12018-04-09T04:00:45-07:00David J. Kim18723eee6e5a79c8d8823c02b7b02cb2319ee0f167901Photo by Martin Coxplain2018-04-09T04:00:45-07:00David J. Kim18723eee6e5a79c8d8823c02b7b02cb2319ee0f1
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12018-04-09T04:02:13-07:00Acknowledgements10plain2018-06-15T04:52:24-07:00First and foremost, the authors acknowledge the students of CTSJ 337 at Occidental College, who were extraordinarily patient with our pedagogical experiment. Their initial research has guided Lukes’s writing of the extant chapters and Kim's organization of this Scalar project. We list them here in alphabetical order:
Adrienne Adams Declan Creed Daniel Calzadillas-Rodriguez Casey Diaz Gavin Heferran Promise Li Brita Loeb Maggie Mather Lindsay Weinberg
We thank the ONE Archive for its access, guided tours, and very existence. We thank REACH LA, and in particular Joseph Stewart, for introducing us to this non-profit’s amazing cache of stuff. We thank all of our oral history narrators and particularly MW Wilson for access to the Shotgun Club collection. We thank Kelly Besser, archivist/librarian/artist extraordinaire, for the class visit on queer community archiving in LA and the zine workshop.
Among students who have worked on Grit and Glamour LA after the semester of CTSJ 337, we thank Promise Li, whose analysis of this project led to a brilliant senior thesis at Oxy and (we would like to think) his acceptance into Princeton’s English PhD program.
We especially thank Daniel Cazadillas-Rodriquez and Adrienne Adams. These two truly made Grit and Glamour LA possible. We solicited Cazadillas-Rodriguez and Adams’ reflection essays in honor of their moving and important work on this project.
Finally, our project is dedicated to the memory of Stuart Timmons, a shining star in the constellation of early independent scholars who allowed academic LGBT* studies to become a reality. As Cazadillas-Rodriguez discusses in more detail, Timmons led our class on a Silver Lake walking-tour months before he passed. Among all our classes’ readings, workshops, fieldwork, and archival visits, Timmons passion for passing history on to younger generations truly brought home the importance of documenting queer LA.