User:Thereen/Sandbox

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world
Jump to navigation Jump to search

This is a lab for books or sections I'm developing (slowly but surely), additions I am planning, and notes about books already developed by others. As this is a wiki, feel free to edit this page as you like but please do not vandalize it. Vandalism is a waste of both my time and yours.


Horticulture/Container Gardening[edit | edit source]

Containers[edit | edit source]

Plastic

Metal

Terra Cotta

Found containers Margarine containers and colanders,

  • Vertical Gardens - different designs, reasons, basics. Preferred plants.
  • Terrariums Cactus

Planting Seeds[edit | edit source]

(link to seeds and planting, section saying container specific stuff.)

Links[edit | edit source]

  • Flowers
  • Foods (/Herbs (basil, thyme, dill)/Lettuce, /Sprouts, /


LGBT[edit | edit source]

LGBT History \ LGBT Literature \ LGBT Young Adult Literature \ LGBT Media

LGBT World History[edit | edit source]

Mine w:LGBT history for leads, and Cultural Anthropology/Marriage, Reproduction and Kinship. JSTOR, Google Scholar, of course. Request transwikis if applicable.

Would have to be structured as a comparative world history text?

  • Content may include:
  • Western European:
  • Cretan pederasty
  • Sappho
  • Ancient Greece
  • Ancient Rome
  • Bath Houses
  • World Wars and Homosexuality in Western Europe
  • 20th Century Riots
  • Pride Parades around the world
  • North America:
  • Stonewall
  • Kinsey
  • Two-Spirited Indigenous Peoples of North America
  • World Wars and Homosexuality in North America (ie. Migration to New York, San Fran)
  • Civil Rights Movements (Persons of Colour, Feminist)
  • Marriage and the 21st Century in North America
  • Africa:
  • Eastern European:
  • Asia and the Pacific:

I could easily break this into separate country-specific histories, starting with Canadian.

Feminism[edit | edit source]

Restructure. Book is currently structured as a history text, little to do with theory or practice. Could this book be more than a history book? Could it work like an intro to ws? All forms of oppression are connected.)