This seemed like an appropriate pairing for yesterday's article, although I feel like the topic has been covered to death in previous articles I've blogged.
Wagner, Corinna. 2013. Pathological Bodies: Medicine and Political Culture. University of California Press, Berkeley. ISBN 978-1938169-08-3
One minor thing that annoys me around this topic is that it's functionally impossible to determine whether Marie Antoinette actually did have any sapphic relationships, whether with the women named in the attack-pamphlets or with anyone else. Given the implausible nature of some of the other accusations against her, the simply fact that she was accused of lesbian sex can't be considered to have any inherent truth value. Now, we can glean some historic facts about public attitudes toward sexuality (and powerful women), and about what sorts of idea people had about lesbian relationshps. We can know what images the average person believed in or at least was exposed to. But MA's actual personal life? That is so obscured by the political noise that even if someone turned up a purported diary entry saying, "My darling girl, I can't wait until we can once again make wild passionate love among the gardens of the Petit Trianon," the best bet would be that it was a forgery.
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This book as a whole looks at connections between medical theories and political culture, in 18-19th century Britain and France. Only one chapter has any relevance to the Project and this summary will be confined to that material.
Chapter 1: The Case of Marie Antoinette: Revolutionary Politics and the Biologically Suspect Woman
Like a number of other publications, this focuses on the political propaganda that depicted Marie Antoinette as an extreme sexual deviant along several axes, with a special interest in tying those themes to deviant anatomy.
The process of turning MA into a hated figure via sexual propaganda pre-dated her, having been used against salonnières and other courtiers earlier in the century, but the intensity and virulence was unprecedented. MA was simultaneously supposed to have committed adultery, incest, sodomy, lesbianism, murder, and treason. Underlying this campaign was not only attacks on a specific woman, but the establishment of specific sexual norms and political values. These revolved around the idea that women were inherently unfit for politics and government, and worked toward the elimination of women from public life.
A key aspect of this process was promotion of the idea that biological differences between the sexes required distinct gender roles, and that women’s bodies were inherently pathological. [Note: This is part of the rise of the “separate spheres” philosophy and the general 19th theories about the genders as essentially separate species.] Despite the political conflicts between France and Britain, this French propaganda influenced British attitudes, resulting not only in negative attitudes in Britain towards MA, but shifting debate around women’s participation in public life.
Another aspect of the French discourse was how it interacted with medical research of the time, especially theories about the connection between physiology and sexual deviance. The chapter reviews Laqueur’s theories about a shift from a one-sex to two-sex model of bodies. There’s a long discussion of this in the chapter, including discussion of how Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s writings on gender and “nature” fit in with it. But I’m going to skip the details on that.
The pornographic pamphlets slandering MA begin in 1789 with accusations of incest and adultery, suggesting that her children are bastards, and depicting her as sexually voracious. This was ascribed to “uterine furor” with a physiological cause that drove her to seek ever expanding sexual gratification. In some publications, this sex drive is specifically ascribed to her “cunt” rather than to her as a person.
Nymphomania was a newly identified condition in French medical writing and generally ascribed to a physical condition, either a disorder of the nerves of the uterus, or in some cases to an enlarged clitoris that caused masculine sexual aggression in women. Other writers attributed a psychological cause (or at least contribution), due to an impotent or cold husband. (An issue present in the royal marriage.) However this aspect didn’t besmirch Louis’s reputation in the way that MA’s was. Especially in Britain, Louis was depicted positively by royalists.
Early theories of nymphomania identified multiple possible causes in women’s lives, all revolving around the idea of not having an appropriate, approved outlet for marital sex enjoyed in moderation. The overall theory was that women, though “naturally passive” had no sexual self-control and required external restraint in order to avoid sexual excess.
The introduction of accusations of lesbianism against MA occurred in a context where differences between the sexes were shifting from metaphysical causes (“nature”) to biological causes. Thus there was a medicalization of non-normative behaviors and a search for physical evidence of their cause. As a byproduct, depictions of abnormal anatomy (e.g., phallic women) were used to represent deprecated political figures. This process was not restricted to MA, but applied to her close companions as well as other women prominent in Revolutionary politics.
The chapter then moves on to similar symbolic connections between ideas of political “transparency” and a fascination with anatomical ambiguity (“hermaphrodites”) and the idea that women (and only women) presenting with anatomical ambiguity were “deceptive” and untrustworthy. This concern especially focused on the clitoris, how to understand unusually large organs, and how those organs might be used. [Note: As usual, I feel that discussions around this topic could really stand to have a solid grounding in intersex issues. Too often there’s a sense that early modern medical writers are either imagining the existence of clitoral hypertrophy, or are discussing only minor variations in size, as opposed to considering the variety of ways in which intersex anatomy might present.] If—based on changing understandings of anatomical analogy—the clitoris is understood as a penis analogue, then it can be considered inherently “deceptive” and pathological as it has no biological purpose other than to infringe on male territory. If the clitoris is inherently pathological, then it must necessarily be associated with other pathologies, such as masturbation, lesbianism, and nymphomania. (This is also a review of the motif of large clitorises being associated with foreignness—especially the extreme version where it is attributed to non-European women.)
Medical discourse worked to create an image where, not only were men and women considered biologically separate species, but lesbians could be considered biologically distinct from “normal” women, by means of linking their sexuality with abnormal clitoral anatomy, and specifically with masculinized anatomy. [Note: This, of course, feeds eventually into one strain of sexological theories of lesbianism.]
At the same time as this medicalization of sexuality was developing, a counter-image of lesbianism as social fashion was created, with elaborate fantasies of an “Anandrine Sect” of women devoted to same-sex erotics. This motif implicated MA as well as some other prominent women in France (some of whom do appear to have been in lesbian relationships).
By 1793, the sexual propaganda against MA was so well established that it was used as legal evidence against her.
At this point, the chapter goes off into topics of less interest.
In the 16th century, a handful of (male) French anatomists "discovered" the clitoris. And then things get really strange.
Park, Katharine. 1997. “The Rediscovery of the Clitoris: French Medicine and the Tribade, 1570-1620” in The Body in Parts: Fantasies of Corporeality, ed. David Hillman and Carla Mazzio. London: Routledge. 171-93.
This article takes a deep dive into French medical literature of the late 16th and early 17th century discussing the clitoris and developing mythology about it that would linger for centuries. One key element of this discourse was a reliance on textual material, despite many of the authors being surgeons.
We can see this in Ambroise Paré’s Des monstres et prodigies (On monsters and prodigies) 1573 which includes in a discussion of “hermaphrodites” (i.e., intersex people) a discussion of hypertrophy of the clitoris (although he mislabels it as the labia) that can experience erection when stimulated “so that they can be used to play with other women.” In a later edition of the work, he adds material from Leo Africanus’s Historical Description of Africa (1556 for the French translation) about female healers who were said to engage in sex with their female patients, along with an unrelated note that some people in Africa would practice clitoral excision.
Park notes that this is part of a tradition of assigning female sexual deviance onto “foreign” and especially racialized women. Paré experienced push-back on this inclusion from colleagues who felt it was inappropriate in a work aimed at a vernacular audience available to female readers. But more notable is the way Paré’s text jumps from topic to topic implying, but not establishing, a logical connection. From hermaphrodites, he moves to the topic of enlarged labia (clitoris?), then to female same-sex encounters in north Africa where no anatomical anomaly is involved, then jumping to surgical measures for supposedly anomalous anatomy.
This tying together of otherwise unrelated topics (related only in that they involve female anatomy and sex between women) appears in a number of other French medical works in the same era. For example, Jean Riolan in the 1614 Discours sur les hermaphrodits (Discourse on hermaphrodites) argued that most supposed hermaphrodites were simply women with abnormally large clitorises. Riolan then connected this with the Greek tribades and asserted that such women preferred sex with women to men.
While medieval medical texts sometimes speculated on anatomical features that might predispose men to homosexual acts, these ca. 1600 French texts were the first serious post-classical discussion of a similar topic for women. Once introduced into the discourse, an anatomical basis for f/f sex became a prominent topic and displaced medical interest in m/m sex, but very specifically centered around the clitoris.
