesbian Elsa Gidlow, born in England, published the first volume of openly lesbian love poetry in the United States, titled "On A Grey Thread."
1937 – The first use of the pink triangle for gay men in Nazi concentration camps.
1938 – The word Gay is used for the first time on film in reference to homosexuality
1941 – Transsexuality was first used in reference to homosexuality and bisexuality.
1945 – The Holocaust ends and it is estimated that between about 3,000 to about 9,000 homosexuals died in Nazi concentration and death camps, while it is estimated that between about 2,000 to about 6,000 homosexual survivors in Nazi concentration and death camps were required to serve out the full term of their sentences under Paragraph 175 in prison. The first gay bar in post-World War II Berlin opened in the summer of 1945, and the first drag ball took place in American sector of West Berlin in the fall of 1945.[26] Four honourably discharged gay veterans form the Veterans Benevolent Association, the first LGBT veterans' group.[27] Gay bar Yanagi opened in Japan
1946 – Plastic surgeon Harold Gillies carries out sex reassignment surgery on Michael Dillon in Britain.
1951 – Greece decriminalizes homosexuality.
1956 – Thailand decriminalizes homosexual acts.
1957 – The word "Transsexual" is coined by U.S. physician Harry Benjamin; The Wolfenden Committee's report recommends decriminalizing consensual homosexual behaviour between adults in the United Kingdom; Psychologist Evelyn Hooker publishes a study showing that homosexual men are as well adjusted as non-homosexual men, which becomes a major factor in the American Psychiatric Association removing homosexuality from its handbook of disorders in 1973. Homoerotic artist Tom of Finland first published on the cover of Physique Pictorial magazine from Los Angeles.[36]
1965 – Vanguard, an organization of LGBT youth in the low-income Tenderloin district, was created in 1965. It is considered the first Gay Liberation organization in the U.S
1967 – The Advocate was first published in September as "The Los Angeles Advocate," a local newsletter alerting gay men to police raids in Los Angeles gay bars
1970 – The first Gay Liberation Day March is held in New York City; The first LGBT Pride Parade is held in New York; The first "Gay-in" held in San Francisco; Carl Wittman writes A Gay Manifesto;[56][57] CAMP (Campaign Against Moral Persecution) is formed in Australia;[58][59] The Task Force on Gay Liberation formed within the American Library Association. Now known as the GLBT Round Table, this organization is the oldest LGBTQ professional organization in the United States.[60] In November, the first gay rights march occurs in the UK at Highbury Fields following the arrest of an activist from the Young Liberals for importuning.
1974 – Chile allows a trans person to legally change her name and gender on the birth certificate after undergoing sex reassignment surgery, becoming the second country in the world to do so.[86] Kathy Kozachenko becomes the first openly gay American elected to public office when she wins a seat on the Ann Arbor, Michigan city council; In New York City Dr. Fritz Klein founds the Bisexual Forum, the first support group for the Bisexual Community; Elaine Noble becomes the second openly gay American elected to public office when she wins a seat in the Massachusetts State House; Inspired by Noble, Minnesota state legislator Allan Spear comes out in a newspaper interview; Ohio repeals sodomy laws. Robert Grant founds American Christian Cause to oppose the "gay agenda", the beginning of modern Christian politics in America. In London, the first openly LGBT telephone help line opens, followed one year later by the Brighton Lesbian and Gay Switchboard;[citation needed] the Brunswick Four are arrested on 5 January 1974, in Toronto, Ontario. This incident of Lesbophobia galvanizes the Toronto Lesbian and Gay community;[87] the National Socialist League (The Gay Nazi Party) is founded in Los Angeles, California.[citation needed] The first openly gay or lesbian person to be elected to any political office in America was Kathy Kozachenko, who was elected to the Ann Arbor City Council in April 1974.[88] Also in 1974, the Lesbian Herstory Archives opened to the public in the New York apartment of lesbian couple Joan Nestle and Deborah Edel; it has the world's largest collection of materials by and about lesbians and their communities.[89] Also in 1974, Angela Morley became the first openly transgender person to be nominated for an Academy Award, when she was nominated for one in the category of Best Music, Original Song Score/Adaptation for The Little Prince (1974), a nomination shared with Alan Jay Lerner, Frederick Loewe, and Douglas Gamley. The world's first gay softball league was formed in San Francisco in 1974 as the Community Softball League, which eventually included both women's and men's teams. The teams, usually sponsored by gay bars, competed against each other and against the San Francisco Police softball team
