#communication history
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benkaden · 10 months ago
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"From the 1880s onward, picture postcards with standardized motifs were being written, sent, and – after the standardization of the postal service – also delivered in the millions. As an artistic material characterized by the ephemeral form of the dispatch with its distribution routes and postmarks, the postcard was also bound up on the material level with ideas about the novelty of modern technology and revolutionary uses of media.“The new postcard was seen as fast, efficient, often political, and potentially dangerous even as it was represented as a fad.” [Monica Cure: Picturing the Postcard: A New Media Crisis at the Turn of the Century (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press 2018), p. 5] Beyond that, the postcard also brought another form of temporality to pictures: the temporal logic of distribution, dispatch, and circulation. After being mailed, postcards become part of a fairly open temporality of potential delays and postponements, as with the postcard that arrived fifty-one years late, which was temporarily lost in the Italian postal system and almost failed to reach its addressee. Although today real-time streaming and social media have turned postcards into dinosaurs of media archaeology, their past future at the beginning of the twentieth century prefigured the utopian tropes in the sender–recipient logic of visual media that are now once again making it possible to imagine an open future in the ubiquitous visual worlds of the Internet." Quelle: Katja Müller-Helle: "Sequencing Failure: Photodynamism and the Knotting of Time". In: Truth in Serial Form: Serial Formats and the Form of the Series, 1850–1930, edited by Malika Maskarinec, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2023, pp. 149-168. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110795110-006
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allthebooksandcrannies · 2 months ago
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Good news in the world!!! Read the article here.
The law also will extend adoption and inheritance rights to same-sex couples!
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bebs-art-gallery · 7 months ago
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Sorrow
Source: †
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whereserpentswalk · 7 months ago
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The nazis that you see in movies are as much a historical fantasy as vikings with horned helmets and samurai cutting people in half.
The nazis were not some vague evil that wanted to hurt people for the sake of hurting them. They had specific goals which furthered a far right agenda, and they wanted to do harm to very specific groups, (largely slavs, jews, Romani, queer people, communists/leftists, and disabled people.)
The nazis didn't use soldiers in creepy gas masks as their main imagery that they sold to the german people, they used blond haired blue eyed families. Nor did they stand up on podiums saying that would wage an endless and brutal war, they gave speeches about protecting white Christian society from degenerates just like how conservatives do today.
Nazis weren't atheists or pagans. They were deeply Christian and Christianity was part of their ideology just like it is for modern conservatives. They spoke at lengths about defending their Christian nation from godless leftism. The ones who hated the catholic church hated it for protestant reasons. Nazi occultism was fringe within the party and never expected to become mainstream, and those occultists were still Christian, none of them ever claimed to be Satanists or Asatru.
Nazis were also not queer or disabled. They killed those groups, before they had a chance to kill almost anyone else actually. Despite the amount of disabled nazis or queer/queer coded nazis you'll see in movies and on TV, in reality they were very cishet and very able bodied. There was one high ranking nazi early on who was gay and the other nazis killed him for that. Saying the nazis were gay or disabled makes about as much sense as saying they were Jewish.
The nazis weren't mentally ill. As previously mentioned they hated disabled people, and this unquestionably included anyone neurodivergent. When the surviving nazi war criminals were given psychological tests after the war, they were shown to be some of the most neurotypical people out there.
The nazis weren't socialists. Full stop. They hated socialists. They got elected on hating socialists. They killed socialists. Hating all forms of lefitsm was a big part of their ideology, and especially a big part of how they sold themselves.
The nazis were not the supervillians you see on screen, not because they didn't do horrible things in real life, they most certainly did, but because they weren't that vague apolitical evil that exists for white American action heros to fight. They did horrible things because they had a right wing authoritarian political ideology, an ideology that is fundamentally the same as what most of the modern right wing believes.
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forsapphics · 4 months ago
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Happy Disability Pride Month! 🩶💚❤️🤍💛💙🩶🌈 (x)
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factoidfactory · 5 months ago
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Random Fact #6,563
The first mobile telephone call was made on April 3, 1973 by Martin Cooper, a former Motorola inventor, who is known as "the father of the cellphone".
