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Sometimes, when I've done a podcast episode on a topic, I tend to deprioritize other publications on that topic in order to keep myself fresh with new material. And there are some topics where there's so many publications that each one adds relatively little new information, so I'd rather focus on expanding the overall content. But sometimes its just worth getting caught up on various topics that aren't "top priority" simply because they're there in the to-do folder. Which is why I'm currently working through a number of journal articles that fall in the aforementioned categories.

While I cast about for an organizing theme for the next bout of LHMP blogging, I think I'll do some housecleaning on loose threads in the files, like this book which simply gets a note that--however intriguing the title--is not useful for lesbian topics.

Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 323 - On the Shelf for September 2025 - Transcript

(Originally aired 2025/09/06 - listen here)

Welcome to On the Shelf for September 2025.

As I mentioned in passing previously, I've decided to continue the podcast fiction series for another two years before putting the project to bed. This year's Call for Submissions if functionally identical to last year's.

Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 324 - Emma Stebbins Exhibition Interview - transcript

(Originally aired 2025/09/20 - listen here)

[This episode is an interview with Heckscher Museum curator Karli Wurzelbacher about her upcoming exhibition of the work of American sculptor Emma Stebbins. A transcript will be posted when available.]

Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 322 – An Encounter With a Lady by Catherine Lundoff - transcript

(Originally aired 2025/08/29 - listen here)

Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 321 – Our F/Favorite Tropes Part 18: Mutually Oblivious - transcript

(Originally aired 2025/08/16 - listen here)

This article feels a bit oddly structured, as if three topics have been picked out of a hat and then a thesis was constructed to connect them. But it adds another angle on the topic of "how things changed" around 1900.

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.

In the 16th century, a handful of (male) French anatomists "discovered" the clitoris. And then things get really strange.

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