1977 – Harvey Milk is elected city-county supervisor in San Francisco, becoming the first openly gay or lesbian candidate elected to political office in California, the seventh openly gay/lesbian elected official nationally, and the third man to be openly gay at time of his election. Dade County, Florida enacts a Human Rights Ordinance; it is repealed the same year after a militant anti-homosexual-rights campaign led by Anita Bryant. Quebec becomes the first jurisdiction larger than a city or county in the world to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation in the public and private sectors; Croatia, Montenegro, Slovenia and Vojvodina legalise homosexuality.[citation needed] Welsh author Jeffrey Weeks publishes Coming Out;[99] Original eight-color version of the LGBT pride flagPublication of the first issue of Gaysweek, NYC's first mainstream gay weekly. Police raided a house outside of Boston outraging the gay community. In response the Boston-Boise Committee was formed.[100] Anne Holmes became the first openly lesbian minister ordained by the United Church of Christ;[101] Ellen Barrett became the first openly lesbian priest ordained by the Episcopal Church of the United States (serving the Diocese of New York).[102][103] The first lesbian mystery novel in America was published; it was Angel Dance, by Mary F. Beal.[104][105] The National Center for Lesbian Rights was founded. Shakuntala Devi published the first[106] study of homosexuality in India.[107][108] Platonica Club and Front Runners were founded in Japan.[95] San Francisco hosted the world's first gay film festival in 1977.[109] Peter Adair, Nancy Adair and other members of the Mariposa Film Group premiered the groundbreaking documentary on coming out, Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives, at the Castro Theater in 1977. The film was the first feature-length documentary on gay identity by gay and lesbian filmmakers.[110][111] Beth Chayim Chadashim became the first LGBT synagogue to own its own building.[78] On March 26, 1977, Frank Kameny and a dozen other members of the gay and lesbian community, under the leadership of the then-National Gay Task Force, briefed then-Public Liaison Midge Costanza on much-needed changes in federal laws and policies. This was the first time that gay rights were officially discussed at the White House 
1980 – The United States Democratic Party becomes the first major political party in the U.S. to endorse a homosexual rights platform plank; Scotland decriminalizes homosexuality; The Human Rights Campaign Fund is founded by Steve Endean; The Human Rights Campaign is America's largest civil rights organization working to achieve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality.[120] Lionel Blue becomes the first British rabbi to come out as gay;[121] "Becoming Visible: The First Black Lesbian Conference" is held at the Women's Building, from October 17 to 19, 1980. It has been credited as the first conference for African-American lesbian women.[122] The Socialist Party USA nominates an openly gay man, David McReynolds, as its (and America's) first openly gay presidential candidate in 1980.[123]
1987 – AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power(ACT-UP) founded in the US in response to the US government's slow response in dealing with the AIDS crisis.[142] ACT UP stages its first major demonstration, seventeen protesters are arrested; U.S. Congressman Barney Frank comes out. Boulder, Colorado citizens pass the first referendum to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation.[143][144] In New York City a group of Bisexual LGBT rights activist including Brenda Howard found the New York Area Bisexual Network (NYABN); Homomonument, a memorial to persecuted homosexuals, opens in Amsterdam. David Norris is the first openly gay person to be elected to public office in the Republic of Ireland. A group of 75 bisexuals marched in the 1987 March On Washington For Gay and Lesbian Rights, which was the first nationwide bisexual gathering. The article "The Bisexual Movement: Are We Visible Yet?", by Lani Ka'ahumanu, appeared in the official Civil Disobedience Handbook for the March. It was the first article about bisexuals and the emerging bisexual movement to be published in a national lesbian or gay publication.[145] Canadian province of Manitoba and territory Yukon ban sexual orientation discrimination.
1990
Equalization of age of consent: Czechoslovakia (see Czech Republic, Slovakia)
Decriminalisation of homosexuality: UK Crown Dependency of Jersey and the Australian state of Queensland
LGBT Organizations founded: BiNet USA (USA), OutRage! (UK) and Queer Nation (USA)
Homosexuality no longer an illness: The World Health Organization
Other: Justin Fashanu is the first professional footballer to come out in the press.
Reform Judaism decided to allow openly lesbian and gay rabbis and cantors.[148]
Dale McCormick became the first open lesbian elected to a state Senate (she was elected to the Maine Senate).[149]
In 1990, the Union for Reform Judaism announced a national policy declaring lesbian and gay Jews to be full and equal members of the religious community. Its principal body, the Central Conference of American Rabbis (CCAR), officially endorsed a report of their committee on homosexuality and rabbis. They concluded that "all rabbis, regardless of sexual orientation, be accorded the opportunity to fulfill the sacred vocation that they have chosen" and that "all Jews are religiously equal regardless of their sexual orientation."
