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In conversation with June Thomas, Strand Book Store (in-person)

  • Strand Book Store 828 Broadway New York, NY, 10036 United States (map)

This event is TICKETED. You may purchase a copy of the book or a $5 admission ticket.

Join us for an in-person event with assistant professor of history and the director of the Public History Initiative at Cornell University Stephen Vider for a discussion of his new book The Queerness of Home: Gender, Sexuality & Politics of Domesticity after World War II. Joining Stephen in conversation is longtime Slate writer and editor June Thomas. This event will be hosted in the Strand Book Store's 3rd floor Rare Book Room at 828 Broadway on 12th Street.

Please purchase a ticket for the event here.

Can’t make the event? Purchase a signed copy of the book here.

STRAND IN-PERSON EVENT COVID-19 POLICY:

In-person events will be presented to a fully vaccinated audience. All patrons over the age of sixteen will be required to show proof* of having completed the COVID-19 vaccination series at least 14 days prior to the date of the event. New York State has now clarified that a child up to the age of 16 who is unvaccinated and accompanied by a vaccinated adult may, in fact, attend events that otherwise are open only to people who are vaccinated. In such an event, the child will not need to be socially distanced, but they will need to wear masks at all times while attending the event.

*Proof of vaccination will be defined as either an original vaccination card or an Excelsior Pass. We will be checking to ensure compliance with the 14 day waiting period post-vaccination.

For contact tracing purposes, buyers must submit the following information at checkout for each attendee in the attending pod: Full Name, Address, Date of Birth, Email Address, and Phone Number. Registration will be required online. No tickets for entry will be sold at the door.

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February 4

In conversation with Greta LaFleur, Harvard Bookstore (virtual)

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February 23

Coalitional Intimacies: HIV/AIDS, Caregiving, and the Domestic Archive, Humanities Without Boundaries Lecture at the Center for the Humanities, University of Wisconsin (virtual)