The function of the clitoris for female sexual pleasure was known to classical Greek authors, but was muddled by ambiguous and imprecise translations as the literature was transmitted via Arabic and Latin authors. [Note: One assumes that this knowledge was well preserved by sexually active women, even if they didn’t have technical terminology for it.] The “rediscovery” came through a combination of returning to the original Greek texts and direct anatomical research by anatomists. But the medical discourse was strongly colored by anxieties about female sexuality, sex difference, and gender relations that were specific to the French context. We can see this in how the anecdotal stories presented in the texts may superficially be about anatomy, but are infused with lessons about male superiority and authority. It is this complex of topics that Park will focus on, providing an exploration of the key texts and their relationships.
While medical texts of the 16-17th century did not have the same authoritative status as such texts have today, they are a useful context for seeing how professional and popular views interacted and reinforced each other. Physicians were coming to be viewed as subject matter experts regarding legal questions of sex difference. In this context, there was pressure to assign non-normative female sexual practices to an anatomical cause (as opposed to a psychological or moral cause). Park notes that this urge has continued to shape medical theories about lesbianism into the 20th century.
Although early medical ideas about the nature and function of the clitoris fall generally into the “one-sex” model, as discussed by Laqueur, Park notes that the reality is contradictory and complex. [Note: This is a general issue with treating the one-sex/two-sex models as some sort of strict divide. Pretty much all eras treated sex/gender in both ways, depending on context and purpose.]
The article circles back to a detailed review of the contents of various French works and their relationship to classical texts. I think this is going to be easier to summarize using a bullet-point approach.
Paré (Des monstres et prodigies 1573): see above for topics
Daléchamps (Chirugie Françoise 1570): discussed sex between women in a chapter on hermaphrodites
Jean Liébault (Trois lires apparenant aux infirmitez et maladies des femme 1582)
Charles Estienne (La dissection des parties du corps humain Latin 1545, French 1546)
Gabriele Falloppia (Italian, Observations anatomicae written 1550, published 1561)
Realdo Colombo (Italian, De re anatomica 1559)
Andreas Vesalius (Italian, Observationum anatomicarum Gabrielis Fallopii examen 1564)
The key element in resistance to Falloppia’s conclusion was the idea that the clitoris was a direct analogue to the penis, whereas the traditional “one-sex” anatomical theory held that the female analogue to the penis was the uterus/vagina imagined as an “inside out” penis. Thus, if all women had a penis-analogue in addition to a uterus/vagina, then all women could be viewed as “hermaphrodites” bearing both male and female genitals and the category of hermaphrodite (as an intermediate sex category) disappeared, but only comprised some women with larger clitorises than usual.
The second consequence of this understanding was to undermine the idea of the tribade as a distinct category apart from “normal women” who desired sex with women due to having a (large) clitoris. If all women have a clitoris, and can enjoy sexual pleasure apart from being penetrated, then all women are potential tribades (and potential penetrators).
The earlier confusion between labia and clitoris was quickly sorted out.
Séverin Pineau (De integritate et corruptionis virginum notis 1597)
Jean Riolan (Anthropographia 1618)
While the earliest French references associating the clitoris with f/f sex had localized it in northern Africa (Fez, Egypt), early 17th century texts begin to cite cases in France, such as Marie/Marin le Marcis who was accused of female sodomy but claimed to have a hidden penis and, after several invasive examinations, was judged to be a “predominantly male hermaphrodite” thus escaping the death penalty, after which Marin lived as a man. Jacques Duval, the examining physician, later engaged in published arguments with Jean Riolan regarding the correct diagnosis of Marcis. In essence, both considered Marcis a hermaphrodite, but disagreed as to gender classification and therefore what sort of sexual partners were approved. [Note: as in many such cases, Marie/Marin de Marcis was quite likely intersex, possibly with male attributes appearing in early adulthood, as they were later described as having a beard.] The theoretical basis of their disagreement relied on two equally incorrect theories of fetal development that different in whether they allowed for actual “intermediate” forms on a spectrum between male and female, or whether all bodies were clearly male or female but might have misleading anatomical deformations. Duval not only considered true intermediate forms to exist, but considered this variation to be natural and part of the diversity of divine creation, arguing for the validity and acceptance of those who didn’t confirm to the sex binary.
Park notes that Duval’s attitude was hardly typical for his age and that “his position was in some respects idiosyncratic and extreme.” But also notes that Duval’s acceptance of a sexual spectrum didn’t extend to approving individual choice of sexual partners, but rather that such people should have legal and medical professionals determine which sex was prevalent for heterosexual purposes.
[Note: Compare to the hints and implications in the early 16th century entry in the Zimmern Chronicle regarding Greta, who was examined to see if she were a “proper woman” because she openly expressed same-sex desire. Although text doesn’t say it explicitly, the examination would either be to see if she were a man in disguise (unlikely, because these were neighbors who had presumably known her all her life) or more likely to see if she had ambiguous anatomy, suggesting “hermaphrodite” status. This would fit in with the earlier model discussed by the French medical writers, where a noticeable clitoris would be understood as an anomaly, and a driver of same-sex desire, rather than being normal female anatomy.]
Early modern French medical writings noted classical authors’ discussion of clitoridectomy in the case of hypertrophy and there are a few references indicating this was sometimes done, or at least requested. (One citation is in 1560 when a woman rejected a request to have the operation at which her husband sought and received an annulment. But the two other cases cited involved a request from an individual or authority to perform the operation but the surgeon refused.) This discussion was not only in the context of unusual anatomy: Riolan (possibly not seriously) suggested that universal removal of the clitoris could be useful for controlling female sexuality.
The image of the penetrative clitoris became entangled in politics via gender stereotypes and the sexualization of political power in the French court when it was dominated by Catherine de’ Medici acting as regent for Henry III. Henry was seen as weak and effeminate and satirized as a passive homosexual. In contrast, Catherine was satirized as masculine and thus connected with images of phallic women.
Increased medical awareness of the clitoris and its function also affected attitudes towards f/f sex. Female homoeroticism that did not involve penetration was typically not classified as a sex act at all, or at least not as “sodomy,” which attracted legal scrutiny. Stimulation by rubbing (which, as Park notes, is the etymological origin of many words for practitioners of f/f sex, such as tribade, fricatrix, confricatrix, etc.) might involve the clitoris as a locus of pleasure, but didn’t invoke it as a penis-analogue. Outside of the image of clitoral hypertrophy, penetration by a woman required an artificial device. Up through the 16th century, anecdotes that make reference to a dildo for f/f sex generally are associated with gender-crossing, where the extreme social and legal reaction doesn’t really distinguish between the gender and sexual aspects of the transgression. A more general use of dildos is referenced by Brantôme. Brantôme, in fact, illustrates the context in which clitoral penetration became a concern, as his extensive discussion of f/f sex doesn’t mention it. But these various writers on dildo-facilitated f/f sex in the 16th century illustrate the context in which anxiety over clitoral penetration was created.
In a context where there is an existing concern about women committing sodomy (i.e., engaging in penetrative sex) using instruments, a newly recognized potential for women—all women—engaging in penetrative sex using their own “normal” anatomy raised new concerns. One reason for dismissing the importance of f/f sex (by authors such as Brantôme and the emerging genre of pornographic works describing f/f sex) is the fiction that only penetrative sex can provide true pleasure. But if women could provide each other with “true pleasure” then not only are women’s interactions a topic of moral and legal concern, but men might be rendered irrelevant. The existence of the clitoris, therefore, threatened the “natural order” of male supremacy. This ties back to Riolin’s comment on clitoridectomy: it wasn’t only about controlling female sexuality but about maintaining the gender status quo.
There are some historians whose field of interest overlaps the focus of the Project very solidly. Susan Lanser is one of them. I have 13 publications under her name in my database and have now blogged 10 of them. I have another in my files, but two are yet to be tracked down. And I should probably hunt down her full bibliography and see what else I haven't stumbled across yet. In fact, now that I've asked mysefl the question the only authors who come close are Valerie Traub with 12 (7 blogged) and Marthia Vicinus with 11 (7 blogged), though there are a handful in the 8-10 publications range. Sorry, I can't help counting things!
