Heather Rose Jones's Blog, page 7

June 19, 2025

Everything New is Old Again

Thursday, June 19, 2025 - 08:00 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

I started some comments to put in this blog section of the post, then realized they fit better into the "Introduction" part of the publication record. So I'm left with nothing of substance to say here. Some day I should post a blog showing the underlying data structure of the Project so that this sort of thing makes sense to readers. (Assuming anyone cares.)

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP LHMP #491c Cleves 2014 Charity & Sylvia Chapter 3 & 4 About LHMP Full citation: 

Cleves, Rachel Hope. 2014. Charity & Sylvia: A Same-Sex Marriage in Early America. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-933542-8

Chapter 3 & 4

I have become fascinated with the cyclicity of historical trends--not necessarily the "big stuff" like wars and forms of government, but the way certain concepts and reactions cycle over and over again, in different forms, but with similar shapes and consequence-chains. We see this in Valerie Traub's idea of "cycles of salience" where specific manifestations of female homoeroticism have dominated social awareness at different times. We see this in the "waves" of feminism, which began long before "first wave" feminism, where women agitate against the specific injustices of their time, make progress to address those injustices, then are hit by backlash that recurs in similar forms, time and time again.

Today's chapters from Charity and Sylvia touch on one of those cycles: the "generation gap" (my label, not the author's). Some sort of social or political disruption occurs that leads a younger generation to have sufficiently different understandings of society that disrupts the idea of learning from and following the lead of the older generation. I'm not talking about a constant background radiation of "kids these days!" but the points at which a generation has literally grown up in an entirely different world from their parents, affecting expectations and assumptions. For Charity and Sylvia, that disruption was the American Revolution, not only due to the physical and economic hardship, but because of embracing the principles that you didn't have to accept "the way things are." That you can make drastic changes in your relationship to authority structures. Authority structures like family hierarchies.

One of the pervasive threads in this book--and an aspect of history that can be hard for modern people to grasp entirely--was the essential interconnectedness of communities. For queer people, that interconnectedness has often been a threat: the need to hide or conform in order to not lose that essential economic stability the community and family provide. The quintessential American archetype of the independent loner who rejects society's demands has always been mostly an illusion. When Sylvia's brother struck out for the "wilds" of Vermont, his success was not that of an independent loner, but of someone who identified key social structures and wove himself into them. (Marrying the boss's daughter has always been a useful strategy.) and when he achieved that success, his first thought was to pull in the loosened strands of his family and weave them back into cloth again.

Charity's family was badly disrupted by autocratic and controling parents, with the result that their children took any opportunity to get out from under their thumb. (A "generation gap" that might have been harder to implement without the general atmosphere of liberatoin.) But those threads were still tangled. Charity's professional life was made possible by the anchors of various siblings who hosted her during her teaching years, allowing her to move between communities while still being tied to them. On the other side, for a single woman to be able to make a living as a teacher was made possible by significant attitude shifts regarding public education that emerged out of the Enlightenment and the disruption of Colonial era attitudes toward the relationship between government and the public good.

Did Charity and Sylvia come to the conclusion that their fantasy of a female "marriage" was possible because of those disruptions to social patterns? It's always hard to distinguish the larger patterns from the particular cases. In several places, Cleves draws parallels between Charity & Sylvia and the similar relationshps of Ponsonby & Butler and Lister & Walker. Yes, they lived in a similar era, but their socio-political contexts were quite different. To what extent is it reasonable to consider them part of a larger pattern of queer possibility and to what extent is the urge toward queer partnerships a constant with individual cases popping into visibility for random reasons and then given undue weight because of that visibility?

Ok, I'm starting to ramble now. But since one of the goals of the Project is to identify larger patterns in history that can help root characters and stories into the particularity of a time and place, these questions are always on my mind.

# # #

Chapter 3: O the Example! 1787

The Revolution had inspired something of a “generation gap” as younger people took seriously the ideals of liberty and independence and were less inclined to reflexively bow to parental and employer authority. Another legacy of the Revolution was the valorization of intimate same-sex friendships among both men and women. These friendships had the potential to displace the familial bonds that had previously been the essential basis for economic success. Such friendships had the same potential as m/f relationships for both joy and tragic break-ups. One of Charity’s brothers suffered greatly from the destruction of one such friendship, which may have affected some of her ambivalence about intimate relationships.

Another of her brothers also had an intimate friendship with that same man, and there was conflict between the brothers over contrasting loyalties. [Note: Although the author doesn’t make the connection at this point, these close same-sex friendships may have been a model for Charity’s own socializing later. Also note: I’m using “intimate friendship” in the sense of a highly particular, intensely emotional bond, without necessarily implying an erotic component.]

