Skip to content Skip to navigation

LHMP

Blog entry

Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 334 - Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast Episode 334 – Fiction Double-Header: Down By the Tumbling Stream by E C Hallewell & Where You Go by Jennifer Nestojko - transcript

(Originally aired 2026/01/31 - listen here)

Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 333 - Our F/Favorite Tropes Part 19: Age Gap - transcript

(Originally aired 2026/01/17 - listen here)

I confess this is going to be a bit skimpier than my usual trope episodes. I had planned an entirely different topic for this month’s show, but it’s turning out to be far more involved and elaborate than originally intended. And on top of that I’m about to be traveling for a couple weeks, so I needed something I could put together quickly without a lot of background research.

Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 332 - On the Shelf for January 2026 - Transcript

(Originally aired 2026/01/03)

Welcome to On the Shelf for January 2026.

This poetic genre looks fascinating, with complex social dynamics in its composition and reception. I really do need to track down the book by Ruth Vanita that's  evidently the main source for this article.

It's hard to tell whether the content in this article is thin because there isn't much to say or because of the overall superficiality of the work. I'm guessing the latter, as other articles and books I've found on India have been richer.

Fiction isn't necessarily a good guide to how a culture thinks about sex and gender--indeed, in some cases social anxieties are worked out in fiction in ways that would not be tolerated in real life--but it can be a space where we see the culture thinking about the subject. This medieval Japanese tale gets even more convoluted than the most extreme of Shakespeare's cross-gender plots.

I can't say I'm disappointed in how skimpy this article was on f/f issues,  but only because I had very low expectations to begin with.

Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 331 – Jane Austen Birthday Celebration - transcript

(Originally aired 2025/12/20)

Given that most academic work on same-sex sexuality comes out of a western framework, it made sense to include this article in my focus group on non-western cultures. Rupp asks some incisive questions that problematize the question of whether there can ever be a unified filed of "same-sex sexuality."

If you wanted a great, compact one-stop overview of lesbian-relevant history in Early Modern Europe, I don't know that I could improve on this article. In an odd way, that makes it very hard to summarize because it is, itself, a summary. There's no content in this article that I haven't already blogged in the context of more focused articles, so I won't even try. But I wanted to give it a shout-out as doing an excellent job of what it set out to do.

Pages

Subscribe to LHMP