Lanser, Susan. 2001. “Sapphic Picaresque: Sexual Difference and the Challenges of Homoadventuring” in Textual Practice 15:2 (November 2001): 1-18.
In this article, Lanser examines the intersection of changing conceptions of sexual difference (i.e., the difference between male and female) and changing attitudes toward sexuality in the 18th century, specifically with regard to how female homosexuality plays a part in these processes. Various theories have identified the 18th century as an inflection point, with Laqueur claiming it as the era when “sex as we know it was invented,” various authors including Trumbull identifying it as when male homosexuality became an identifiable identity, and Foucault as the beginning of institutional concern over how people used their sexuality. But Lanser argues that most of this work is disrupted and complicated when women’s sexuality, and especially female homoeroticism, is given adequate consideration. For example, rather than Hitchcock’s assertion that the changing nature of heterosexuality caused a change in f/f relations from “mock heterosexual” to “romantic,” Lanser suggests that changing images of female homosexuality may have been a cause rather than a result of other changes.
For this article, Lanser focuses specifically on England, the 18th century, and the genre of “sapphic picaresque” to illustrate her interrogation of the principles proposed in Michael McKeon’s “Historicizing Patriarchy: The Emergence of Gender Difference in England, 1660-1760.” McKeon connects the emergence of “modern patriarchy” in England with changes to ideas about class and sexuality. The change from viewing sex difference as a matter of hierarchy (women are inferior men, i.e., the “one-sex” model) to difference (men and women are a different species, i.e., the “two-sex” model) he argues connected to the emergence of the system of heterosexuality, which then automatically presupposes the existence of homosexuality. The increasing importance of identity based on sex, was accompanied by a shift in class identity from being based on familial inheritance to being based on socioeconomic status. The disruption of class identity is then stabilized by the importance of gender difference. As class becomes more mobile and permeable, gender (in the form of gender performance) becomes more rigidly enforced.
But Lanser points out that women don’t figure very strongly in McKeon’s theory—something particularly evident when considering same-sex topics. McKeon follows Trumbach in asserting that in the 18th century it was assumed that sapphic women also desired men, and therefore did not disrupt patriarchal dynamics. But this position rests on the erroneous conclusion that lesbianism had, historically been ignored as unproblematic. Here Lanser summarizes work on medical theories of sapphic anatomy and legal records of prosecutions. Earlier medical/anatomical theories of sapphic desire relied on the image of “masculinized” bodies—bodies that fell more toward the male side on the sliding scale of “one-sex” anatomy. But establishing the “two-sex” model that denied any overlap between male and female removed the basis for a physiological distinction between sapphic and non-sapphic female bodies. In the 18th century, this shift occurred in parallel with the rise in celebration of female intimate attachments. And in this context, there arose a literary genre that Lanser names “sapphic picaresque” at the same time that male homoerotic culture was manifesting as “molly culture” and generating its own cultural backlash. The space opened for sapphic picaresque texts was brief and was followed by an era of compulsory heterosexuality, manifesting not only in personal relationships but in an entire social structure of women positioned in complementary roles to men. Within sapphic relationships, this pressure returned to positioning female same-sex desire as “masculine”—not in terms of biology this time, but in terms of behavioral attributes.
The “sapphic picaresque” genre as defined by Lanser involves a same-sex connection within a non-domestic context, especially involving movement. It tends to have an episodic structure and presents the illusion of a realistic “true narrative.” Drawing from the traditional picaresque genre, the protagonist often fits the “loveable rogue” image—morally ambiguous and unconventional. The protagonists challenge not only the patriarchal status quo but interplay between class and sexuality.
Examples of the proposed genre include:
The common features include a f/f relationship that is both primary and chosen, though not necessarily sexual, presented as a viable alternate to marriage, not simply as “second-best.” If the story involves cross-dressing, it does not exist to provide plausible deniability for the same-sex relationship (in contrast to works like Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, Lyly’s Gallathea, or Cavendish’s The Convent of Pleasure). The same-sex desire is not negated or replaced by heterosexuality. And the plot involves movement and adventure. (This contrasts with sapphic poetry of the same era, which has a more static setting.) Movement through the world enables the protagonists to interact with additional women, not just each other, sometimes as women and sometimes in male disguise—at which they are always successful. These romantic encounters undermine the idea of fixed gender identities—indeed, undermining the nascent “separate species” theory of sexual difference.
This brief literary fashion points out that the course of social attitudes towards sapphic themes is erratic and contradictory. Historians have identified periods of hostility both before and after the era of the “sapphic picaresque,” and it was coincident with other genres of literature that showed similar hostility, such as the rise of anti-masturbation tracts. This makes the admiring and even celebratory nature of sapphic picaresque works even more striking.
Lanser argues that one thing enabling this acceptance is the presentation of the texts as personal narratives, framing their characters as central and even heroic, either using first person narration or a sympathetic observer. The existing theme of the morally ambiguous “picaro” figure gives the characters license to step outside social norms. But in addition, this admiration is allowed by being cagy about the erotic nature of the women’s relationship. It might be alluded to, or explicitly danced around, or denied in an over-the-top “wink-wink” manner, or simply identified as “unaccountable.” The cause of their preference for women’s company is vague, though their aversion to heterosexual marriage may be made explicit. The narratives leave large open spaces for speculation and imagination.
At the same time, the old one-sex model was flailing, in part from arguments that if there is no qualitative difference between men and women, then attraction between men and women is not solidly linked to difference, but could be experienced between similar types. And if women—ordinary women—can be attracted to other women, if they can have the experiences, feelings, and desires depicted in the picaresque texts, then perhaps men aren’t necessary to them. This represents a clear danger to patriarchal structures. A new concept of sexual difference was necessary to reinforce heterosexuality as normal and inevitable, with new arguments against the viability of same-sex attraction. In mid-century, we begin to see texts that echo the picaresque genre while redirecting the resolution, such as Henry Fielding’s The Female Husband. Mary Hamilton could have been a picaresque heroine, but fails and is punished for the attempt. Furthermore, she is framed as having inevitably failed due to the inability of a woman to successfully carry out a gender-crossing adventure. The English translation of Bianchi’s life of Catherine Vizzani adds an epilogue criticizing and condemning her, where the Italian original had been fairly neutral (if bewildered). Novels turn to emphasizing the insufficiency of f/f desire (Fanny Hill) or its menacing nature (Pamela, Sir Charles Grandison) and poetic jabs at sapphic desire label it unnatural (Satan’s Harvest Home, The Sapho-an). These works may not be responding directly to the sapphic picaresque, but clearly represent a shift in the zeitgeist. Even within conduct literature, there come reminders that women’s friendships must give way to marital fidelity.
Among the forces contributing to the “separate spheres” model of sexual difference are—ironically—Enlightenment ideals of equality. If women, as human beings, have a claim to equal social and political rights with men, just as they have an equal potential for sexually desiring women, then some new argument must be made in order to stabilize patriarchal hierarchies. This new argument boils down to “separate but equal”—yes, women are equal to men, but only in fulfilling their entirely separate functions. Functions that are private, domestic, and centered around being useful and pleasing to men.
But which are the chickens and which are the eggs in this complex of forces and effects? Lanser speculates that discourse around sapphism rises in response to specific types of changes in gender relations, especially women’s social, cultural, and economic mobility. And given that this mobility is associated with national power, in the 18th century it manifests most in the great international powers of England, France, and the Netherlands. (Although Lanser does acknowledge that this may be an illusion due to differences in the amount and depth of historic research into sexuality history.) In this era, women’s social mobility is tied to sexuality: upward mobility through marriage, downward mobility through sexual transgression. And sexual propriety becomes a major signifier of gentry class identity. (See Lanser 1998 https://alpennia.com/lhmp/publication/6813) Sapphic discourse becomes a means of managing one aspect of female propriety by defining the performative boundaries of acceptable same-sex affective behaviors. But those very boundaries then become a means for manipulating the acceptability of same-sex relationships, regardless of their underlying nature.