Resistance to parental attempts to dictate their lives led to most of Charity’s siblings eventually distancing themselves from their father and step-mother. Her sisters struggled harder to find a path other than marriage. One had poetic aspirations, but chose marriage at 20. Another married even younger. Both moved away from the family neighborhood at marriage. That left Charity as the only child at home at age 15. Charity clashed regularly with her stepmother, perhaps over her distaste for the endless housework, preferring literary activities. These gave her a common focus for close friendships with other young women in the community.

At age 20, after a conflict with her father, he threw Charity out of the house and she went to live with one of her married sisters. In the next decade, Charity moved between several communities, living with relatives, and formed a number of close friendships with women who were drawn by her intellect and bold spirit. But the admiration she attracted also sparked gossip and tension within those communities.

 

Chapter 4: Mistress of a School 1797

Charity worked as a school teacher, which fit well with her skills and interests, though she had a low opinion of many of her students. Like several of her siblings, she was a poet. At first, she boarded with her sister Anna. After some problems with gossip (more on which later), and a minor medical crisis, she moved back in with her parents until that became untenable. Then she went to live with a brother in western Massachusetts, where she resumed teaching.  Then back to join Anna in a different locations. Despite these various moves and occasional breaks from teaching, the profession gave her freedom and economic independence, if not a very substantial income.

Post-revolutionary America encouraged general education, creating new employment opportunities for educated women (as they could be paid less than male teachers). Young female teachers often wrote about their “liberty” from parental oversight and restrictions (and the expectation of domestic labor if they remained at home).

Charity became a prolific letter writer, as well as a poet, often describing her life in dramatic and sentimental terms, as if narrating a novel.

She often wrote poems as gifts to friends, and was considered talented. She and her correspondents sometimes had pet names for each other used in their letters.

In her writing, Charity praised the virtues of modesty and sincerity, though she didn’t always recognize her own failings in those areas. Others viewed her pride and self-confidence as deviating from feminine ideals.

Time period: 18th c19th cPlace: USAEvent / person: Charity Bryant & Sylvia Drake View comments (0)
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Published on June 19, 2025 09:23

June 18, 2025

Building a Picture of a Queer Life

Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 08:00 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

Cleve's biography of Charity and Sylvia takes an approach that both makes the book more readable and requires the audience to read critically. In order to fill in the background and the silences of their lives, we get a lot of general historical details that help make sense of the decisions and actions of their families. But in order to try to contextualize their emotional lives, we also get a lot of interpolation from other lives. "Here is this thing that someone else felt; they could have felt this too." We know that this person was writing poetry about love between women in England at the same era, they might possibly have been familiar with it." Interspersed with quotations from their surviving correspondence, we also get descriptions of things they are asserted to have done, thought, and felt that are not cited to a specific source and that I interpret as being drawn from the author's imagination. I'm of two minds about this approach. One the one hand, it makes for a clearer storyline, in the same way that tv or movie presentations of people's lives fill in or omit details, or rearrange timelines, in order to present a more coherent story. But as someone who is looking for the verifiable facts of history in order to better be able to do similar extrapolations, I'd rather have a clear distinction made in my history books between fact and imagination.

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP LHMP #491b Cleves 2014 Charity & Sylvia Chapter 1 & 2 About LHMP Full citation: 

Cleves, Rachel Hope. 2014. Charity & Sylvia: A Same-Sex Marriage in Early America. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-933542-8

Chapter 1 & 2

Chapter 1: A Child of Melancholy 1777

Charity’s mother died of consumption shortly after Charity’s birth in 1777, in the middle of the Revolutionary War. She was the last of 10 children. Death haunted the family with three of Charity’s grandparents and her oldest brother also dying within the same 2-year period.

Charity felt the absence of her mother keenly (as documented in poems on the subject), despite never having known her. Charity was named for a “spinster” aunt, famed as a seamstress, who may have served as something of a role model. Both due to her mother’s illness during pregnancy and the lack of mother’s milk, Charity was a sickly infant and considered unlikely to survive. She was supported through it by a hired nurse who became a family friend, and by the care of a slightly older sister, Anne. Charity’s father remarried (the date of the marriage is not given here) but her stepmother evidently had little affection for her.

Chapter 2: Infantile Days 1784

Sylvia’s childhood was a contrast to Charity’s. She had a loving mother and family, neither war nor illness devastated the family, but the disruptions of the Revolution did leave them bankrupt and homeless. (In contrast, Charity’s family was well off.) Like Charity, Sylvia was the youngest of a large family.

[Note: The book often digs deeply into the historic context of the women’s lives, as with the post-war economic crisis in Massachusetts. There is also a lot of social history background to provide context for how people understood the women’s lives and affections. I’m not going to take notes on those aspects in detail, but simply stick to the outlines of the couple’s lives.]

The town Sylvia’s family lived in was poor and crime-ridden. When her grandfarther’s death meant selling off their property to settle debts, the family split up to live with or work for various relations. Because of Sylvia’s youth, she stayed with her mother and invented fantasies in her poetry of the comfortable togetherness that she had never actually known.