The oldest national bisexuality organization in the United States, BiNet USA, was founded in 1990. It was originally called the North American Multicultural Bisexual Network (NAMBN), and had its first meeting at the first National Bisexual Conference in America.[150][150][151] This first conference was held in San Francisco in 1990, and sponsored by BiPOL. Over 450 people attended from 20 states and 5 countries, and the mayor of San Francisco sent a proclamation "commending the bisexual rights community for its leadership in the cause of social justice," and declaring June 23, 1990 Bisexual Pride Day.
The first Eagle Creek Saloon, that opened on the 1800 block of Market Street in San Francisco in 1990 and closed in 1993, was the first black-owned gay bar in the city.
1993Civil Union/Registered Partnership laws:Repeal of Sodomy laws: Australian Territory of Norfolk IslandDecriminalisation of homosexuality: Belarus, UK Crown Dependency of Gibraltar, Ireland, Lithuania, Russia (with the exception of the Chechen Republic);Anti-discrimination legislation:End to ban on gay people in the military: New ZealandSignificant LGBT Murders: Brandon TeenaMelissa Etheridge came out as a lesbian.The Triangle Ball was held; it was the first inaugural ball in America to ever be held in honor of gays and lesbians.The first Dyke March (a march for lesbians and their straight female allies, planned by the Lesbian Avengers) was held, with 20,000 women marching.[156][157]Roberta Achtenberg became the first openly gay or lesbian person to be nominated by the president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate when she was appointed to the position of Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity by President Bill Clinton.[158]Lea DeLaria was "the first openly gay comic to break the late-night talk-show barrier" with her 1993 appearance on The Arsenio Hall Show.[159]In December 1993 Lea DeLaria hosted Comedy Central's Out There, the first all-gay stand-up comedy special.[159]Before the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy was enacted in 1993, lesbians and bisexual women and gay men and bisexual men were banned from serving in the military.[160] In 1993 the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy was enacted, which mandated that the military could not ask servicemembers about their sexual orientation.[161][162] However, until the policy was ended in 2011 service members were still expelled from the military if they engaged in sexual conduct with a member of the same sex, stated that they were lesbian, gay, or bisexual, and/or married or attempted to marry someone of the same sex.[163]Passed and Came into effect: Norway (without adoption until 2009, replaced with same-sex marriage in 2008/09)US state of Minnesota (gender identity)New Zealand parliament passes the Human Rights Amendment Act which outlaws discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation or HIVCanadian province Saskatchewan (sexual orientation)
1998Anti-discrimination legislation: Ecuador (sexual orientation, constitution), Ireland (sexual orientation) and the Canadian provinces of Prince Edward Island (sexual orientation) and Alberta (court ruling only; legislation amended in 2009)Significant LGBT Murders: Rita Hester, Matthew ShepardDecriminalisation of homosexuality: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, South Africa (retroactive to 1994), Southern Cyprus and TajikistanEqualization of age of consent: Croatia and LatviaEnd to ban on gay people in the military: Romania, South AfricaGender identity was added to the mission of Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays after a vote at their annual meeting in San Francisco.[182] Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays is the first national LGBT organization to officially adopt a transgender-inclusion policy for its work.[183]Tammy Baldwin became the first openly gay or lesbian non-incumbent ever elected to Congress, and the first open lesbian ever elected to Congress, winning Wisconsin's 2nd congressional district seat over Josephine Musser.[184][185]Dana International became the first transsexual to win the Eurovision Song Contest, representing Israel with the song "Diva".[186]Robert Halford comes out as being the first openly gay heavy metal musician.[187]The first bisexual pride flag was unveiled on 5 December 1998.[188]Julie Hesmondhalgh first began to play Hayley Anne Patterson, British TV's first transgender character.[189]BiNet USA hosted the First National Institute on Bisexuality and HIV/AIDS.[190]
sorry its long just these i didnt know half of all this and thought we should all know 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_LGBT_history,_20th_century
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tonpower91-blog · 6 years ago
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Bath Readers are 2019 FDM Everywoman In Tech Awards finalists
Academic Award – sponsored by Lloyds Banking Group
Awarded to a woman in academia who has made an outstanding contribution to technology and science and whose work has made or has the potential to make a significant long-term impact in STEM.