But sapphic picaresque narratives are a background of instability for these principles. They destabilize official principles of sexual desire. They deny that gender can be fixed and known. And they suggest that even biological sex may be irrelevant. They offer alternate modes of economic and social mobility (due to escaping the restrictions of gender), and if mobility and disguise can successfully transcend gender boundaries, they can clearly transcend boundaries of birth and status. They make clear the economic basis for romantic freedom, placing significant emphasis on the financial arrangements necessary for female couples to be successful, at the same time pointing out how heterosexual marriage relies on female economic dependency for its success.
This article was cross-referenced in another of Susan Lanser's articles I blogged recently, so I took that as a cue to move it up in the queue. I'll follow it with yet another Lanser take on the long 18th century.
Lanser, Susan. 1998. “Befriending the Body: Female Intimacies as Class Acts.” in Eighteenth-Century Studies 32 (winter 1998-99): 179-98.
This article examines the interactions of class and sapphic desire in the “long 18th century,” arguing for a complex interaction between the two. That is, that class could insulate women from scrutiny of their intimate friendships with women, but that suspicion concerning women’s intimate friendships could degrade their class standing.
Some women, such as Butler & Ponsonby, could live together as a married couple, even using the language of marriage and sharing a bed, while being celebrated by society, while others such as sculptor Anne Damer and actress Mademoiselle de Raucourt were openly derided as lesbians. It wasn’t simply a matter of individual critics having a particular attitude, for Hester Thrale, for example, openly reviled “sapphists” both in England and France, while retaining friendships with other women in homoerotic relationships. In the same era that Scottish courts proclaimed it unthinkable that Pirie & Woods engaged in a sexual relationship, Anne Lister carried on courtships and affairs with a wide circle of women in Yorkshire.
The underlying question, Lanser argues, is whose interests it served to praise some female relationships while disparaging others. To answer this question, she traces the dynamics of female friendship in England from the 17th century through the early 19th following two themes: how female friendships served women struggling for “autonomy and authority” while simultaneously acted as a tool of the establishment of gentry sensibilities as a moral center. A reorganization of social hierarchies used perceptions of female intimacy as a way of drawing boundaries between the acceptable and unacceptable in a context where both status and sexuality were being redefined.
The official philosophical literature of friendship up through the 16th century focused entirely on men, rejecting both the viability of male-female friendship and the existence of female-female friendship. Even as authors like Katherine Philips were creating a literature of female friendship in the 17th century, male authors were only grudgingly admitting that a few women might have the qualities to be true friends. But by the mid-17th century, women across Europe were creating and publicly performing intimate friendships as an inherent part of their social networks.
Regardless of gender, in the 17th century friendships were in the process of not only supplementing but supplanting kinship as the primary social “glue”. Several things were happening in parallel: the rise in power of the bourgeoisie, an emphasis on merit, and a de-emphasis on inherited hierarchies of power. Among the elite, male friendships were a public as well as a private act. For women, this destabilization of previous social hierarchies raised the possibility of destabilizing gender hierarchies as well. And women were getting access to social contexts where non-familial bonds could be established, such as boarding schools, salons, and an increasing urban migration. Female-dominated courts in England and Sweden, female-dominated salons in France (and later England), and circles of educated, literary women were a breeding ground for female friendships that could become of central importance in their lives. The importance of such context is clear from the male satire they attracted.
Adopting the models and rhetoric of male friendships ran into the problem of women’s different material and legal status. Male friends could promise to have “one purse” but most women had only tenuous control over their own purses, much less the power to share them. To counter men’s arguments that women weren’t suited to be true friends, women raised the point that marriage was often so oppressive that female friendship was obviously superior to that state. Even if marriage could not be avoided, women’s friendships were a bulwark against its hazards. And a few women openly proposed with varying degrees of seriousness that women would be better off rejecting men entirely.
Herein lay the danger of women’s friendships to the status quo. Men could prioritize their friendships without upending existing social hierarchies, but if women prioritized their female friendships, the world was turned upside down. This was amplified when the physicality of friendship was considered. Emotional bonds were expected to be reflected in physical affection—kisses and embraces that might border on the sensual but were expected and acceptable behavior. For men, focusing their physical affection on friends had little impact on their marriages, but for women to turn to other women for their physical desires risked making men obsolete.
And yet, as Lanser catalogs in extensive detail, the 18th century saw a flood of open, public expressions of embodied female friendship, expressed in terms of passion, caresses, kisses, the treasuring of physical tokens of love, and a celebration of the physical presence of the friend. So how did some women embedded in this culture escape the accusation of sapphism, while others didn’t escape it? There is plenty of evidence that people (in general, though maybe not universally) were aware of the potential for sex between women, especially in medical and legal contexts, and certain versions of it were persecuted and satirized. [Note: I feel like Lanser misses an angle by not noting that legal prosecution was almost always in the context of gender-crossing, not simply same-sex relations.] So if so many of these intimate female friendships seem obviously “lesbian” to us today, how were they viewed by their contemporaries? [Note: Here Lanser notes that she does not require “proof of sex” to consider a historic relationship sapphic.] The answer, she asserts is public relations. “Female intimacies were perceived as chaste or sapphic according to the conventions through which they could be read.” And the women involved in them could actively manipulate these conventions to their benefit.
In the long 18th century, Lanser asserts, class was the key factor in how potentially sapphic relationships were judged, but class itself was decidedly unstable in this era, meaning that all such relations and judgments were in flux. The “Ladies of Llangollen” are a case in point. The label “lady” was no longer a fixed category of inherited rank, but could be “earned” through behavior and accomplishment. A new class consciousness was emerging from the “gentry” who distinguished themselves not only from the unlettered and uncultured working classes, but also from an aristocracy increasingly framed as degenerate, debauched, and decadent. Membership in the gentry could be derived from birth, but that was not necessarily guaranteed, and it could be acquired in other ways as long as one achieved the symbolic necessities.
Female friendship came to function as one of those symbolic necessities. Not only did the ability to create and maintain female friendships serve as a marker of being “well-connected and well-bred” but it served as a context in which the class status of potential friends could be evaluated and either judged sufficient or found wanting. This was established even in 17th century female friendship discourse in aristocratic circles, and served the emerging gentry class by creating a definition of worthiness that aligned with class sensibilities. Thus “female friendship…served contradictory feminist and patriarchal purposes” establishing gender-based bonds while drawing class-based boundaries.
One attribute of “virtuous female intimacy” was a clear distinction from the images of aberrant sexuality associated with “tribades” and inheriting suspicions of abnormal anatomy. Even as older anatomy-based theories of lesbianism were increasingly displaced and segregated to “foreign” (and especially, non-Christian) women, more local models of lesbianism were treated as a moral failing, associated with the both the lower classes and with decadent aristocrats. Advice literature warned of servants “corrupting” well-born children by “teaching” them sexual practices. 18th century literature introduces the motif of the predatory working-class woman who sexually preys on or threatens to corrupt the virtuous heroine. Certain religious sects were also suspect, especially Methodists and Catholics. (Remember this is from an English point of view.) Travel literature locates lesbian practices in the Ottoman Empire. Even in the Pirie-Woods legal case, the blame for imagining the possibility of f/f sex is assigned to a biracial Anglo-Indian girl.
Within this context, the promotion of (chaste) female friendship as restricted to the gentry is not simply a byproduct of the context in which it emerged, but an ongoing deliberate strategy to maintain it as a class marker. In Sarah Scott’s Millenium Hall, only the “ladies” who establish the hall are allowed to be “friends” while the unfortunate and working class women who are benefitted by their charity are depicted as incapable of establishing such friendships. (While primary evidence taken from working women’s lives clearly contradicts this attitude.) By the 1740s, Lanser observes, the program of using female friendship as a marker and mechanism for gentry class membership was practiced by both men and women. Rather than attacking women’s friendships, patriarchal forces took on the task of helping write the rules for how they must be enacted, shaping those rules to benefit the hetero-patriarchy. Women’s friendships could be framed as bleeding off frustration and unhappiness with the lot of woman, without challenging the causes of that situation.