One of her brothers moved to Vermont for better opportunities and found trhem in plenty, marrying his employer’s daughter and becoming a land holder. This allowed him to invite the rest of the family to join him (except for the father, who died on the journey). Vermont was far less developed than Massachusetts, providing more opportunities for men, but fewer for women.

Time period: 18th c19th cPlace: USAMisc tags: female co-habitationemotional /romantic bonds between womenlove poetrymarriage resistanceromantic friendshipEvent / person: Charity Bryant & Sylvia Drake View comments (0)
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Published on June 18, 2025 08:59

June 17, 2025

America's Answer to Anne Lister?

Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 17:00 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

I'm blogging a new book starting today, which will probably run for about ten days worth of posts. The early 19th century romance of Charity and Sylvia is "unique" only in how well documented it was, due to both being prolific correspondents, both being poets (a context for recording their emotional lives in more detail than might otherwise have happened), and due to their families being supportive enough of their "marriage" to have turned their papers over to a local historian rather than destroying them (though much of their correspondence had been destroyed at various crucial points in their lives). Like many other iconic f/f couples, studying their lives is important not simply for the particularity, but also for what it says about the possibilities for women generally. (And--as with Anne Lister--for the incidental documentation of a wider informal network of women whose romantic interests were for other women.)

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP LHMP #491a Cleves 2014 Charity & Sylvia Preface About LHMP Full citation: 

Cleves, Rachel Hope. 2014. Charity & Sylvia: A Same-Sex Marriage in Early America. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-933542-8

Preface

The book opens with a description of a pair of cut silhouettes, framed with a lock of hair and labeled with the names of the two women. There follows an overview of their lives (which are then covered in much more detail in the chapters). Both women had determined not to marry. Both came from large families, though of different character. They met in 1807 and set up a household together where the continued as an acknowledged couple for 44 years. All their neighbors and relatives knew they were a couple and used the language of marriage for them, though the law treated them as two single women, e.g., for tax purposes. They lived gender-coded roles, with Charity taking on the husband-coded activities and Sylvia the wife-coded ones. After death, their relatives buried them together with a single headstone.

The author asserts that their sexuality must have been an “open secret” as “marriage was considered an inherently sexual institution.” In small communities, social harmony relied on people quietly overlooking facts that would disrupt society. And it may be noteworthy that female couples of that era usually dreamed of rural retreats rather than longing for urban anonymity. Charity and Sylvia’s lives were deeply intertwined with their families and community. They were accepted even when not entirely approved of. They were active with church and charities, supported their relations in sickness and hardship, and supported the local economy in the structure of their tailoring business. They were considered pillars of the community. Their remarkable union was even documented in a newspaper during their lifetimes, though without giving their names.

Charity (the elder) had numerous romantic relationships with women before meeting Sylvia, and her earlier life was the subject of gossip and rumor. Perhaps for that reason, she arranged for most of her writings, memoirs, and letters written to intimate friends to be destroyed. Sylvia, who survived her, had no such attitude and preserved all their documents after Charity’s death, though some items may have been weeded out. After Sylvia’s death, their papers were given to a local historian.

Stories like this one emphasize how spotty the historic record is for f/f couples, as so many women did destroy their papers (or their surviving relatives destroyed them out of a concern for the family’s reputation).

This introductory chapter concludes with a review of the available documentation.

[Note: A couple of observations that apply to the entire book. The chapters are numerous but very short, which is why I’ll be clustering them for the blog. Cleves often assigns thoughts, feelings, reactions, and actions to her subjects that are note cited to specific documentation, but neither are they explicitly framed as rooted in the author’s imagination. It is sometimes difficult to tell when she is speculating and when she may be summarizing actual data that isn’t supported by quoted material. She brings in contextual material about female same-sex relationships that are more explicit regarding sexuality, such as details from the lives of Anne Lister and from Addie Brown and Rebecca Primus, then speculates that Charity and her various intimate friends may have engaged in similar practices. These approaches make for better storytelling and provide a richer picture of what their lives may have been, but at the expense of historical clarity. The undiscerning reader can easily come away with the impression that these various interpolations are factual rather than imaginative.]

Time period: 18th c19th cPlace: USAMisc tags: female co-habitationemotional /romantic bonds between womenlove poetrymarriage resistanceromantic friendshipEvent / person: Charity Bryant & Sylvia Drake View comments (0)
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Published on June 17, 2025 17:42

June 16, 2025

A Plethora of Gender and Sexuality Categories in 18th C America

Monday, June 16, 2025 - 07:00 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

Sometimes I envision a broad-scope historical understanding of the dynamics of gender and sexuality as being like a collage of scraps of colored paper. Each individual book or article has a specific take on the question, and they don't always align with each other, but as each is pasted in place, a larger picture develops that is independent of the precise nature of each piece of paper. And--of course--I must never lose sight of the fact that the person pasting them in place (that is, me) has a vision for the overall work that affects how the collage is put together. History is never simple and coherent. We must move back and forth between standing at a distance to see that composed picture and zooming in to read the writing on the individual scraps.

