Jeannette Howard Foster
Jeannette Howard Foster | |
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Born | November 3, 1895 |
Died | July 26, 1981 | (aged 85)
Alma mater | Rockford College University of Chicago |
Occupation |
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Jeannette Howard Foster (November 3, 1895 – July 26, 1981) was an American librarian, professor, poet, and researcher in the field of lesbian literature. She pioneered the study of popular fiction and ephemera in order to excavate both overt and covert lesbian themes. Her years of pioneering data collection culminated in her 1956 study , which has become a seminal resource in LGBT studies. Initially self-published by Foster via Vantage Press, it was photoduplicated and reissued in 1975 by and reissued in 1985 by Naiad Press with updating additions and commentary by Barbara Grier.
Biography[]
Jeannette Howard Foster was born on November 3, 1895 in Oak Park, Illinois, daughter of mechanical engineer Winslow Howard Foster (b. January 10, 1869) and Anna Mabel Burr. She attended Rockford College and graduated with a degree in chemistry in 1918. Foster earned a Ph.D. at the Graduate Library School of the University of Chicago. She taught library science at the Drexel Institute of Technology from 1937 to 1948.[1] She was librarian at the Institute for Sex Research at Indiana University during the years 1948 to 1952 where she worked with Alfred Kinsey. She eventually retired to Pocahontas, Arkansas with two other women.[2] Howard was the recipient of the 1974 Stonewall Book Award for Sex Variant Women in Literature: A Historical and Quantitative Survey.[3] She contributed fiction and reviews to The Ladder.
Foster lived to see her 1956 book hailed as a founding document of a new area of scholarship. She was friends with Valerie Taylor and Marie Kuda, who founded the first national lesbian writers' conference in the United States. Taylor dedicated the first conference in 1974 to Foster.[4]
In 1998 Foster was inducted into the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame.[5]
In 2008, the first biography of Foster, Sex Variant Woman by Joanne Passet, was published.[6]
References[]
- ^ Passet, Joanne (2008). Sex Variant Woman: The Life of Jeannette Howard Foster. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press.
- ^ Hickman, Alan (2007)"Gay & Lesbian Movement". The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture.
- ^ Carmichael, James (Winter 2000). ""They Sure Got to Prove It on Me": Millennial Thoughts on Gay Archives, Gay Biography, and Gay Library History." Libraries & Culture, 35 (1)
- ^ "Jeannette Howard Foster, Ph.D." Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on September 30, 2013. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-10-17. Retrieved 2015-06-28.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ "Rediscovering Dr. Kinsey's librarian -- a lesbian pioneer". Indiana University News Room. Archived from the original on September 30, 2012. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
- 1895 births
- 1981 deaths
- LGBT studies academics
- LGBT writers from the United States
- American librarians
- American women librarians
- University of Chicago Graduate Library School alumni
- Rockford University alumni
- LGBT people from Illinois
- LGBT academics
- American women poets
- 20th-century American poets
- 20th-century American women writers
- Stonewall Book Award winners