Within this context, Lanser identifies three strategies used to resolve the instability of the class-sexuality intersection: re-centering sapphic relationships within a heterosexual context; deliberate “compensatory conservatism” practiced by women at risk of scrutiny; and idealization of such relationships in a way that removed them from everyday life.
Narratives of the 18th century embedded potentially sapphic relationships within heterosexual plots, as in Eliza Haywood’s The British Recluse when two women, wronged by the same man, share their stories and join their lives together. Other similar stories don’t even allow them women a resolution together, but allow their friendship to mitigate what is otherwise a tragic story. In other cases, a passionate declaration of love unto death between the women is yet set aside for a marriage plot. Such devices “domesticated” intimate female friendships as a supplement to (not a displacement of) heterosexual relations, directly parallel to the way that Cleland’s Fanny Hill offers up pornographic sapphic encounters as long as the protagonist rejects the idea that they could be as satisfying as heterosexuality. The heterosexual resolution is required in order to acknowledge, then defuse, the danger of same-sex intimacy. This diversion practice is reflected in the real-life memoirs of women lamenting that marriage resulted in the death of friendship as the friend’s attention and energy was claimed and redirected by a husband.
As this heterosexual redirection became an established motif, women who continued to resist and avoid marriage for whatever reason became more visibly “odd,” especially if co-habiting with a female friend. Here Lanser invokes the concept of “compensatory conservatism”—the idea that sapphic women (or in some cases, simply those at risk of being thought sapphic) deliberately invoked the symbols of respectability and carefully policed their public performance to deflect suspicion. Both Butler & Ponsonby and Anne Lister are excellent examples as some of the traditional signs of class status were precarious (finances for Butler & Ponsonby, ancestry for Lister) and they left copious documentation of how they managed social interactions that can be read for strategies. Butler & Ponsonby were strict about controlling social access to them, rejecting overtures from people they considered would not add to their consequence (a frequent occurrence as they were something of a “tourist destination”). Lister’s private diaries document her thoughts on the acceptability of various women as potential partners, rejecting some as “vulgar.” We also have documentation that all of them had their respectable status challenged on occasion—the Ladies when depicted in a newspaper article as something of a butch-femme couple, and Lister in regular encounters with working class men and women who commented on her “mannish” tailoring and affect. It is unlikely to be coincidental that both households expressed politically conservative views and worked to maintain a conceptual divide from the “lower classes” or even simply from those who they felt were on equally shaky social ground. In some cases, sapphically suspect women dissociated themselves not only from politically liberal principles but from feminist principles, presenting themselves as uniquely distinct from the run of femininity.
The argument that this conservative turn is specifically associated with suspect status is bolstered by comparing the behavior and writings of women in more ordinary female friendships, who are more likely to be open to social mobility and inclusiveness. It’s also bolstered by examples of how association with suspected sapphists explicitly threatens the status of their associates, as in the “sapphic epistle” threatening those who associated with Anne Damer. Avoidance behavior not only affects personal relationships but the content of women’s writing about female friendship. Lanser notes that after about 1760, the depiction of physical affection within women’s friendships is more prevalent from male authors and married female authors, but less present in the writings of unmarried women, whereas the latter are more likely to focus on the female gaze, with women admiring each other’s beauty but no longer enacting that admiration in physical terms.
The third strategy, used by writers in all categories, was to defuse the danger implied by female friendships by framing them in idealized terms: as sisterhood, as set within an imagined pastoral landscape, or as being spiritual rather than bodily (including the emerging theme of union in death rather than in life). Pastoral imagery was a prominent motif from the 17th century and continues not only in the use of classical nicknames, but in fantasizing about setting up household in a rural retreat (something the Ladies of Llangollen achieved in reality). Increasingly as the 18th century came to a close, relations framed in terms of a marriage-like arrangement were seen as suspect, to be replaced by kinship metaphors. Relationships that were performed or perceived as competing with heterosexual marriage were more likely to attract criticism, as in the case of Anne Lister’s overtly marriage-like partnership with Ann Walker. Even the much lesser degree of criticism directed at Ponsonby & Butler focused on the marriage-like symbolism of their partnership. A century earlier Queen Anne’s simultaneously intimate and political relationships with her favorites were a focus of sapphic satires. Much of the animosity against Queen Marie Antoinette took the form of criticizing relationships that were perceived as displacing the king from both her bed and government. Indeed, the increased anxiety and animosity toward sapphism (real or alleged) at the end of the 18th century was related to concerns about the influence of intimate friendships on public power. In the 1790s we see many different signs of suspicion and concern about relationships that seem to have been protected by class status previously. This is when the suggestive newspaper article about Ponsonby & Butler appears, when Hester Thrale turns her poison pen on “ladies [who] live too much together” and when St.-Méry criticizes American women for seeking pleasures with their own sex, and also when there is a wave of lesbian prosecutions in the Dutch Republic. [Note: See Van der Meer 1991 { https://alpennia.com/lhmp/publication/5384}] It is also the era when Mary Wollstonecraft, who had experienced female romance and featured it in her fiction, is found to be criticizing too great intimacies of that type.
Lanser notes that issues of class continued to impact the images of, and attitudes to, lesbians into the 20th century with working-class butch-femme culture considering itself distinct from the experiences of middle and upper class lesbians, as exemplified by Parisian salon culture of the 1920s.
Happy Big Round Number to the Lesbian Historic Motif Project!
Donoghue, Emma. 2007. “Doing Lesbian History, Then and Now” in Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques, Vol. 33, No. 1, Eighteenth-Century Homosexuality in Global Perspective: 15-22
Being a firm believer in celebrating Arbitrary Round Numbers, I determined to find something appropriate to schedule for publication #500. I'd come up with several candidates when perusing my database of publications, but when I read this article I knew I'd found my choice. As I note below, Emma Donoghue's Passions Between Women was a major inspiration for the Lesbian Historic Motif Project (along with Lillian Faderman's Surpassing the Love of Men). Although I didn't blog Passions Between Women itself until publication #100 (another case of scheduling for an Arbitrary Round Number), it was a constant presence in my mind in the decades between when I first encountered the book and when I published the first Lesbian Historic Motif Project blog back in 2014-06-09. So just as Donoghue takes this moment to reflect on where she started and where she was then (when the article was published), it makes a good publication to mark where we started and how far we've come.
Periodically I like to do a "check-in" on how I'm progressing through the blogging of publications I'd identified as potentially relevant. Currently, my database has exactly 1200 publication records. (That round number wasn't planned--I only realized it when I went to check for this write-up.) Of those, as noted, I've blogged 500. Another 107 have been flagged as not relevant after all, on consideration. (I keep them in the database because if I once thought they might be relevant, I don't want to duplicate the effort if I run into them again in someone's bibliography.) So that means I've reviewed almost exactly half of the citations I've logged. I've occasionally taken note of similar stats, so here's a comparison:
I won't do a statistical analysis projecting when I can expect to be entirely caught up, because the amount of time I have to devote to the Project has been variable. I'll also reach a point when I have a substantial residue of references that someone else has cited that I don't have access to, however interesting they might be. And as I've noted on previous occasions, there are some subjects where I'm reaching diminishing returns in terms new information from reviewing additional sources. (I strongly suspect that there's nothing more to learn about Sappho, unless someone turns up new primary source material.)
I constantly regret how skewed the Project has been toward the subjects most accessible through English-language research (and subjects of interest to those academics). When it comes to writing The Book, I'll have a focused section on the peri-Mediterranean Islamicate world and then maybe brief pointers toward information on the rest of the non-Western world, but the book's focus will necessarily be narrow (though in a way that corresponds to levels of interest in historical fiction).
I never aspired to doing new original research, simply to gather, collate, summarize, and synthesize existing reserach toward a specific and highly subjective purpose: the writing of historical fiction. So it seems fitting that the "patron saint" of my Project, if you will, is both a historian and a historical novelist.
# # #
Emma Donoghue takes the occasion of having been an invited speaker at a history conference to reflect on her own life, motivations, and accomplishments in the field of sexuality history. As such, it doesn’t present any new information but is a fun roadmap of a career (that is still in process).