With this post, I'm caught up on the rather large set of articles I'd managed to write up in advance. I've been working on a fascinating book, which I'll post in smaller pieces (though probably not one chapter at a time, as the chapters are very short). Then I have three more books on US topics lined up. One thing I'm finding is that even in books specifically focusing on American queer history, there's a lot of reliance on British material and examples. It makes me curious about the overall similarities and differences between the British and American lesbian experiences have been (during the centuries when both existed to compare). I don't feel like I'm there quite yet, but it's a note to jot down in my outline for the book project.

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP LHMP #490 LaFleur 2014 Sex and ‘Unsex’ About LHMP Full citation: 

LaFleur, Greta. “Sex and ‘Unsex’: Histories of Gender Trouble in Eighteenth-Century North America.” Early American Studies, vol. 12, no. 3, 2014, pp. 469–99.

This article challenges the strict version of “social construction” of sexuality by reviewing the evidence that 18th century Americans had an extensive vocabulary for identifiable and categorizable variations in sexual behavior and gender presentation. At the same time, the author does not claim a multi-century continuity of certain gender/sexuality concepts, rather than certain concepts have recurred at different times. [Note: compare Valerie Traub’s “cycles of salience.”]

One question she examines is whether “gender” (as a concept of performative presentation distinct from anatomy) existed as a concept in 18th century America. A relevant context is that scientific advances at that time had developed an elaborate vocabulary for describing sexual and gender differences among plants and animals, that could be available for applying to humans. (Note: the gender theories of Joan Scott, Judith Butler, and Denise Riley are credited as background for the discussion.) This article is not a study of specific texts, but rather a higher-level consideration of 18th century gender concepts as a whole.

Changes to traditional ideas about gender and sexuality occurring in the 1790s shook up social attitudes, but this was part of a larger shakeup that considered class inequities, colonial dynamics, religious attitudes especially concerning Christianity vs. Islam, and differing governmental structures. Many issues were being re-examined and gendered norms and expectations were shifting drastically. (As background, the author notes the work of Laqueur and Trumbach.)

An example is given from an English conduct manual republished in America in 1791 that inveighs against behaviors framed as crossing gender lines, such as make-up on men and male-coded dress styles on women (such as tailored riding habits). Also relevant is the popularity of cross-dressing narratives involving women such as Hannah Snell (British) and Deborah Sampson (American) who demonstrated a cultural category that was understood to have certain characteristics and scripts. When race intersected gender, popular opinion distinguished degrees of “womanliness” that were not available to racialized women, essentially creating alternate gender categories.

The “legibility” of gender was a concern—that is, the ability to identify what gender category someone belonged to based on consistent and universal cues. Ways in which women were labeled as being “masculine” were evaluated in inconsistent ways, with arguments for women’s education and political participating praising “manliness” in women, while in other behavioral fields even feminists decried male-coded activities such as sport and hunting. Satire and caricature used masculinity to attack women in certain fields, such as writing. Individuals who failed to fit neatly into binary gender categories (most notably the Chevalier d’Eon) became celebrities, indicating a fascination with a pluralistic understanding of gender.

Conduct literature pushed the idea that men and women should stick to their “natural state” but there was no clear consensus as to exactly what those states were. Feminists such as Wollstonecraft argued that a woman’s state could hardly be “natural” if society had to work so hard to keep her in it.

The existence of an elaborate vocabulary for gender/sexuality argued for the existence of conceptual categories matching that vocabulary, for women, such as: sapphists, tribades, amazons, female husbands, viragos, tommies, and “unsexed females.”

The article’s conclusion returns to Judith Butler’s concept of gender as performance, noting that the development of gender theorizing in the later 20th century has misled historians to dismiss the possibility that similar concepts could have existed earlier. Instead, LaFleur argues that cycles of “gender trouble” have recurred, with societies experiencing parallel periods of gender disruption without the existence of a continuous through-line connecting those periods.

Time period: 18th cPlace: USAMisc tags: cross-gender roles/behaviorEvent / person: Hannah SnellDeborah Sampson (Robert Shurtleff) View comments (0)
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Published on June 16, 2025 08:02

June 15, 2025

Demographic Anxieties in 19th c America and Sexuality

Sunday, June 15, 2025 - 10:00 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

How much do general social anxieties around demographics and sexuality interact with each other? I've seen a number of historians connect early 19th century concerns about falling birthrates with increasingly controlling attitudes towards non-procreative sex. But is there cause and effect? We could look around today's America and ask "is the nativist anxiety about white birthrates tied in any way to surges of hostility against marginalized genders and sexualities? To be sure, I've occasionally seen anti-trans comments to the effect of "they're destroying their reproductive protential." And it definitely feels like there's a connection between anxieties around white birthrates and anti-abortion forces. But the current picture is far more complex than that. The dynamics were likely to have been similarly complex in the 19th century. The cyclical recurrence of "sex/gender panics" and the ways in which they manifest would be worth studying as a topic on its own, just as the cyclicity of feminist progress and repression is worth studying. Once you see it, the whole illusion of unidirctional social progress evaporates. We may start each cycle from a different status quo, but we never seem to solve the underlying issues and anxieties that generate the next cycle.