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Apala Majumdar, Reader in Applied Mathematics, University of Bath
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Adelina Ilie, Reader in Nanoscience, University of Bath
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Shakira Asghar, Head of Design and Technology, Ashlawn School
The One to Watch Award – sponsored by Computacenter
Awarded to a girl aged 11-18 who is actively encouraging girls to study STEM subjects at school-level.
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Laurelin Chase, Student, Clacton County High School
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Aoibheann Mangan, Student, Mt St Michael Secondary school
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Avye Couloute, Student, Bishop Gilpin
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Leslie Sarango Romero, Student, Harris Academy Bermondsey
The Apprentice Award
Awarded to a young woman apprentice who is a game-changer and is excelling in her early career.
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Emily Tomlinson, Trainee IS Security Coordinator, Northumbrian Water
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Chloe O'Shea, Technology Consulting Bright Start, Deloitte
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Tiffany Cooksley, Software Engineer, CGI
Rising Star Award - sponsored by T-Systems
Awarded to a woman aged under 26 who is excelling in her technology career, making a valuable contribution to her organisation.
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Clare McKeever, Software Engineer, PwC
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Tasha Morrison, Solution Architect Graduate, Whitbread
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Mahek Vara, Founder and CEO, Code Camp
Digital Star Award - sponsored by CGI
Awarded to a woman who is excelling in a digital role. This could include innovative digital content, social media, web development or developing online solutions.
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Melissa Dunn, Head of Digital Product Development, Sainsbury's Argos
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Monique Ho, Innovation Exchange Lead, BAE Systems Applied Intelligence
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Esther Kieft, Senior Product Manager (Contractor), Former Product Owner at Lloyds Banking Group
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Kar Lok Chan, Technology Architecture Associate Manager, Accenture
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Samantha Charles, Director, Float Digital
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Rebecca Ellul, Head of Strategy & Business Development, Digital & Tech Policy, Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport
Software Engineer Award – sponsored by NATWEST
Awarded to a woman who has made a significant difference to the art of software engineering and has built something new, shifted the art of the possible and is moving the profession forward.
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Pae Natwilai, CEO, TRIK
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Nelly Kiboi, Software Engineer, American Express
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Nadine O'Hagan, Senior Software Engineer, PwC
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Hannah Bird, Senior Squad Manager (Platform Engineering), Lloyds Banking Group
Team Leader Award - sponsored by American Express 
Awarded to a woman whose team leadership has greatly contributed to the organisation’s success and is leading a team of up to 100 employees.
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Janine Hughes-Griffiths, Director of Service, CGI
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Edel Owen, CTO BUK Ventures, Barclays Bank
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Sally Bogg, Head of Service Management, Leeds Beckett University
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Ranjeet Ruprai, Technical Team Lead, Experian
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Jasleen Budhiraja, Assistant Consultant, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd
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Shilpa Shah, Director Technology Consulting, Women in Technology Lead, Deloitte
Entrepreneur Award - sponsored by IBM iX
Awarded to an owner/operator of a technology business whose vision and talent will inspire others to start their own technology-related venture (over 24 months old)
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Kim Nilsson, CEO, PIVIGO
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Colleen Wong, Founder, Techsixtyfour
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Joanne Smith, Founder & Group CEO, Recordsure
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Helen Mitchell, Co-Founder, Blukudu Ltd
Innovator Award - sponsored by Equiniti 
Awarded to a woman designing, developing, researching, implementing or being exceptionally creative with technology in an unconventional and innovative way.
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McCall Dorr, Innovation Strategy Director, Experian
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Maureen Biney, Software Engineer, American Express
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Megha Prakash, Co-Founder, CEO, Earthmiles (GMS Partners Ltd)
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Felicia Meyerowitz Singh, CEO, Akoni
Leader Award - sponsored by BP 
Awarded to the woman operating in a senior technology role within her organisation, leading over 100 employees and making a contribution to the strategic direction of the business.
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Angela Maragopoulou, Global Head of IOT/UCC Operations, Vodafone Group Services Limited
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Deborah O'Neill, Partner, Oliver Wyman
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Ana Perez, Senior Director Consulting, Oracle
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Marianne Lillian Breen-Hart, Program & Project Mgmt Associate Director, Accenture
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Amy Chalfen, Global Service & Delivery Director, Decision Analytics, Experian Ltd
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Sharon Moore MBE, CTO for Government, IBM
Male Agent of Change Award - sponsored by VMware 
Awarded to a male agent of change for their active commitment to encouraging, advancing, sponsoring or championing the progress of women working in technology.
