Jump to content

Bob Cant: Difference between revisions

From LGBT History Project
Ross Burgess (talk | contribs)
Created page with "'''Bob Cant''' is a Scottish journalist and writer, the author of ''Footsteps and Witnesses'' (1993). :"So I don't know exactly what I was expecting to do when I came bac..."
 
Ross Burgess (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Bob Cant''' is a Scottish journalist and writer, the author of ''[[Footsteps and Witnesses]]'' (1993).
[[File:Bob Cant.jpeg|thumb|Bob Cant]]'''Bob Cant''' is a Scottish journalist and writer, the author of ''[[Footsteps and Witnesses]]'' (1993).


:"So I don't know exactly what I was expecting to do when I came back to Edinburgh in 1990, but I was very conscious of being gay and Scots in a way that I hadn't been for quite a long time. And then I'd done a book in London called ''[[Radical Records]]'' which was interviewing people who had been involved in lesbian and gay politics across the UK, but I noticed when I came back that there was no oral history book in Scotland and there didn't seem to be any signs of one being produced at that point."<ref>http://www.livingmemory.org.uk/rememberwhen/interview/intBC.html</ref>
:"So I don't know exactly what I was expecting to do when I came back to Edinburgh in 1990, but I was very conscious of being gay and Scots in a way that I hadn't been for quite a long time. And then I'd done a book in London called ''[[Radical Records]]'' which was interviewing people who had been involved in lesbian and gay politics across the UK, but I noticed when I came back that there was no oral history book in Scotland and there didn't seem to be any signs of one being produced at that point."<ref>http://www.livingmemory.org.uk/rememberwhen/interview/intBC.html</ref>

Revision as of 18:31, 27 December 2013

Bob Cant

Bob Cant is a Scottish journalist and writer, the author of Footsteps and Witnesses (1993).

"So I don't know exactly what I was expecting to do when I came back to Edinburgh in 1990, but I was very conscious of being gay and Scots in a way that I hadn't been for quite a long time. And then I'd done a book in London called Radical Records which was interviewing people who had been involved in lesbian and gay politics across the UK, but I noticed when I came back that there was no oral history book in Scotland and there didn't seem to be any signs of one being produced at that point."[1]

References

<references>