The weight of the phone used to make that call was about the same as a bag of sugar (2lb). The brick–like battery required, which allowed a talk time of just 30 minutes and took 10 hours to charge, made carting it around even more of a chore.
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crowleys-right-eyeball · 7 months ago
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i lied abt only posting abt this situation once, i just saw this lovely person’s comment!! passing it on to tumblr 🫡
edit: SOMEONEE changed the password and ruined it for everybody :/ pls try this version instead!!
edit 2: WATCHER POSTED AN UPDATE
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gayest-historian · 4 months ago
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Creating the Transgender Flag
So today I'll be talking about the history and creation of the trans flag! This will probably be a shorter post but still equally as important of course
The transgender flag was originally created by Monica Helms, a trans woman from America, in 1999. She got the idea from Micheal Page who had created the bisexual flag a year earlier. Helms describes the meaning of each stripe in the flag as:
"The stripes at the top and bottom are light blue, the traditional color for baby boys. The stripes next to them are pink, the traditional color for baby girls. The stripe in the middle is white, for those who are intersex, transitioning or consider themselves having a neutral or undefined gender."
- Monica Helms
The original flag (pictured below) was later donated to the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in 2014 by Helms.
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Later on, in 2019, Helms published a book in which she expresses shock that her flag design has been adopted so wholeheartedly by the trans community. I'd like to end off this post with that quote.
The speed with which the flag’s usage spread never fails to surprise me, and every time I see it, or a photo of it, flying above a historic town hall or building I am filled with pride.
- Monica Helms
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queerism1969 · 1 year ago
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justdavina · 4 months ago
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HOT HOT HOT Barbie pink goes well any day!
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shutinthenutouse · 7 months ago
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bolshevikitherat · 1 year ago
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from the Lavender and Red Union, a group of communists who wrote this in 1975.
"GAY LIBERATION IS IMPOSSIBLE WITHOUT SOCIALIST REVOLUTION. SOCIALISM IS INCOMPLETE WITHOUT GAY LIBERATION."
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maddie-grove · 1 year ago
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As someone who’s living with a middle school social studies teacher, all the posts along the lines of “why did we never learn about this historical event in school” just make me go “because your teacher was supposed to cover all of US history in one year, and they didn’t get to the Revolutionary War until Halloween because they were urged to slow down the progression of the lessons because a more senior teacher was running behind, and they didn’t get to the Civil War until Valentine’s Day because the school kept scheduling every special event during social studies because there’s no end-of-grade testing for that subject, and they didn’t get to WWI until May because they were sick for a few days and the substitute couldn’t do much more than babysit, and now they’re having to do the entire Cold War in two days, so that’s why you didn’t hear about the lesbian inventor of the circus peanut. They would have loved to tell you about the lesbian inventor of the circus peanut!”
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bebs-art-gallery · 1 year ago
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Dog sculptures turned golden from tourists petting them throughout the years
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kit-catrock · 1 year ago
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I just discovered that there was a person who was afab and ended up joining the russian army by the name of Alexander Durov in 1806.
Born a woman, Nadezhda Durova (birth name) ran away from home and joined a light cavallery regiment dressed as a man.
After his identity was uncovered, the russian tsar summoned him to the palace at St. Petersburg, where he impressed the tsar so much that he awarded Durov the Cross of St. George and promoted him to lieutenant in a hussar unit.
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He always referred to himself as a man and was upset when people called him a woman.
He signed letters with his male last name.
He expressed feelings of disgust towards his sex and how that worried him a lot.
He never married willingly and adopted many dogs and cats.
He only danced with women when attending a ball.
He asked to be buried under his male name Alexander Andreevich Alexandrov but the church did not agree to that.
I never saw him in "historical transmasculine people" compilations and only discovered his story coincidentally.
Unfortunately, historians still adress him with female pronouns, although he did not want that.
Let's remember him together. We won't allow him to be forgotten.
I'll probably add onto this post later or make a better one but you can read a lot on this wikipedia article:
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