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP LHMP #489 Freedman 1982 Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century America About LHMP Full citation: 

Freedman, Estelle B. 1982. “Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century America: Behavior, Ideology, and Politics” in Reviews in American History, Vol. 10, No. 4, The Promise of American History: Progress and Prospects: 196-215

This article mostly concerns attitudes toward m/f sex, so my summary is going to focus fairly narrowly on the high-level basic premise and the specifically f/f parts.

Freedman examines three parallel but separate topics in sexual history: ideology (prescriptive opinions), behavior (evidence for what people were actually doing), and “politics” (by which she means activities intended to change sexual practice or attitudes, as distinct from simple statements about what was considered correct behavior). These three topics interact, but historians have often assigned causation between them in ways not supported by the evidence. For example, looking at declining fertility rates in certain populations and ascribing it to conduct literature that prescribes control of sexuality, rather than looking for changes in sexual practice that avoided pregnancy. Another example involves conduct literature that asserted 19th century women’s disinterest in sex, while ignoring both rational reasons women might be less than enthusiastic (such as fear of pregnancy and lack of sexual satisfaction) and evidence from surveys that contradicted the claim that women had low sexual desire.

A decline in fertility in the later 19th century was paralleled by an increase in public concerns about female masturbation and lesbianism. (Male anti-masturbation literature had become prevalent a century previous.) There was a rising suspicion toward girls’ same-sex crushes at school, while a survey (taken in the 1920s among adult women about their younger experiences) reported that of women born after 1850, a majority had masturbated to orgasm and 20% of college-educated women had been involved in lesbian relationships. Did an increase in non-procreative sex cause a decline in birthrates that then created anxiety about the causes? Or did the decline in birthrate leave authorities casting about for a correctable cause, who then pointed the finger at pre-existing that had made no difference?

Women’s intimate same-sex relationships had long been considered acceptable and not considered “lesbian” (regardless of whether individual relationships had an erotic component) until sexologists began pathologizing them. [Note: I’m grateful to Freedman for challenging Faderman’s assumption that 19th century women were incapable of experiencing sexual desire and that therefore Boston Marriages were never erotic.]

Although the preceding discussion is included in the introductory part of the article, the remainder is entirely focused on m/f sex.

Time period: 19th cPlace: USA View comments (0)
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Published on June 15, 2025 10:07

June 14, 2025

How to be a Lesbian in an 18th Century American Novel

Saturday, June 14, 2025 - 20:30 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

Psychoanalyzing the fiction of earlier ages has been a popular, if often misguided sport. In particular, when characters' intimate friendships are analyzed from contemporary angles, while ignoring the context when the work was written, we find out more about the literary critic's mind than the minds of the author or the characters. The "social constructionist" approach needs to cut both ways: if a character cannot properly be labeled "lesbian" because orientation categories hadn't been invented yet, then neither can that character be dismissed as "perverted" if the social constructions of their own day would not frame them as such. These are the debates playing out in analysis of the novel Ormond.

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP LHMP #488 Comment 2005 Charles Brockden Brown’s ‘Ormond’ and Lesbian Possibility in the Early Republic About LHMP Full citation: 

Comment, Kristin M. 2005. “Charles Brockden Brown’s ‘Ormond’ and Lesbian Possibility in the Early Republic” in Early American Literature, vol. 40, no. 1, pp. 57–78.

The novel Ormond by Charles Brockden Brown (1799) maybe the earliest American literary depiction of a passionate romantic relationship between women. Criticism of the work has tended to reflect the attitudes toward women’s same-sex relationships prevalent in the critic’s own era, rather than considering it within its own context.

This literary analysis situates it within the cultural debates and anxieties prevalent in the Anglophone world around 1800, including the “sex panic” in the wake of the French revolution that led to something of a backlash in England (and to a lesser extent in America) around women’s sexuality in general, but in turn led to some interesting explorations in fiction of the nature and limits of women’s intimate relations with each other.

Ormond focuses around several prominent female characters, in particular the intimate friendship between Constantia and Sophia, but also including the “male-identified” Martinette (who is held up as something of a bad example, due to a somewhat bloodthirsty enthusiasm for revolution) and others. The generally positive and supportive relationships between the female characters are contrasted with more destructive dynamics between the male characters.