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Jonathan Pritchard, Reader in Astrostatistics, Imperial College
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Jim Bichard, UK Insurance Leader, PwC
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Philip Neal, Founder, Digital Workplace Director, BP
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Philip Wallace, Managing Director - Oracle Business Group, Accenture
International Inspiration Award
Awarded to an individual based outside of the UK, male or female, for their active commitment to encouraging, advancing, sponsoring or championing the progress of women working in technology.
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Jessie Haugh, Head of Research and Development, The Ablegamers Charity
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Mujde Esin, Founder, KizCode
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Adriana Bianca, Biofuels CIO and Ethics and Compliance Leader, BP
Source: https://www.everywoman.com/events-awards/2019-fdm-everywoman-tech-awards
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thebookrat · 5 years ago
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Whew! Last month really flew by, didn't it? And with it, the time to enter ALL THE GIVEAWAYS. And man, they were plentiful! I seriously cannot say thank you enough to all of the many authors that made Austen in August so great, and all of you for showing up and chiming in. Below you'll find the complete* list of giveaways and winners. All winners have been contacted except for TWO who didn't provide a valid way to contact them, so if you think it's you mentioned on this list, check your email or email me! If any winners don't respond to claim their prize, I will choose a new winner or winners, and I will contact them -- I'm not one of those people who makes you tie yourself to a blog post in the hopes of winning something; I will seek you out. I will find you, and I will give you things. *at least, i think it's the complete list. there were a lot of giveaways to keep track of this year, guys! i might have missed something. But before I get into the list of winners, I have one final piece of Austen homework for you. Well, two. The first is, I want you to go out into the world and just JANEITE all over the place. Just, everywhere. Spread that Austen love around. And then come back here and tell me when you find something amazingly Austenesque out there, so I can help you share it! The second is; Let me know in the comments what you'd like to see more of (or less of), and any authors or books you think should be on my radar for next year! I normally do an end-of-event survey, but I think the comments section has more potential for conversation, so let me know. Now. Onto what you're really here for!
THE WINNERS
all winners are listed as they are in Rafflecopter, 
not according to email addresses or blog/social media usernames
Austen in August Mega Prize Pack 1
Edel W!
Austen in August Mega Prize Pack 2
Kate B!
Austen in August Mega Prize Pack 3
Jan D!
Austen in August Mega Prize Pack 4
Patricia L!
Rational Creatures audiobook from Christina Boyd
Suzannah Clark ( I don't have an email address for you, Suzannah, please contact me!)
Kai C!
$15 gift card from Christina Boyd
Emmaline Lavender Fields (I do not have an email address for you, either, please contact me!!)
Hearts, Strings & Other Breakable Things from Jacqueline Firkins
Megan S!
Maria Grace audiobook prize pack
Darcy Bennet!
The Jane Austen Society from Natalie Jenner
Mary E!
True Love Never Fails from Debra-Ann Kummoung
Laura H!
Falling for Elizabeth Bennet from Debra-Ann Kummoung
Danya!
$10 Amazon gift card from Debra-Ann Kummoung
Bailey C! Renee G!
Regina Jeffers prize pack
Regina decided to add some extra prizes, so the following people 
were chosen and already gifted with their prize(s):
Danielle C
Eva E 
Marsha B 
Peggy K 
Luthien84 
Debbie F
His Choice of a Wife from Heather Moll
Edel W.
The Flight Path Less Traveled from Leigh Dreyer
Sophia R!
Colleen L!
Darcy in Hollywood from Victoria Kincaid
Talia S!
Jane Austen Made Me Do It from Laurel Ann Nattress
Kelly W!
Cassandra D!
Amy D'Orazio book of choice
bn100!
Holidays with Jane prize pack from Jessica Grey
Buturot!
Janeite Swag Pack from Me!
Jessica C!
Custom Janeite bookmarks from Me!
Darcy B!
John S!
Nancy P!
Congratulations, winners!!
Didn't win anything? Don't forget, I made sure there was something for everybody!
BIG THANKS to the following people for contributing prizes, posts, and/or time this Austen in August:
Alexa Adams, Jennifer Altman, Christina Boyd, Marilyn Brant,  Cara at Wilde Book Garden, Jennieke Cohen, Courtney at The Green Mockingbird, Karen M. Cox, Amy D'Orazio, Riana Everly, Leigh Dreyer, Monica Fairview, Jacqueline Firkins, Alyssa Goodnight, Maria Grace, Cecilia Gray, Jessica Grey, Regina Jeffers, Natalie Jenner, Nancy Kelley, Kerri the Book Belle, Victoria Kincaid, Debra-Ann Kummoung, Kara Louise, Heather Moll, MyNameIsMarines, Laurel Ann Nattress, Nikki Payne, Lisa Pliscou, Abigail Reynolds, Sophia Rose, Eliza Shearer, Joana Starnes, Shannon Winslow, Deborah Yaffe, and YOU!
