February is LGBT History Month at Hydra Books

Lesbian Gay Bisexual Trans History Month takes place every year in February. It celebrates the lives and achievements of the LGBT community. A programme of events has been compiled by OutStories Bristol, Bristol Lesbian & Gay Switchboard, CycleOut Bristol, M-Shed, Gay West and Hydra Books.

The events at Hydra Books are :

Changing images of trans people in speculative literatureCheryl Morgan

Thursday 2 February  – 7:00 pm

The availability of magic and advanced science have allowed writers of fantasy and science fiction literature to explore issues of gender in their work. Hugo Award winning critic, Cheryl Morgan, explores how the way in which trans characters have been portrayed in speculative literature has changed as real trans people have become better known to the general public. Cheryl Morgan is, to her knowledge, the only out trans person ever to have won science fiction’s highest honour, the Hugo Award. Born in Somerset, she has lived in Australia and California and now resides near Bath where she runs a small ebook publishing company and bookstore. She blogs regularly at www.cheryl-morgan.com

Celebration of Lesbian and Gay Literature –  OutStories Bristol

Tuesday 7 February – 7:00 pm

From love poems to sci-fi and satire – come and join us in an evening of readings from literature with LGBT themes. Bring your favourite poem or excerpt and share it with the audience. Tell us what it means to you and where we can find more like it. Help us raise the profile of this new bookshop in the heart of Bristol’s Gay Village.

Cross-dressers and the establishment in Victorian England – Juliet Jacques

Thursday 9 February  7:00 pm

The emergence of public cross-dressing in the 19th century industrial city caused great anxiety to the Victorian legal establishment and England’s new police forces alike. In this talk, Guardian and New Statesman writer Juliet Jacques (longlisted for the Orwell Prize in 2011) explores how those who cross-dressed were criminalised, most famously in the scandalous trial of Ernest “Stella” Boulton and Frederick “Fanny” Park in 1871, and how contemporary transgender identities began to evolve in response.

Juliet Jacques is a journalist and author, best known for writing A Transgender Journey for The Guardian – the first time that the gender reassignment process has been serialised for a mainstream British publication. She has also written for the New Statesman and TimeOut, and was longlisted for the Orwell Prize in 2011.

Exhibition – Lesbian and Gay Switchboard

Sunday 26 February – 4:00 pm

Bristol’s Lesbian and Gay Switchboard has been running for 37 years. Come and see an exhibition to celebrate its history at the bookshop. This will be followed by a party at 7pm at the Old Market Tavern for volunteers, friends and supporters of the Bristol Lesbian and Gay Switchboard.

 

 

 

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Next Week’s Events at Hydra Books

Tuesday 31st January – 7:30 pm

“The Bristol Communist” –  Workshop on the Communist Manifesto

 

Wednesday 1st February – 7:00 pm

Bristol Against the Arms Trade – Review of 2011 and plans for 2012

 

Thursday 2nd February – 7:00 pm

Outstories Bristol – LGBT History Month – Changing images of trans people in speculative literature with Cheryl Morgan

 

Friday 3rd February – 7:00pm

Industrial Workers of the World – Bristol branch meeting

 

 

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Workshop on the Communist Manifesto

Date : Tuesday 31st of January

Place: Hydra Books, 34 Old Market

Time: 7:30

The Communist Manifesto and its relevance today is the topic of Tuesday’s meeting by a new group to the Hydra known simply as “the Bristol Communist”. In these tumultuous times is this manifesto relevant today, is the topic. So whether you’ve never read this classic text or you are a dyed in the wool Communist, come along and discuss your ideas.

 

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Gaza author Selma Dabbagh at Hydra Books Weds 25th Jan

Date : 25 January 2012

Place: Hydra Books, 34 Old Market

Time: 7pm

Hydra Books is pleased to welcome Selma Dabbagh to the shop this Wednesday as part of our series of “Meet the Author” events.

Details of Selma’s book are here. If you want to listen back to today’s interview with Dr Phil Hammond on BBC Radio Bristol it is here with the interview taking place between 2:22 and 2:30 hours into the broadcast (11:22 am this morning). You may also be interested in the reviews in The Guardian or the Beirut Daily Star.

The book was published by Bloomsbury (UK) on 5 December 2011. Selma will be talking about the background to the book and doing a short reading. We will then have a discussion with her concerning Gaza and the novel.

Gaza is being bombed. After spending the night getting stoned watching it happen, Rashid wakes to hear that he’s got the escape route he’s been waiting for: a scholarship to London. His sister, Iman – frustrated by atrocities and inaction around her – has spent the night at a meeting that offers her nothing but more frustration. Grabbing desperately at another opportunity, she finds herself followed by an unknown fighter. A gripping tale of dispossession and belonging, treachery and loyalty, endurance and bravery, Out of It follows the lives of Rashid and Iman as they try to forge places for themselves in the midst of occupation, the growing divide between Palestinian factions, and the rise of Islamic fundamentalism. Written with extraordinary humanity and sharp humour, this book re-defines Palestine and its people.

“An original and vivid voice. Full of energy, this is a new and welcome take on the Palestinian story.”
AHDAF SOUEIF

Selma Dabbagh is a British Palestinian writer of fiction based in London.

Her writing is mainly set in the contemporary Middle East. Recurring themes in her work are idealism (however futile), placelessness, political engagement (or lack thereof) and the impact of social conformity on individuals.

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Old Market March and Police Riot – 80th Anniversary

Date:        Saturday 25th February 2012

Time:          4:00 pm

Place:        Hydra Books

February 23rd 1932 was the scene of a confrontation between the National Unemployed Workers’ Movement and the police. To mark the 80th anniversary, historians Roger Ball and Dave Backwith will consider the impact of the events of that day and the wider context of the struggles of the unemployed during the great depression.

Dave backwith is a researcher of Bristol\’s working class history in the inter war years particularly 1919 and the unemployed workers movement in the 1930’s. He is a family and community studies lecturer at the Anglia Ruskin University.

Roger Ball is a post graduate research student in the history department at the University of the West of England.

This is one of a series of events surrounding the Old Market Riot put on by Bristol Radical History Group.

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