Acknowledgments

Deborah P. Amory; Sean G. Massey; Jennifer Miller; and Allison P. Brown

An earlier version of the first research profile in chapter 2, “Lukas Avendaño: Reflections from Muxeidad,” was published on Siwar Mayu: A River of Hummingbirds (http://siwarmayu.com/). I would especially like to thank Mario Patiño, the very talented photographer, for use of the stunning photographs. An earlier version of the second research profile for chapter 2, “Queering Pan-Africanism,” was published on Africa Is a Country, “*Not the Continent with 55 Countries” (https://africasacountry.com/about).


About the authors

Deborah P. Amory is professor of social science at SUNY Empire State College. She holds a PhD from Stanford University in anthropology, and a BA from Yale University in African studies. Her early work focused on same-sex relations on the Swahili-speaking coast of East Africa and on lesbian identity in the United States. She has served in academic administration and has been energized by the open education movement, especially in relation to developing online open educational resource courses and textbooks, including Introduction to Anthropology, Sex and Gender in Global Perspective, and Introduction to LGBTQ+ Studies.

Sean G. Massey is associate professor of women’s, gender, and sexuality studies at Binghamton University and coinvestigator with the Binghamton University Human Sexualities Lab. He received his PhD in social personality psychology from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. His research focuses on the study of sexuality, gender, anti-homosexual prejudice, attitudes toward same-sex parenting, racial bias in educational and law enforcement contexts, and the relationship between social science and social change.

Jennifer Miller earned a PhD in cultural studies from George Mason University and an MA in literary and cultural studies from Carnegie Mellon University. She is an independent scholar and high school teacher. Her research focuses on LGBTQ+ children’s literature and culture, digital culture, and sexual subcultures. Her books include The Transformative Potential of LGBTQ+ Children’s Picture Books (2022) and The Dialectic of Digital Culture (2019), which she coedited with David Arditi. Her scholarship appears in the Journal of Homosexuality, the European Journal of American Studies, Fast Capitalism, and other journals and edited collections.

Allison P. Brown is digital publishing services manager at SUNY Geneseo’s Fraser Hall Library. She oversees the library’s publishing program, which includes supporting student journals such as Gandy Dancer and the Proceedings of GREAT Day, and manages the editorial and production processes of the Geneseo Authors and Milne Open Textbooks imprints. She provides education and guidance to the Geneseo community in digital publishing, open access, open educational resources, and copyright. She studied for her MFA in poetry at Emerson College, where she also became interested in design and digital publishing.

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Acknowledgments Copyright © by Deborah P. Amory; Sean G. Massey; Jennifer Miller; and Allison P. Brown is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.