And if I forgot anyone, I am sincerely sorry, but from the bottom of my lil' Janeite heart, THANK YOU!
Click here to return to the master list of Austen in August posts!
via The Book Rat
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biofunmy · 6 years ago
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When Resistance Became Too Loud to Ignore
At times the fight for civil rights is a straight road pocked with speed bumps; at other times a maddening spiral of detours. It was a battlefield in the early hours of June 28, 1969, when a small group of gay, lesbian and transgender people, herded by police out of a Greenwich Village bar called the Stonewall Inn, just said no: shoved back; threw bricks, bottles, punches. As the police defensively barricaded themselves inside the bar, the fight — since variously termed a riot, an uprising, a rebellion — spread through the Village, then through the country, then through history.
It’s still spreading, expanding the way the term “gay” has expanded to include lesbian, bisexual, transgender, queer and other categories of identity. And for this summer’s half-century Stonewall anniversary, substantial displays of art produced in the long wake of the uprising are filling some New York City museums and public spaces.
The largest of them is the two-part “Art After Stonewall, 1969-1989” shared by Grey Art Gallery, New York University, and the Leslie-Lohman Museum in Soho. A trio of small archival shows at the New-York Historical Society adds background depth to the story. And at the Brooklyn Museum, “Nobody Promised You Tomorrow: Art 50 Years After Stonewall,” 28 young queer and transgender artists, most born after 1980, carry the buzz of resistance into the present.
Grey Art Gallery and Leslie-Lohman Museum
‘Art After Stonewall, 1969-1989’
This survey, organized by the Columbus Museum of Art in Ohio, where it will later appear, is split into two rough chunks defined by decades, with material from the ’70s mostly at Leslie-Lohman and from the ’80s at Grey. Unsurprisingly, the Leslie-Lohman half is livelier. A lot of what’s in it was hot off the political burner when made, responsive to crisis conditions. The modest scale of the gallery spaces makes the hanging feel tight and combustible. And as a time of many “firsts,” the early years had a built-in excitement.
There was, of course, the thrill of the uprising itself, captured by the Village Voice beat photographer Fred W. McDarrah in an on-the-spot nighttime shot of protesters grinning and vamping outside the Stonewall. (One of them, the mixed-media artist Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt has sparkling, tabletop-size sculptures in both sections of the show.) Activist groups quickly formed, and a way of life that had once been discreetly underground pushed out into the open.
The Gay Liberation Front, aligning itself with antiwar and international human rights struggles, coalesced within days after Stonewall, soon followed by the Gay Activists Alliance, which focused specifically on gay and lesbian issues. It was clear pretty fast that both were predominantly male, white and middle class — misogyny, racism and classism have plagued L.G.B.T. politics from the start — and further groups splintered off: Radicalesbians, Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR), and later, the Salsa Soul Sisters. All the energy produced, among other things, the first Christopher Street Liberation Day March (now the NYC Pride March).
Many of the Stonewall-era trailblazers, like Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera — one black, the other Latinx, both self-identified drag queens — were longtime veterans of the West Village gay scene. But for many other people the event prompted a first full public coming out, which was no light matter.
In 1969, even mild affectional acts between same-sex couples were illegal in much of the United States, as was cross-dressing. An arrest — and there were many — could instantly end a career, destroy a family, shut down a future. Bullying gay men was considered normal; violence was acceptable.
As a gay person, you went through the world watching your movements, monitoring your speech, worrying about how much of yourself, just by being yourself, you were giving away. This could make for a lonely life. If, for some reason, you were heedless, or incapable, of acting straight, good luck to you.
So when safety arrived in the form of an army of out-and-proud lovers and protesters, the relief was tremendous. And you can feel the rush of at Leslie-Lohman, in photographs of the first marches in New York and Los Angeles taken by participants like Cathy Cade, Leonard Fink, Diana Davies, Kay Tobin Lahusen (who, in a wall label, is credited as being the first openly gay American woman photojournalist).
Particularly strong among these images is Bettye Lane’s shot of a raging Sylvia Rivera confronting a jeering gay crowd — they had just been applauding an anti-trans speech by the lesbian feminist leader Jean O’Leary — at the 1973 New York march. But no picture can compare in gut-level impact with the short glitchy surviving video of Rivera in action that day. (You can find it on YouTube. I urge you to watch it.)
