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A queer scrapbook

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A queer scrapbook assembles sources that highlight LGBTIQ+ histories from across the UK and Ireland since 1945, accompanied by commentaries and short essays.
  • 31 March 2026
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A beautifully illustrated compendium of LGBTIQ+ life, A Queer Scrapbook offers a rich archive of histories from across Britain and Ireland. Brimming with interviews, newspaper clippings, photographs, and flyers, it traces urban, rural, and regional queer experiences from 1945 to the present. Commentaries and short essays introduce a changing queer landscape, organised around four themes: home and family, socialising and sex, arts and culture, and activism and community. The book explores domestic life and parenting, reveals the unexpected places where LGBTIQ+ people gathered for fun, highlights the importance of creative expression, and documents campaigns for justice and equal rights. Rooted in the tradition of collecting as a way for marginalised people to assert identity and community, A Queer Scrapbook vividly captures the diversity of queer and trans lives across the British and Irish isles since the Second World War.
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Price: $29.95
Pages: 216
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 31 March 2026
ISBN: 9781526165312
Format: Paperback
BISACs: HISTORY / Social History, Oral history, SOCIAL SCIENCE / LGBTQ+ Studies / General, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / 20th Century
REVIEWS Icon

‘A goldmine for anyone seeking to reinvigorate their hearts, minds and toolkits for activism, harvested from beautiful case studies of queer life and love that have been hidden… until now.’
Dan Glass, author and activist

‘Proof we've always been here, proof of all we've fought for, proof that we need to keep fighting now more than ever.’
Charlie Craggs, actress and activist

‘Our histories are often unspoken or erased, so this lovely treasure trove provides a wealth of fascinating insights into the personal lives, stories, activism, communities, art and desire of queer people that have occurred since the post-war period. Highly recommended!’
Paul Baker, author of Fabulosa!

‘Queer life bursts from these pages, messy and touching and grubby and gorgeous. The voices of A queer scrapbook have something urgent to say to everyone: it's a treasure trove of historical sources and community across time, and it will hold you as you hold it.’
Kit Heyam, author of Before We Were Trans

‘Leaps energetically from moment to moment, place to place – a book as delightfully idiosyncratic as queer and trans history itself.’
Morgan M. Page, author and activist

‘Wonderfully researched and richly illustrated, A queer scrapbook is the next best thing to being in a queer archive. Not only a brilliant introduction to queer history but a thoughtful commentary on the future of queer archival work.’
Elizabeth Lovatt, author of Thank You for Calling the Lesbian Line

‘Queer history is often about lives lived in the margins: notes scrawled on scraps of paper, homemade zines, blurry Polaroids and photocopied posters. A queer scrapbook is an ode to this history, an authoritative and comprehensive collection of queer life in Britain over the past eighty years. More than this, it’s a love letter to the real queer people of Britain, not just the celebrities or the uber rich. Everyday people who built their own communities from scratch, despite incredible hardship. This book will make you happy, will make you proud, not in a fluffy corporate way, but in seeing real queer people changing the world – one flyer, Post-it note or cartoon strip at a time.’
Sacha Coward, author of Queer as Folklore

'A queer scrapbook makes queer history visible, accessible, and insistently ordinary. The scrapbook invites us to sit with fragments, assemble our own connections, and to recognise how much of queer history survives in the margins.'
Mae Murphy, The Mancunion

Justin Bengry is Senior Visiting Research Fellow at King’s College London
Matt Cook is Jonathan Cooper Professor of the History of Sexuality at Mansfield College, University of Oxford
Rebecca Jennings is Professor of Modern Gender History at University College London
E-J Scott is a curator, Founder of the Museum of Transology and Senior Lecturer at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London

Introduction
Section 1: Home and family
Section 2: Socialising and sex
Section 3: Arts and culture
Section 4: Activism and community
Conclusion
Index