American reactions to the French revolution differed in certain aspects from English reactions, with Americans initially celebrating the French cause and American women leveraging debates over women’s rights. However with the turn of the century, enthusiasm for the excesses of the revolution waned, and some of the momentum for women’s rights with it.

Despite American and English differences, the two strands of literature both saw women’s virtue as reflecting the strength and morality of the state, manifesting as a debate around controlling women’s bodies. This is the context in which Ormond depicts the specter of the most extreme version of female autonomy: women so closely bonded to each other that male interests are excluded entirely.

The 18th century had seen something of an explosion of literature (English and French) depicting lesbian interactions, generally with a sense of titillation but in some cases for satiric purposes. But the absence of similar literature in America cannot be taken as an absence of interest, either literary or real. The article quotes French travel writer Moreau de St. Méry discussing in the 1790s how Philadelphian women might be averse to hearing sexual language, but “are not at all strangers to being willing to seek unnatural pleasures with persons of their own sex.”

The romantic relationship between Constantia and Sophia in Ormond is described and acted out in line with the ideals of romantic friendship, but it includes a physicality that is less common. And the central conflict of the novel is the competition between Sophia and Ormond for Constantia’s affection. Ormond’s reaction is hostile and jealous, establishing for the reader that there is a potential reason for jealousy in the strength of the women’s bond. The novel’s author uses various motifs to contradict the sapphic potential, again, recognizing that potential.

The potential for female same-sex erotics was certainly in the public awareness in the 18th century. The lesbian rumors/slanders about Marie Antoinette were rife. Military cross-dressing narratives and female husband stories felt the need to deny any sexual element when a female-bodied person living as a man flirted with women or married, as when a news account of Continental Army soldier Deborah Sampson’s romantic interactions with women commented that they were inspired by “sentiment, taste, [and] purity” and that “animal love, on [Sampson’s] part was out of the question.” Clearly it wasn’t entirely out of the question if there was a need to deny it.

Thus, readers of Ormond would have been well aware of the potential for such an intense and intimate love between two women to take an erotic turn. If such a possibility had been unthinkable, there would have been no need for the author to deny it.

The character of Martinette in Ormond helps to situate non-normative sexuality as a “foreign” element—a common theme in the early modern period—both by her birth and by her association with France. This was another way of acknowledging sapphic possibilities while insulating the “virtuous” characters from any taint.

Despite repeated attempts to heterosexualize the female characters in Ormond, the male characters play a very marginal role and a repeatedly shown to be inessential to the women’s emotional and economic lives, highlighting the potential for full female self-sufficiency within a truly “companionate” relationship of the type beginning to be idealized for (but rarely achieved in) heterosexual marriage. The titular character fails to win Constantia by wooing her and resorts to attempting violence, viewing her as a prize or possession, not a love object.

The author concludes that literary representations of romantic friendship must be understood not simply in the context of the idealized image of that type of relationship, but also in the context of the anxieties and power struggles around female autonomy and lesbian possibility. Literature was one of the tools for recognizing and trying to contain these potentials as a means of social control.

 

Time period: 18th cPlace: USAMisc tags: emotional /romantic bonds between womenromantic friendshipEvent / person: Ormond: or the Secret Witness (Charles Brockden Brown) View comments (0)
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Published on June 14, 2025 20:39

June 13, 2025

Margaret Fuller Should Be More Interesting Than This

Friday, June 13, 2025 - 19:00 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

I'm not completely allergic to "lit crit" articles (by which I make a fine-grained distinction from "literary criticism" but perhaps one that is idiosyncratic), but I confess I find them far less useful for the Project than articles written from a historian's angle. I guess it's because lit crit feels like it's more about the reception of the topic in question by a modern audience than it is about the historic context of the topic itself. Perhaps that means I'm wronging this journal article in classifying it as "lit crit" because it's very much about the historic context of Fuller's life and writings. It just...feels very slippery and squishy.

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP LHMP #467 Wood 1993 With Ready Eye About LHMP Full citation: 

Wood, Mary E. 1993. “’With Ready Eye’: Margaret Fuller and Lesbianism in Nineteenth-Century American Literature” in American Literature 65: 3-4.

Given the prominence of the word “lesbianism” in the title of this article, I found it less interesting than I hoped. Margaret Fuller was a prominent American writer and feminist in the first half of the 19th century. The theme of this article is how her writings and opinions around various romantic connections she had with women illustrate the tensions around the dividing line between acceptable and praiseworthy Romantic Friendship and the types of relationships between women that were felt to go beyond the bounds of the acceptable.

