1.1CollectiveAccessThe Unstraight MuseumUnstraight2012-12-26T16:24:42Z2012-12-26T16:26:32Zhttp://dbw.unstraight.org/index.php/Detail/Object/Show/object_id/32https://db.unstraight.org/media/collectiveaccess/images/0/53397_ca_object_representations_media_33_thumbnail.jpgT-shirt1.1http://kulturarvsdata.se/TUM/object/3232T-shirtThe Unstraight MuseumTUMhttp://kulturarvsdata.se/TUM/object/html/32http://kulturarvsdata.se/TUM/object/xml/32http://kulturarvsdata.se/TUM/object/rdf/32http://kulturarvsdata.se/resurser/License#by-nc-ndhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/se/https://db.unstraight.org/media/collectiveaccess/images/0/53397_ca_object_representations_media_33_thumbnail.jpghttps://db.unstraight.org/media/collectiveaccess/images/0/62832_ca_object_representations_media_33_medium.jpghttps://db.unstraight.org/media/collectiveaccess/images/0/53397_ca_object_representations_media_33_thumbnail.jpghttps://db.unstraight.org/media/collectiveaccess/images/0/62832_ca_object_representations_media_33_medium.jpgOwner's personal experienceThis t-shirt was bought in London, in june 1994. It was part of my coming-out process. At the time I had only told a few friends I was gay, and spending a month in London gave me a great opportunity to try my new identity out. I had never had a boyfriend at the time, but I got the brilliant idea of buying this t-shirt for myself, and wearing it as a public statement. However I did only wear it in London, when i got back to Sweden it suddenly felt embarassing.Owner's personal responseA straight item made unstraight by contextSakordT-shirtobjectidSE_UNSTRAIGHT_32