Women and transgender people are the heart of the Leslie-Lohman half of the show, not only in its documentary components but in the art chosen by the curator Jonathan Weinberg, working with Tyler Cann of the Columbus Museum of Art and Drew Sawyer of the Brooklyn Museum.
Standouts include a Tee A. Corinne-designed coloring book consisting of exquisite line drawings of vulvae; Harmony Hammond’s sculpture of two clothbound ladderlike forms leaning protectively together; and Louise Fishman’s 1973 “Angry Paintings,” acts of controlled gestural chaos that name heroic lesbian names (the critic Jill Johnston, the anthropologist Esther Newton, Ms. Fishman’s partner at the time) and speak of emotions once suppressed, now released.
The Grey Gallery half of the show, which brings us into the 1980s, makes a quieter impression. Partly this is because of a more spacious installation spread over two floors, and to the more polished-and-framed look of much of the work. Political content is, with vivid exceptions, subtle, indirect, which is not in itself a bad thing, though an earlier charge of communal energy is diminished. We’re basically now in a different, more market-conscious, canon-shaping art world, one closer to the museum than to the street.
And though we’re in the era of AIDS, the sense of urgency that absolutely defined that time is missing. This is not to say there’s a shortage of good work. The show would be valuable if it did nothing more than showcase artists like Laura Aguilar, Luis Cruz Azaceta, Jerome Caja, Lenore Chinn, Maxine Fine, Luis Frangella and Marc Lida, all seldom, if ever, seen in New York now.
Here again photography opens a window on cultural histories that would otherwise be lost to memory. Dona Ann McAdams’ shots of performances at the lesbian-feminist W.O.W. (Women’s One World) Café, and other East Village clubs, are reminders of the radical talents — John Bernd, Karen Finley, Ishmael Houston-Jones, Holly Hughes, Tim Miller — that this brief time and vanished environment nurtured.
In the end, though, it was two text-pieces, familiar but reverberant, that stayed in my mind. One, a 1989 print by Felix Gonzalez-Torres, was originally enlarged to billboard size and installed on Christopher Street, near where the Stonewall Inn still stands. It’s plain black field is empty except for two unpunctuated lines of small white type read, as if floating up from delirium: “People With AIDS Coalition 1985 Police Harassment 1969 Oscar Wilde 1895 Supreme Court 1986 Harvey Milk 1977 March on Washington 1987 Stonewall Rebellion 1969.”
The other piece is a 1988 poster designed by the AIDS activist collective Gran Fury. In large letters it commands us to “Take Collective Direct Action to End the AIDS crisis.” In smaller type it acknowledges that, “With 42,000 dead, art is not enough.”
In an ethically pressurized political present, it’s a message I find myself carrying away from a lot of recent contemporary shows.
New York University Bobst Library
‘Violet Holdings: LGBTQ+ Highlights From the N.Y.U. Special Collections’
With the Stonewall Inn — now a national monument (and a bar again; it was a bagel shop in the 1980s) — in its neighborhood, New York University has scheduled several additional events around the anniversary, among them a homegrown archival exhibition called “Violet Holdings: LGBTQ+ Highlights from the N.Y.U. Special Collections,” on view at Bobst Library, across the park from Grey Art Gallery.
Organized by Hugh Ryan, it tracks the history of queer identity back to the 19th century with documents related to Elizabeth Robins (1862-1952), an American actor, suffragist and friend of Virginia Woolf, forward with material on pathbreaking organizations like the Mattachine Society and the Daughters of Bilitis, and close to the present in the form of ephemera associated with the musician and drag king Johnny Science (1955-2007), and the D.J. Larry Levan (1954-1992), who, in the 1980s, presided godlike at the gay disco called the Paradise Garage, then a short walk from the N.Y.U. campus.
New-York Historical Society
‘Stonewall 50’
The Paradise Garage, or “Gay-rage,” has high visibility in “Letting Loose and Fighting Back: LGBTQ Nightlife Before and After Stonewall,” one of a cluster of dense micro-show at New-York Historical Society. The club’s metal street sign is here, along with some theme-dance fliers, and a mash-note drawing of Levan by Keith Haring. A matchbook from working-class lesbian bar called the Sea Colony, is a souvenir of 50s butch-femme culture in New York. A key fob and a flip-top lighter are relics of gay male sex clubs, like the Anvil and the Ramrod, that sizzled in the ’70s. So plentiful were such pleasure emporia that some activists feared they were sapping the strength of goal-oriented gay politics.
