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Index
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Introduction – There and back again: A Pink Triangle’s journey
1 The visual history of the Pink Triangle
2 Global queer history
3 Nazi atrocities and the Pink Triangle
4 Queering gay history
5 Provincializing queer history
6 Memory and victimhood
7 Feeling the Pink Triangle
8 Searching for the Pink Triangle
9 Mapping the Pink Triangle’s journey
1 A badge of continuities – Pink radical politics and identification with the Nazi past
1.1 Emancipation on paper
1.2 Wearing Pink Triangles, showing Pink Triangles
1.3 Remembering the men with the pink triangle
1.4 Collectivizing the triangle
1.5 The power of images
2 A badge of narratives – Pink Triangles, written communication networks, and the Queer Atlantic
2.1 Pink Triangles over the Atlantic: Narrating victimhood in the press
2.2 Writing a play, sharing a myth: Bent and collective memory
2.3 A man with a mission: Richard Plant and transatlantic gay historiography
2.4 Pink Triangles against the grain: Lesbian symbolism and memory
2.5 From narratives to the streets
3 A badge of memory – Defining and remembering victimhood in the queer Atlantic
3.1 Americanizing and globalizing the Holocaust
3.2 Remembering the injury
3.3 Pink Triangle injuries, Pink Triangle warnings
4 A badge of inclusion – Carving Pink Triangles into stone and shaping the queer subject
4.1 Of triangles and reliefs
4.2 Seeking justice for the community: Working out trauma at the site of injury
4.3 Getting a seat at the table: Transatlantic official Holocaust memory and queer activism
4.4 Same triangles, different triangles: Transatlantic inclusions
4.5 The cohesive potential of the triangle
5 A badge of exclusion – Pink Triangle frameworks and the limits of collective memory
5.1 The men without the Pink Triangle
5.2 The men not just wearing the Pink Triangle
5.3 The women with[out] the Pink Triangle?
5.4 Memory with or without solidarity
6 A badge of universalization – Pink Triangles and the limits of Euro-American queer suffering
6.1 Carving Pink Triangles in Schöneberg
6.2 Patent of nobility: The International Lesbian and Gay Association and the universalization of suffering
6.3 Pink Triangles against homophobia: International victimization in official political memorialization
7 A badge of survival – AIDS activism, Pink Triangles, and an aesthetic of injury
7.1 Act up! coalitions, direct action and emancipation
7.2 AIDS activism and international knowledge transfers
7.3 A queer trivialization of genocide? Dystopian visions of an epidemic
7.4 Still a badge of survival
8 A badge of temporalities – European time and asynchronous Pink Triangle modernities
8.1 Looking back at whiteness in the Euro-American world
8.2 A badge of European modernity?
8.3 A badge of homosynchronism
8.4 Different timelines, same triangle
9 A badge of visibility – Branding Pink Triangles for emancipation
9.1 Branding Pink Triangle bridges: Capitalism
9.2 Pictorial agency
9.3 The potential of objects
Epilogue – The Pink Triangle in homonationalist times
10.1 Many Pink Triangles
10.2 Memory culture and victimhood in the transatlantic world
10.3 A visual history of the Pink Triangle
10.4 Global queer history and provincialized gayness
10.5 Beyond homonationalist triangles? Beyond the rainbow?
Bibliography
Unpublished Source Material
Canada
Federal Republic of Germany
United States of America
Newspapers Corpus
Films and other Broadcastings
Interviews
ACT UP Oral History Project
Archiv der anderen Erinnerungen
Published Source Material
Secondary Literature
Index
Notes
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