In general, this article leans more toward literary criticism than social history. There is a review of literature on Romantic Friendship and the history of sexuality in the 19th century, examining how relationships that were described with strongly romantic and sensual language could be seen as not transgressing social norms. (See, for example, Smith-Rosenberg 1975 and Lillian Faderman 1981.) Two strains of thought on this topic are: 1) that 19th century female friendships were never “lesbian” and that was why they were acceptable; or 2) that all such female friendships can be considered to be within a broad “lesbian continuum” regardless of whether they were erotic, thus reducing the meaningfulness of the term “lesbian.” Wood looks at a middle path where 19th century society was constantly, if silently, negotiating how far female friendships could go without crossing the line.

Wood identifies places in Margaret Fuller’s writings where she appears to be self-aware of reaching or crossing those lines, such as when she wrote to one intimate friend, “I build on our friendship now with trust, for I think it is redeemed from ‘the search after Eros’.” In passages like this, Fuller recognizes the potential for eros (thus negating framing #1) and deliberately steps back from it (thus negating framing #2).

Fuller was hardly the only writer who recognized that this boundary existed, well before intimate friendships were pathologized by medical sexologists. Advice literature aimed at women and girls cautions them to view their same-sex friendships as “not the real thing…but rather a foreshadowing of love” that must be put in second place after marriage. Close same-sex bonds were essential to the homosocial divisions of society, but there was a constant policing of those bonds to ensure they didn’t exclude men and marriage entirely.

In her feminist writings, Fuller finds an uneasy balance between attacking the notion of women’s inherent difference from men, and accepting the idea that certain types of opinions, interests, and literature were inherently gendered.

Overall, far less interesting than I hoped, and the examples from Fuller’s writing that are supposed to illustrate a “lesbian” sensibility are rather weak.

Time period: 19th cPlace: USAMisc tags: emotional /romantic bonds between womenEvent / person: Margaret Fuller View comments (0)
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Published on June 13, 2025 19:05

June 12, 2025

Didn't We Just Do Colonial Sodomy Laws?

Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 15:00 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

Yes, once again I'm blogging an article that largely duplicates material that was covered more extensively in a different publication. Sigh. The work of a historian is not always exciting.

But what is exciting is that I'm coming up on publication #500. I'm currently searching the set of all publications that I haven't yet blogged that I have in-house to see if I can find something Significant And Meaningful for the occasion. Feel free to suggest your favorite publication relevant to lesbian history. (Though you might want to search the site to see if I've done it already.)

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP About LHMP Full citation: 

Oaks, Robert F. 1978. “"Things Fearful to Name": Sodomy and Buggery in Seventeenth-Century New England” in Journal of Social History, Vol. 12, No. 2: 268-281

As with several other articles I’ve blogged in this run of American-themed publications, this one covers material that I’ve already discussed in more detail in a previous entry. (Godbeer, Richard. 1995. “"The Cry of Sodom": Discourse, Intercourse, and Desire in Colonial New England” in <em>The William and Mary Quarterly</em>, Vol. 52, No. 2: 259-286)

As the title notes, the general subject is the legal and social treatment of sodomy (generally defined as same-sex relations) and buggery (most often applied to bestiality) in 17th century New England. Oaks notes that court records are the most important data source for this topic, but that this can skew our understanding as it only tells us about cases where offenses were identified and prosecuted. Even so, the legal records is valuable at the very least to correct myths, such as that sodomy usually received the death penalty.

The article notes that sodomy laws only applied to men, except for one New Haven code briefly for ten years starting in 1655 when female same-sex relations were included. Despite the theoretical harshness of the laws, the actual case outcomes show that sodomy was not punished more severely than other types of sex crimes, and that the death penalty was applied very rarely (and never to women). This leniency increased toward the end of the 17th century.

In relating the most commonly cited f/f case, that of Mary Hammon and Sara Norman for “leude behavior each with other upon a bed,” the article adds that Norman was also accused of “divers Lasivious speeches,” which may explain why her sentence required a public confession while Hammon was “cleared with admonision” which I read as telling her not to do it again. If the lascivious speeches were specifically in connection with this incident, then we may imagine that they may have specifically concerned f/f sex, though a later note indicates that Norman was also brought before the law for m/f sexual offenses in at least one case.

The latter part of the article is focused in great detail on accusations of bestiality.

Time period: 17th cPlace: USAMisc tags: sex between womenfemale sodomycourt caseEvent / person: Sara Norman & Mary Hammon View comments (0)
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Published on June 12, 2025 15:40

June 11, 2025

Complicated Gender in Colonial Virginia

Wednesday, June 11, 2025 - 07:00 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

Once again, I have an article on a topic covered much more extensively in a publication I already blogged. Though in this case, by a different author. Thomas/ine Hall reminds us of the ways in which historic fixation on binary gender complicate the question of categorizing interactions as "same-sex" or "opposite-sex". There are several topics that I'll be discussing in the book version of the Project where it's inaccurate to characterize the topic as "lesbian" but that shed useful light on how historic societies would have viewed lesbian activity. Probable intersex people are one of those categories in the same way that transgender people are.