[Note: Some day I would love to have Donoghue on the podcast. I once queried her agent on the occasion of a book release but got no response. I probably know someone who could put me in contact but I haven’t had the nerve to make it a serious project yet. Maybe for the 10th anniversary of the podcast. That gives me two years to work up to it.]
Donoghue’s inspiration was the initial publication of material from Anne Lister’s diaries that contradicted the accepted wisdom that there was no context for early 19th century women constructing a self-aware identity as a woman who was “too fond of women.” There was, for all practical purposes, no field of lesbian history at that time and the history of homosexuality was dominated by men.
Donoghue notes that she didn’t pursue a topic in lesbian history for her PhD, not having any confidence that she could find administrative support for it. But at the same time, she conceived of the idea of assembling a sourcebook of material on lesbian topics in Britain between 1668 and 1801. [Note: regular readers will be unsurprised that the publication of Passions Between Women in the early 1990s was a major force in the inspiration for my own project.] With no apparatus for finding relevant material directly, she cast a wide net, pursuing what might seem to be tangential topics. Rather than finding a desert, she was surprised at the volume of material that came to light, especially in the fields of medicine and journalism. She records her sense of betrayal at finding the Oxford English Dictionary’s unreliability on the usage dates for “lesbian.” The wealth of different terms for women who loved women in the long 18th century challenged the claim that such women had no context for understanding themselves as belonging to a “type” of person.
The resulting book was written in two years (during a break from her PhD), having become a personal passion project related very much to Donoghue’s own queer identity. While groundbreaking, she acknowledges that the book is very much a product of its time, existing in reaction to what came before (just as Faderman’s Surpassing the Love of Men was of its time a decade earlier and reacting to a different set of predecessors). In reacting against what she perceived as an overly uniform lesbian feminist culture of the 1990s, Donoghue emphasized variety, eccentricity, a lesbian-bisexual continuum, and aspects of sexuality (like pornography) that were considered taboo among feminist circles of the time. She also rejected the idea of conflating male and female homosexual history, seeing a need to view lesbian history from a woman-centered point of view. One aspect of the book that is very much “of its time” is the treatment of female masculinity, which was not yet informed by the work done and questions raised since then by transgender studies.
Donoghue discusses the tension between presentism [i.e., viewing the past in terms of how it relates to the present] and an excessive over-emphasis on the avoidance of anachronism only when it touches on marginalized topics, whose study is so often driven by personal connections to the material.
She concludes the article by discussing how her study of history has intertwined with her work as a historical novelist (with a side comment on how many of her historical studies have ended up involving women named Anne).
Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 320 - On the Shelf for August 2025 - Transcript
(Originally aired 2025/08/03 - listen here)
Welcome to On the Shelf for August 2025.
I have a busy month or so coming up. In about a week I’ll be heading off to the World Science Fiction Convention in Seattle. Then a couple weeks after that, I’m headed off to New Zealand for my official, if belated, retirement celebration trip.
I have a couple of things to celebrate this year at Worldcon. The most exciting is my Hugo Award nomination in the category of Best Related Work. I’m just finishing sewing my outfit for the awards ceremony and looking forward to being able to fasten the little nominee rocket pin on the lapel.
But the second exiting thing is that after several years of promising myself that I’d get my act together and publish my story collection in time for release at Worldcon, I actually did it this year! The collection is Skin-Singer: Tales of the Kaltaoven and includes all my stories from the Sword and Sorceress anthology series, plus a brand new novelette that finishes off the story arc. Official publication date is August 10 and I’ll have print copies with me at Worldcon. Skin-Singer is not historic fiction, except to the extent that the secondary world it’s set in is very, very roughly inspired by Iron Age Europe, but it does have a low-key sapphic romance that develops across the series. I’ve put a buy link in the show notes, though I’m still working on setting up with a couple of distributors.
Also on the excitement front, the Bella Books collection Whispers in the Stacks, which includes my Restoration-era short story “Bound in Bitterness” was awarded the Golden Crown Literary Society award for best fiction anthology or collection. So all in all, exciting times.
It's the time of year when I need to decide about whether to continue the podcast fiction series for another year. This year is the first time when finances are a consideration, what with the whole retirement thing. Although the Lesbian Historic Motif Project has a Patreon, it doesn’t raise anywhere near enough to cover story royalties, much less narrators’ fees. I’ve never wanted to tie the fiction series directly to fundraising, but I don’t feel able to continue funding it out-of-pocket indefinitely. But here’s the deal. I like round numbers, so I’ll commit to running the fiction series for another two years, to bring it to an even ten. But unless something changes drastically on the funding support, that will be it. I’ll update the Call for Submissions soon, but it will be functionally identical to last year, in case you want to get started.
Publications on the Blog
When blogging publications for the Project, I didn’t quite match last month’s count of 15 separate items, but I did manage 11 this month. After posting the 5 that I currently have queued up, I’m going to take a bit of a break, partly due to the upcoming travel, and partly because I need to spend time on some other writing projects.
This month, aside from a couple of articles on random topics—Ula Lukszo Klein’s “Busty Buccaneers and Sapphic Swashbucklers,” Tess Wingard’s “The Trans Middle Ages,” and Jonathan Katz’s Gay American History—I fell into a pattern of pairs of related articles. I finished up the research for the Sexology podcast with Allida Black’s “Perverting the Diagnosis: The Lesbian and the Scientific Basis of Stigma” and George Chauncey’s “From Inversion to Homosexuality: Medicine and the Changing Conceptualization of Female Deviance.” Then a pair on linguistics: Paula Blank’s “The Proverbial ‘Lesbian’: Queering Etymology in Contemporary Critical Practice” and an early discussion of a 10th century use of “lesbian” in a homosexual sense, Albio Cesare Cassio’s “Post-Classical Λεσβίας.” Next a pair of articles on 18th century author Eliza Haywood by Catherine Ingrassia: “Fashioning Female Authorship in Eliza Haywood’s ‘The Tea-Table’” and “’Queering’ Eliza Haywood.” And finishing with two items from a special journal volume on the Bluestockings: Nicole Pohl’s “A Bluestocking Historiography” and Susan Lanser’s “Bluestocking Sapphism and the Economies of Desire.”
Book Shopping!
No new book shopping for the Project, though I did pick up a fascinating history of women’s detachable pockets.
Recent Lesbian/Sapphic Historical Fiction
Looking at the new fiction spreadsheet, I have startlingly few books to announce this month. These things come in waves: with some months very full and others not, but I worry that the books are out there and I’m just not finding them through my usual avenues. In particular, I’d expect more indie books than I’m currently seeing, and since I mostly have to rely on Amazon keyword searches for those, I’m concerned that the algorithms may be failing me. Once again, I’ll remind people that dropping me a note about your upcoming book, or pointing me to book you’ve heard about can mean the difference in whether they get included or not.
It appears—maybe—that the flood of cookie-cutter series books that have hallmarks of AI generation has slowed, at least for historicals. A listener helpfully pointed out a couple titles that had made it through my filtering process, which is a hazard of trying not to be overly paranoid. I won’t intentionally promote a book generated using large language models, but we know that there’s no perfect way of detecting it.
So here are the 5 new titles I found since last month.
June gives us The Painter's Palette (The Legacy Lane Series #2) by Gina Everleigh. The series is all queer focused, but this is the only f/f title. The stories have cross-time plots, with the current inhabitants of Legacy Lane turning up evidence of older lives.
When restoration artist Jax Miller returns to his hometown to settle his late aunt’s estate, he expects a quick trip and a quiet goodbye. Instead, he uncovers a hidden mural behind the town hall’s walls—vivid portraits of forbidden love, erased by time and prejudice. As Jax peels away the layers, he stumbles upon something far more personal: a link to his own fractured family history.
With the help of Emma Winters, the town’s historical society director, Jax begins to unravel the mural’s story—and his own. A surprise email from the mural’s mysterious artist, long-lost family secrets, and letters from the 1920s ignite a search for truth that challenges everything Jax thought he knew.
