Sexuality Studies Resources Held in
the UC Davis Shields Library's Special Collections
Department
(For
non-film resources click here)
(For
film resources click here)
The Special Collections
Department at UC Davis houses a number of books, serials
and other research materials supporting primary research
in the area of Sexuality Studies. The Department
has particularly strong resources in the area of research
on GLBT issues. Two areas where the Special
Collections Department is especially able to provide
support for research and instruction are the history of
the gay liberation movement, and the history of lesbian
and gay literature and publishing.
The Special Collections
Department has the largest collection of gay and serial
serials held in the UC system. Items in the
collection include an extremely rare copy of the first
issue of the first lesbian serial published in America
(Vice Versa, 1947), and complete or
near-complete runs of a number of pre-Stonewall gay
and lesbian serials, such as ONE Magazine
(Los Angeles, 1953-1972), Mattachine Review (San
Francisco: Mattachine Society, 1955-1966), and The
Ladder (San Francisco/Reno: Daughters of
Bilitis,1956-1972), as well as the publications of many
other early gay organizations such as the Society for
Individual Rights (San Francisco 1964-1976), the
Association for Responsible Citizens (Sacramento
1965-1967), and the Janus Society (Philadelphia
1964-1969). Also included are a number of the
serials that sprung up immediately following the
Stonewall Riots, including Gay Sunshine (San
Francisco), Fag Rag (Boston), Gay
Insurgent (Philadelphia), Gay Power (New
York), and Gay Liberator (Detroit).
Additionally, Special Collections also houses a number
of examples of the wave of lesbian/feminist
publications from organizations and publishers springing
up in 1970s, such as The Amazon Quarterly
(Oakland), The Furies (Boston), Lesbian
Tide (Los Angeles), and Womanspirit (Wolf
Creek), to name a few.
Examples of significant
literary works owned by the department, range from very
early works such as sensationalized The Surprising
Adventures of a Female Husband (London, ca 1746), to
the hidden subtexts of works like Margaret Sweat's
Ethel's Love-life (NY, 1859), to such privately
published works as the Paris edition of Robert McAlmon's
Distinguished Air (1925), to a number of
examples from the first wave of openly gay and lesbian
novels of from the late 1920s and '30s , such as G.S.
Donisthorpe's Loveliest of Friends (1931), Anna
Weirauch's The Outcast (1933), Gale Wilhelm's
We Too Are Drifting (1935), Lilyan Brock's
Queer Patterns (1935), and the anonymously
published Diana: A Strange Autobiography
(1939). On a more minor (but not necessarily less
significant) note, Special Collections also houses a
collection of lesbian-themed pulp paperbacks from the
1950s and 1960s, which marked for many people of that
generation the first readily available works to provide
literary presentation of the lives of lesbian women. Also
notably these works document the mores of their period
through their lurid covers and tellingly sensationalized
blurbs.
The Special Collection
Department also has a significant amount of material
supporting the broader area of gender studies. The
Department is especially strong with regard to books
documenting the historic changes in society's perception
of the role and place of women, as well as the historic
development of the women's right movement during the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In
addition, the Department houses a number of nineteenth
and early twentieth works treating such topics as sexual
morality (from some very different points of view),
sexual education, prostitution, birth control, and many
other topics.
Contact person:
John Sherlock
752-9868
Rare Books and Special Collections Librarian, Shields
Library, UC Davis
jasherlock@ucdavis.edu
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