Question

A 2023 Jamey Jesperson article that examines “transfeminine life and death in New Spain” is titled “Transmisogyny in the Colonial [one of these places].” For 10 points each:
[10e] Name these locations, which collect primary source documents for historians. An online “Internet” one of these places hosts the Wayback Machine.
ANSWER: archives [accept Internet Archive or archive.org or digital archives or “Transmisogyny in the Colonial Archive”; prompt on libraries]
[10h] Jesperson heavily cites Jules Gill-Peterson, whose best-known book documents trans people with this status in 20th-century America. Philippe Ariès’s (“ar-YES’s”) book Centuries of [this status] argues that this status is a modern invention.
ANSWER: childhood [or descriptions of being a child or kid or adolescent or teenager; accept Centuries of Childhood or L’enfant et la vie familiale sous l’ancien regime or Histories of the Transgender Child; prompt on descriptions of being young]
[10m] Jesperson argues that the first record of trans Indigenous people in the archive is the execution of “young men in women's apparel” by this conquistador, the first European to view the eastern shore of the Pacific Ocean.
ANSWER: Vasco Núñez de Balboa
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Data

Georgia Tech CAlabama A1001020
Auburn AGeorgia Tech E1001020
Clemson AGeorgia A100010
Emory BGeorgia Tech F100010
Emory AGeorgia Tech A10101030
Georgia Tech BGeorgia Tech D100010
Tusculum AAuburn B0000