As Jax uncovers the courage of those who came before him, he must decide whether to step into the light of his legacy—or leave it hidden forever.
There’s also one July book that turned up in this month’s search: The Needfire by M.K. Hardy from Solaris Books. I’m not entirely certain of the date of the setting, though the cover art suggests maybe late Victorian, which fits with the gothic mood.
You are afraid of the border places. You are afraid of the fork in the road.
Fleeing her mistakes in Glasgow for a marriage of convenience, Norah Mackenzie’s new home on an estate far in the north of Scotland is a chance for freedom, a fresh start. But in the dim, draughty corridors of Corrain House, something is very wrong. Despite their warm correspondence, her distant, melancholic husband does not seem to know her. She is plagued by ghost ships on the sea, spectres at the corner of her eye, by winding, grasping roots. Her only possible companion, the housekeeper Agnes Gunn, is by turns unnerving and alluring, and harbours uncanny secrets of her own.
As the foundations crumble beneath her feet, Norah must uncover the truth about Corrain House, her husband, Agnes, and herself, if she is to find the freedom she has been chasing.
August gives us three titles. The Worst Spy in London (The Luckiest With Love #2) by Anne Knight is another series where the previous book is not sapphic.
Damaris Dunham doesn't understand what all the fuss about love and marriage is all about. Annette de Morand is aching for a chance to show her love for Damaris, but knows it can never be.
When the two young women discover a secret plot to further Napoleon's cause against the English crown, they band together to defeat the threat. As the conspiracy grows more dangerous, they both realize it's not the only threat--their hearts are on the line, too.
You almost expect a book with “heiress” in the title to be a Regency Romance, but The Unexpected Heiress by Cassidy Crane from Bold Strokes Books is set during the Depression—a time when an inheritance would definitely be a plus.
All Clara Cooper wants is something exciting to happen to her for a change. She chafes against the constraints of her society, which would rather see her married off than achieve her artistic dreams. A surprise inheritance turns her life on its head, opening doors she’d never dreamed of.
Addie Barnes is nothing if not pragmatic. Getting by on nothing but her wits and her looks, she turns her savvy eye to Clara and her secret fortune. If she can become Clara’s companion, she’ll be set for life. She initially sees Clara as a means to an end, but as their connection deepens, she grapples with conflicting emotions.
Amidst the tumultuous backdrop of the Great Depression, can they find redemption and love in the face of adversity?
It feels like there’s quite a fashion lately for books re-telling versions of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Rappaccini’s Daughter. This Vicious Hunger by Francesca May from Orbit Books is at least very reminiscent of that story about a poison garden and the woman who tends it.
Thora Grieve finds herself destitute and an outcast after the sudden death of her husband, but a glimmer of hope arrives when a family friend offers her the chance to study botany under the tutelage of a famed professor. Once at the university, Thora becomes entranced by a mysterious young woman, Olea, who emerges each night to tend to the plants in the private garden below Thora's window.
Hungry for connection, Thora befriends Olea through the garden gate and their relationship quickly and intensely blossoms. Thora throws herself into finding a cure for the ailment confining Olea to the garden and sinks deeper into a world of beauty, poison, and obsession. Thora has finally found the freedom to pursue her darkest desires, but will it be worth the price?
What Am I Reading?
And what have I been reading? I could have sworn that I read more than two books in the last month—and one of them more like a novelette. But evidently not. At least they were both sapphic and historical.
The Tapestry of Time by Kate Heartfield is a historic fantasy set during World War II focused around the war efforts of a family with various psychic powers who are connected in some way to the Bayeux Tapestry. Told through multiple viewpoints, the novel gradually builds up a fragmentary picture of how all the parts relate until it all comes together. There’s a fair amount of violence and peril, as one might expect in a wartime espionage story. Heartfield writes dense, twisty books that can take some concentration but I’ve enjoyed every one that I’ve tackled.
Murder by Post by Rachel Ford introduces her detective couple, Meredith and Alec Thatch, set in the wake of World War I in England. Alec is passing as a man in order for them to marry, but is not presented as transgender as far as I can tell. This adds an extra element of risk and danger when the resident of a neighboring flat is found dead with signs of poison. This is a classic cozy-style mystery, with lots of clues and red herrings, allowing the reader to think just one step ahead of the characters. This initial story—really just a novelette—is free on the author’s website. I hope that some day she’ll decide to release the rest of the series more widely than just Kindle Unlimited. It deserves a wider audience.
Show Notes
In this episode we talk about:
Links to the Lesbian Historic Motif Project Online
Links to Heather Online
A look at female relations within Bluestocking circles and what sorts of evidence exist that some relations were queerer than others.
Lanser, Susan S. 2002. “Bluestocking Sapphism and the Economies of Desire” in Huntington Library Quarterly, Vol. 65, No. 1/2, Reconsidering the Bluestockings: 257-275
This article examines the question “were the Bluestockings queer?” Also the converse “were Bluestocking and ‘lesbian’ mutually contradictory?” On the Bluestocking side, Lanser places 5 women generally considered the movers and shakers: Elizabeth Robinson Montagu, Elizabeth Carter, Catherine Talbot, Hester Mulso Chapone, and Sarah Robinson Scott. The Bluestockings weren’t a clearly defined group and membership was sometimes assigned from outside, rather than being a self-identification—a process in which historians have participated. (The article goes into some of the complexities of how either their contemporaries or historians have sorted out the question.) When it comes to a question of how scholars have considered the potential queerness of Bluestockings, the same reflex towards protection that the Bluestockings themselves exhibited can come into play, with scholars arguing that the close friendships among Bluestocking women cannot be considered sapphic as they did not avoid friendships with men, their friendships were not exclusive, and that the sometimes passionate language they used toward each other was simply the ordinary way women expressed themselves at the time.
Lanser points out that in the 18th century a distinction was beginning to appear between “chaste female intimacies” and problematic relationships, and that the Bluestockings used stereotypes of class and gender to keep their own friendships within the “acceptable” group. What Lanser challenges is whether that line of acceptability is aligned with a line between sapphic and non-sapphic, or whether we can identify evidence for a middle space where relationships could be primary and potentially erotic while still being treated as within acceptable bounds.
As examples, Lanser offers the relationship between Sarah Scott and Barbara Montagu that was acknowledged as significant by their contemporaries. The question of whether it could have been erotic runs up against the “extraordinary evidence” fallacy. If a similar relationship had existed between a man and woman, it would be assumed to have a sexual component even without a shred of evidence, but between two women, positive evidence is demanded. Positive evidence for sexual relationships is rarely forthcoming for any historic individuals, aside from pregnancy. Anne Lister is an incredibly rare exception in the candidness (and survival) of her diaries. Even Butler and Ponsonby—considered by their contemporaries to have been a married couple—left no positive evidence of a sexual relationship, despite recording that they shared a bed their entire lives. When looking for sapphic relationships in history, Lanser argues, we need to stop expecting or demanding proof of sex.
If that standard is adopted—i.e., that a range of erotic possibilities always exist—then we can more equitably compare how Bluestockings managed their potentially erotic relationships with both men and women. When compared to the generality of women of their era, most of the Bluestockings were clearly more invested in primary relationships with women than the average woman was, or than they were invested in relationships with men. And for those Bluestockings where this wasn’t the case, as with Hester Chapone, we can compare how Chapone wrote about her female friendships compared to how other, more-invested Bluestockings wrote. Lanser goes into some detail making these comparisons and identifies systematic differences in intensity and tone.
Focusing specifically on Sarah Scott and Barbara Montagu, she notes their long cohabitation, combined finances, and perhaps most tellingly, cautionary letters from Elizabeth Montagu alluding to a different female couple, saying “those sorts of reports hurt us all…one cannot have men intimates and at this rate the women are more scandalous…I cannot think what [the female couple] can mean by making such a parade of their affection.” (Somewhat confusingly, Elizabeth Montagu is Sarah Scott’s sister and is not closely related in any way to Barbara Montagu, as far as I can tell.) So there was clearly an awareness that the public affection between two women could reclassify their relationship as suspect. Other references in Scott’s correspondence suggest an active managing of how people perceived their relationship, and Lanser suggests that the avoidance of a degree of verbal and physical affection between the protagonists of Scott’s Millenium Hall that would have been expected and normal between women of that era may be another sign of overcompensating out of concern for how her own relationship might be perceived.