Yet activism is the essence of a second show, “By the Force of Our Presence: Highlights from the Lesbian Herstory Archives,” which documents the founding in 1974 — by Joan Nestle, Deborah Edel, Sahli Cavallaro, Pamela Olin, and Julia Stanley — of a compendious and still-growing register of lesbian history. The items on view represent a small part of the whole but still suggest the arc of a larger story driven by charismatic personalities.
And personality-plus is what you get in a set of separate solo homages to such out-and-proud imperishables as Stormé DeLarverie (1920-2014); Mother Flawless Sabrina/Jack Doroshow (1939-2017); and Rollerena Fairy Godmother (born 1948). All three, for decades and in different ways, served the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community, as guardian angels (Ms. DeLarverie, a biracial male impersonator, worked as a bouncer at lesbian bars); style models (Ms. Flawless was impresaria of countless drag pageants); and cheerleaders (who could forget the delight, in the ’70s, of seeing Rollerena, purse in hand, whizz by?).
Brooklyn Museum
‘Nobody Promised You Tomorrow: Art 50 Years After Stonewall’
As it happens, Ms. DeLarverie is stage center in this notably youthful and history-conscious — and history-correcting — survey at the Brooklyn Museum. The museum commissioned the artist L.J. Roberts, self-identified as genderqueer, to create a Stonewall monument for the occasion. Ms. DeLarverie is the subject the artist chose to honor, both as a power of example and as a figure whose role at Stonewall — some accounts have her landing the first punch on intruding police — has been obscured. In the sculpture, a construction of light boxes on bricks, her image appears repeatedly, along with those of Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera. (A monument commemorating both will be placed in the vicinity of the Stonewall Inn.)
Rivera, who died of cancer at 50 in 2002, and Johnson, who was found dead in the Hudson River in 1992 (her death, ruled suicide at the time, is still under investigation), are further saluted in a video docudrama by Sasha Wortzel and the artist Tourmaline, and in a bannerlike sequined hanging by Tuesday Smillie.
Friends in life, the two historical figures are tutelary spirits of an exhibition in which a trans presence, long marginalized by mainstream gay politics, is pronounced.
It’s here in the work of the queer graffiti artist Hugo Gyrl, in the diarylike photographs of Elle Perez (a participant in the current Whitney Biennial), in the vivid memorial portraits of murdered trans women by the painter David Antonio Cruz, in the songs of Linda LaBeija, in the internet-based work of Mark Aguhar, a femme-identified transgender artist who died in 2012; and in the hand-sewn textile protest signs of Elektra KB.
For many reasons, protest is a logical direction for art right now. There is still no federal law prohibiting discrimination against L.G.B.T.Q.+ people on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity (although some states and cities have enacted laws prohibiting it). Trans women continue to be victims of violence. The rate of new H.I.V./AIDS transmission among gay black men remains high. And the impulse within the gay mainstream to accommodate and assimilate is by now deeply ingrained. The time has come to hear Sylvia Rivera calling us out again.
Art After Stonewall, 1969-1989
Through July 21 at the Leslie-Lohman Museum, 26 Wooster Street; 212-431-2609, leslielohman.org, and through July 20, at Grey Art Gallery, New York University, 100 Washington Square East; 212-998-6780, greyartgallery.nyu.edu.
Violet Holdings: LGBTQ+ Highlights from the N.Y.U. Special Collections
Through Dec. 31, New York University Bobst Library, 70 Washington Square South; 212-998-2500, library.nyu.edu.
Stonewall 50 at New-York Historical Society
Through Sept. 22 at the New-York Historical Society, 170 Central Park West; 212-873-3400, www.nyhistory.org .
Nobody Promised You Tomorrow: 50 Years After Stonewall
Through Dec. 8 at the Brooklyn Museum, 200 Eastern Parkway; 718-638-5000, brooklynmuseum.org,.
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gordoncheung · 8 years ago
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Last minute visitors! 👏🔥👏 Anastasia Sakoilska / photo: Deborah Curtis @thehouseoffairytales - #GordonCheung solo show is now closed @edelassanti - thanks to everyone who came! - #painting #edelassanti #dutchgoldenage #southchinasea #artificialislands (at Edel Assanti)
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number9580-blog · 8 years ago
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gordoncheung · 8 years ago
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Final last minute visitors! #GavinTurk / photo: Deborah Curtis @thehouseoffairytales - #GordonCheung solo show is now closed @edelassanti - thanks to everyone who came! - #glitch #glitchart #dutchgoldenage #painting (at Edel Assanti)
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