Digital Transgender Archive
Ameirah Neal is a Black woman from Washington, DC. At the time of this interview she was working as a Peer Ed Coordinator with a nonprofit organization in DC. In this oral history she speaks at length about growing up in Washington DC with her mother, homelessness, her employment history and experiences with workplace discrimination, and going to art school in the South. She also touches upon topics such as the ballroom scene in Baltimore, geographies of social support for trans people of color, and her encounters with law enforcement.
Item Actions
- Identifier
- 5425k9934
- Collection
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Oral Histories with People of Color
- Institution
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Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection, University of Minnesota
- Creator(s)
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Neal, Ameirah
- Contributor(s)
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Jenkins, Andrea
- Publisher
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University of Minnesota Minneapolis Libraries
- Date Created
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Dec. 1, 2016
- Genre
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Oral Histories
Transcriptions
- Subject(s)
-
Black Lives Matter (BLM)
Tretter Transgender Oral History Project
- Places
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Washington, D.C.
>
Washington County
>
Washington
Washington, D.C. > Washington > Anacostia
South
- Topic(s)
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Art
Assigned gender
Ball culture
Black LGBTQ+ people
Black people
Child abuse
Colleges
Detention of LGBTQ+ people
Discrimination
Division
Drag
Drug abuse
Employment policies
Etymology
Families
Femininities
Friendships
Gender-affirming care
Harassment
Homelessness
Hormone therapy
Intersectionality (Sociology)
Language
LGBTQ+ communities
Passing (Gender)
Police interactions with LGBTQ+ people
Politics
Prejudices
Race relations
Sex work
Sexual orientation
Stereotypes
Transgender community
Transgender people
Work
- Resource Type
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Moving image
Text
- Language
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English
- Related URL
-
https://umedia.lib.umn.edu/
- Rights
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In copyright
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