Bluestocking friendships were performed in a variety of ways. The one between Elizabeth Montagu and Elizabeth Carter played out through letters and temporary visits, not cohabitation, and appears to have received less scrutiny, despite the intensity of emotion that Montagu’s letters convey. Carter, on the other hand, recorded her “passion” (using that word) for writer Catherine Talbot, and their letters expressed deep frustration with their inability to spend more time together.
Examining the language in these several correspondences, Lanser identifies several strategies they used to manage the expression of their desires. A significant method was to create an imagined time and place when they could be together—a reality often frustrated by finances and family obligations. There is also an emphasis on “signs and tokens” of the relationship—ways of connecting through shared objects (including the letters themselves, but also keepsakes) or shared parallel activities (such as reading the same book). The third method is a displacement of bodily connection from pleasure to distress. The letters rarely express appreciation or desire for the other’s physical body, but frequently reference shared or empathized pain and illness.
What is solidly absent from the correspondence of these women is any sort of longing or regret for men in their lives (and several were, at some point, married). Well before meeting Talbot, Carter expressed a disinclination—indeed a horror—for ever marrying. And she had repeated close attachments to women throughout her life, complaining when she “loses” them to marriage. After they had become a couple, Talbot would tease her about “falling in love” with other women.
In conclusion, Lanser suggests (referencing another article of hers, that I have now moved up in the queue) that the reputation Bluestockings had for virtue and propriety, rather than being in conflict with sapphic desires, could have been over compensation—performing conservatism in order to deflect suspicion from the ways in which they departed from acceptable behavior.
I've blogged several articles on sapphic aspects of Bluestocking culture over the years. Since I was blogging a different article in this special issue on Bluestockings, I figured I'd include this general introduction to their history as well. (I confess that I have something of a "thing" for brainy women in women-centered historic contexts.)
Pohl, Nicole, and Betty A. Schellenberg. 2002. “Introduction: A Bluestocking Historiography” in Huntington Library Quarterly, vol. 65, no. 1/2, pp. 1–19.
This is a high-level overview of the English Bluestocking movement(?), as part of a special volume of Huntington Library Quarterly on “Reconsidering the Bluestockings.” As such, it doesn’t touch much on specifically sapphic topics, but provides a useful context for various individual Bluestockings.
The article starts off with two quotes, roughly contemporary with the heyday of the Bluestockings: one from Elizabeth Montagu talking about how wonderful the experience is, one by Frances Burney semi-satirizing Montagu’s autocratic rule over her circle. These serve to illustrate the poles of opinion about the group.
The Bluestockings were informal salons, including both sexes (though generally organized and presided over by women), primarily drawn from the gentry and upper classes (though professing social equality). Their goal was education, intellectual conversation, and engaging in polite socializing. The peculiarly English character of this movement rested, in part, on its conservative Anglican foundations.
Not all Bluestocking salons were as rigidly hierarchical as Montagu’s, as Montagu herself noted with respect to those of her friend Elizabeth Vesey. But rumors of factional competition within the movement were often fictions invented due to anxieties about women’s prominence in the movement and the widening of women’s social roles in general in the 18th century.
The name “Bluestocking” has been traced originally to an incident during the “Little Parliament” in 1653 in reference to the simple dress of some members, but was taken up in the 18th century in reference to one Mr. Stillingfleet who, having turned down an invitation to one of Vesey’s gatherings due to not being in the habit of dressing up, was told “Come in your blue stockings!” as the garment was still a symbol of informal dress. In the 1750s and 1760s the term became common for certain salon circles in London, Bath, and Dublin. Originally informal afternoon receptions, they evolved around principles of merit-based invitations resulting in a certain limited social mobility, equality between the sexes, and intellectual conversation. In common with the French salon tradition, they were organized and presided over by female hosts.
By the 1770s, the term Bluestocking increasingly came to refer only to female members of the salons and began having a negative tinge, especially when used by those who felt excluded. A second generation of hosts arose, including a few men. In addition to in-person gatherings, Bluestocking culture was maintained by large quantities of correspondence among the members. The expansion of membership helped lead to the application of the term Bluestocking to any intellectual woman. But in the anti-intellectual backlash in reaction to the French Revolution in the 1790s, the term acquired a much more negative sense, as intellectual and politically active women came to be associated with dangerous radicalism. In a general sense, the word continued in active use into the first decades of the 19th century for intellectual and literary women, but with an air of social privilege and conservatism.
Taken as a whole, “Bluestocking” covered a wide range of practices and attitudes, but certain progressions can be identified. The early Bluestockings took a socially progressive approach, though still from a position of aristocracy, addressing what they considered corrupt and libertine practices at court. Though channeled through female leadership, they took a gender-essentialist view that “feminization” was a civilizing force. But this left them open to the reverse charge: that they supported “effeminacy” in public life. The tightrope balance between these two positions meant that even as Bluestockings supported greater education and opportunities for women, they felt the need to enforce rigid standards of respectability and morality, especially around sexual issues. Moving into the 19th century, this led to an emphasis on Christian philanthropy, to some extent ceding the literary and artistic field to the masculine-coded Romantic movement.
As the Bluestockings moved into the realm of history, there was a tendency for specific participants to be singled out as noteworthy, while the movement as a whole was marginalized. (And at this point, the article moves on to the historiography of the Bluestockings, rather than their actual history, followed by a summary of the volume’s other contents.)
This publication is wildly out of order in the numbering system for logistical reasons. Specifically: It had a lot of primary source quotations which I was mining for my vocabulary project, which took quite a while to process. It didn't make sense to read through it to create a blog entry then come back to process the vocabulary. But in order to create the entries in the vocabulary database, I needed to assign it a LHMP publication number. So I've been posting a bunch of later numbers while working my way thorugh the data entry for this one. More details than you wanted to know! I still have a large backlog of earlier material to process for the vocabulary project. (The hazard of adding sub-tasks to the Project.) But it's more practical to make sure I process the current publications as I post them.
Katz, Jonathan. 1978. Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. Avon Books, New York. ISBN 0-380-40550-4
This is a collection of excerpts from historic sources related to homosexuality in America. As with other publications of this sort, I’m mostly going to be cataloging the items of interest. Although it’s a very thick little paperback, the lesbian content is sparse. In fact, Katz notes, “In the present volume, Lesbian-related material is dispersed unequally within the parts, and not always readily identifiable by title—thus difficult to locate at a glance. For this reason, a female sign [i.e., the “Venus” symbol] is here placed beside the title of each text containing the most substantial references to women-loving women.” While this tagging doesn’t cover all the lesbian-related material, it provides me with a convenient way of skimming the rest.
The material is organized in thematic groups, and then chronologically within each group.
Trouble: 1566-1966
Treatment: 1884-1974
Passing Women 1782-1920
(For this section, rather than listing by the author of the text, I’ll list by the names(s) of the subject unless not provided.)
Native Americans: 1528-1976
Resistance: 1859-1972
Love: 1779-1932
The collected skin-singer stories are now on their way to publication! I just pushed the buttons for the ebook and POD versions at Draft2Digital a few minutes ago. (I need to set up Kindle separately, so I haven't done that quite yet.) Official release date will be August 10 (assuming I did that correctly at the website).
This is my first professional (i.e., for-sale) self-published fiction, so I've been picking up a lot of new skills and experiences along the way. I worked with a fabulous cover artist: The Illustrated Page Book Design (Sarah Waites).
Next steps are to set up distribution for Kindle. (For various logistical reasons, as advised by more experienced people, everything is simpler if I do that separately from D2D.) Also look into distributing through at least one other outlet that D2D doesn't handle. Eventually I should set up a direct sale apparatus on my website, but that will take consultation with my web designers. I also plan to record it for audiobook.
Once I have buy links available, they will of course be added.