This Month in Queer History

Produced by CAMP Rehoboth Community Center, This Month in Queer History delivers short, punchy episodes that each spotlight a different piece of LGBTQ+ history. Episodes typically run just 5 to 12 minutes, which makes them perfect for a quick listen during a coffee break or commute. Do not let the brevity fool you, though -- each installment is well-sourced and comes with show notes documenting the research behind it.
The topics range widely across 20th-century queer culture and activism. You will hear about Polari, the secret coded language used by queer Londoners. There are episodes on the Lesbian Avengers, the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, the creation of the rainbow Pride flag, and the cultural significance of disco and bathhouses. The show also covers landmark legal cases and trailblazing figures like Christine Jorgensen, one of the first widely known Americans to undergo gender confirmation surgery.
With 20 episodes and a monthly release schedule, the catalog is still growing. The production is clean and accessible, and the show manages to be educational without ever feeling like homework. CAMP Rehoboth is a well-established LGBTQ+ community center in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, so the institutional knowledge backing this project runs deep. If you want a quick, reliable way to learn one new piece of queer history every month, this show delivers exactly that -- no filler, just the good stuff.
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