Join TQH for a community conversation about our upcoming closure and final program year. This gathering is free, will be both in-person and livestreamed, and requires tickets/registration.
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Join TQH for a community conversation about our upcoming closure and final program year. This gathering is free, will be both in-person and livestreamed, and requires tickets/registration.
Bring your love of LGBTQIA+ history and your friends, and let's play TRIVIA!
Here's the thing- whether you're a bonafide queer history nerd or you don't know any LGBTQIA+ history, you are WELCOME to attend this all-levels event.
We're taking a fun, educational and engaging approach to sharing history with you.
We'll have three rounds, plus a bonus round, for you to play:
1. General, nation-wide history (like queer history 101)
2. Upper Midwest history (MN, ND, SD, WI, MI, IA)
3. Minnesota-specific history
4. Bonus round: Telling Queer History history!
You're competing for the joy of broadening your queer knowledge and finding your place in our shared queer histories.
Create a Team of 4 people & register your team.
Don't have a team? NO PROBLEM, register as an individual and we'll assign you to a new team. :)
We'll be providing light food and N/A beverages, and there will be fun prizes available for competing teams!
Here are the FACTS:
*WHEN: Wednesday, December 6, 6:30-8:30 PM
*IN PERSON & VIRTUAL
*WHERE: United Theological Seminary (767 Eustis Street, St. Paul, 55114)
(virtual attendees will receive the link on trivia day)
*ASL Interpreted
*Childcare Available
*Sliding-scale Tickets Available
There’s a history here- drugs and alcohol have both helped us to connect and have been a source of harm.
FACTS:
The use of drugs and alcohol is not inherently bad.
Queer people have found each other in bar spaces for a long time.
Drugs and alcohol use have directly and indirectly harmed so many LGBTQIA+ folks.
The alcohol industry and forces of substance legalization are such powerful influences. Balance with substance use can be helpful and healing, leading to freedom on dance floors, deep conversations, and mental health improvement. There are so many considerations, and no one right way to address these issues.
Folks who choose to use and those who choose sobriety can both become isolated, for different reasons. Queer people have higher substance use rates because of mental health issues arising from social trauma, family and religious trauma, panicky / phobic laws and politicians, and cultural stigma. Substances can be helpful when healing from depression, anxiety, PTSD and trauma symptoms; they can also be the cause of harm and some of these symptoms.
We see hope in the increasing trend (despite bans!) of drag brunches, library drag story hours, drag shows on TV and more. The euphoric feeling of finding your people is now accessible globally, intergenerationally, and outside of bar culture.
We don’t want the bars or the substances to go away, and we want there to be other options for folks. More than ever- given that queer culture is getting so commodified- we need to build deeper connections with each other. That’s why TQH gatherings are and will continue to be intergenerational connection and deep healing spaces and they will remain substance free.
This Telling Queer History Gathering:
is ASL Interpreted and held in an ADA-compliant building
will have food and non-alcoholic beverages available
has restrooms near the conference room where the event will take place
Is open to all ages of people
Is a substance-free space
tickets are free but you are invited to make a donation to TQH to cover the event costs (suggested donation of $25/person)
will have childcare available during the gathering
Honoring queers & transcestors providing reproductive care, abortions, education & family support as the next generation of LGBTQ+ families emerge.
Join Telling Queer History for the first event of our 2021/22 program year, Virtual Housing Justice Stories on Sunday, October 10 @ 2:00 - 4:00 pm
Save your spot here https://housingjusticestoriesoct102021.eventbrite.com/?aff=Web
Listen to TQH archives here https://soundcloud.com/telling-queer-history
Queer Love: featuring Mikko Blaze Bordeaux Feb 9, 2020 2-4:30pm. Join Telling Queer History for music, art, and connections at this free all ages event.
April 10th, 2016 2-4:30pm
Location TBD
Mental Health co-hosted by Reclaim
December 13th 2-4:30pm
AIDS and HIV
Location TBD
Love: It's Complicated
February 14th, 2016 2-4:30pm
Mid-Continent Oceanographic Institute
2388 University Ave W. Saint Paul, MN, 55114
October 11th 2-4:30pm
Marriage with Michael McConnell
Anderson Library at the U of M
222 21st Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55455
House Party Fundraiser
Saturday August 29th 6-11pm
Chez Longfellow
4432 Longfellow Ave S, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55407
August 9th from 2-4:30
Home
Hennepin History Museum
2303 3rd Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55404
June 14th, 2015 2-4:30pm
Vulva Riot
Central Library
300 Nicollet Mall, Minneapolis, MN 55401
April 19th, 2015 2-5pm
The Central Area Neighborhood Development Organization (CANDO)
3736 Chicago Ave S.
MPLS MN 55407
February 15th, 2015
Queer Love
Schmidt Artist lofts Community Room
900 W 7TH STREET
ST. PAUL, MN 55102
December 13th, 2014
Spirituality, Social Justice and Sexuality
SpringHouse Ministry Center
610 West 28th St.
Minneapolis, MN 55408
October 5th, 2014
University of Minnesota Anderson Library
June 8th, 2014
Rosanna Hudgins
MPLS Central Library -Doty Room
300 Nicollet Mall
MPLS MN 55401
March 9th, 2014
Alex Iantaffi
Quatrefoil Library
1220 East Lake Street