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP LHMP #485 Vaughan 1978 The Sad Case of Thomas(ine) Hall About LHMP Full citation: 

Vaughan, Alden. 1978. “The Sad Case of Thomas(ine) Hall” in Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 86: 146-48.

I’m inadvertently continuing my theme of publications where I’ve already covered a more extensive version of the same material, though in this case by a different author. (Brown, Kathleen. 1995. “’Changed...into the Fashion of a Man’: The Politics of Sexual Difference in a Seventeenth-Century Anglo-American Settlement” in Journal of the History of Sexuality 6:2 pp.171-193.)

The article opens with a discussion of how Colonial courts seemed to be fond of inscribing penalties for crimes (especially moral crimes) onto a person’s visible presentation, noting that the “scarlet A” that is central to Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter was only one of a variety of alphabetic penalties in Massachusetts law. He connects this practice with the unique penalty applied to Thomas(ine) Hall in Virginia in 1629. Hall’s offense was not one of commission but of existence: being intersex and failing to choose one binary gender presentation and sticking with it. (Please see Brown 1995 for the details. Vaughan’s discussion is more scanty and less analytic.) Hall’s sentence was to wear clothing that combined male and female garments, as a visible sign of their transgression. Note that although Hall presented variously at times as male and female, when they had a sexual relationship with a woman, it was when presenting as male.

Time period: 17th cPlace: USAMisc tags: transgender identitycourt caseEvent / person: Thomasine Hall View comments (0)
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Published on June 11, 2025 08:07

June 10, 2025

A 19th Century Psychologist's Report

Tuesday, June 10, 2025 - 07:00 The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Lesbian Historic Motif Project logo

This is largely a "teaser article" for Jen Manion's book on female husbands. Since it largely duplicates material I've already blogged, I've just linked that write-up. But it does quote a medical journal article written by Joe Lobdell's psychiatrist, which includes some interesting points of language.

Major category: LHMPTags: LHMP LHMP #484 Manion 2016 The Queer History of Passing as a Man in Early Pennsylvania About LHMP Full citation: 

Manion, Jen. “The Queer History of Passing as a Man in Early Pennsylvania.” Pennsylvania Legacies, vol. 16, no. 1, 2016, pp. 6–11.

Manion’s book Female Husbands: A Trans History came out in 2020. This is something of a “teaser” article in what appears to be a local history magazine (rather than an academic journal) presenting information from that research that is specific to Pennsylvania. See the Project’s coverage of the later book for a broader picture.

The current article starts with a discussion of Charles Hamilton/Mary Hamilton’s career as an itinerant doctor in the Colonies, supplemented with their background in England which was fictionalized in Henry Fielding’s The Female Husband. The details provided are essentially identical to what is in Female Husbands, so I won’t repeat them here.

The second example presented in this article is Joseph Lobdell/Lucy Ann Slater who spent various stints toward the end of their life in Pennsylvania (though the majority in other locations—so the tie-in for this periodical is somewhat tenuous). I’m going to cheat a little, since Lobdell’s life history is provided in much greater detail in chapter 5 of Peter Boag’s Re-Dressing America's Frontier Past. So I’m not going to re-iterate it here.

The major addition that the current article provides is an extensive excerpt from the medical case study published about Lobell, based on their sessions with a doctor at the Willard Asylum for the Insane. (Wise, P.M. 1883. “Case of Sexual Perversion,” in Alienist and Neurologist: A Quarterly Journal of Scientific, Clinical and Forensic Psychiatry and Neurology, vol 4, no 1: 87-91.) The doctor uniformly genders Lobdell as female, but has an overall sympathetic tone, within the context that Lobdell clearly had mental health issues. Although the doctor describes Lobdell’s gender-crossing as a “form of insanity” he does appear to distinguish between the psychological issues that landed Lobdell in the asylum (depression and mania) and their gender identity.

Also of interest is the language the doctor uses.

“During the few years following her [i.e., Lobdell’s] return from the West, she met with many reverses, and in ill health she received shelter and care in the alms-house. There she became attached to a young woman of good education, who had been left by her husband in a destitute condition and was receiving charitable aid. The attachment appeared to be mutual and, strange as it may seem, led to their leaving their temporary home to commence life in the woods in the relation of husband and wife. The unsexed woman assumed the name of Joseph Lobdell and the pair lived in this relation for the subsequent decade; ‘Joe,’ as she was familiarly known, following her masculine vocation of hunting and trapping and thus supplying themselves with the necessaries of life. An incident occurred in 1876 to interrupt the quiet monotony of this Lesbian love. …”

I want to call attention to the three bolded items. The doctor recognizes the marital nature of their relationship, though he clearly distances it from “real” marriage. Although describing Lobdell’s presentation and activities elsewhere as “masculine” he calls Lobdell “unsexed.” This is a characterization that appears regularly from the later 18th century on to describe women who move away from or reject stereotypically feminine things. Sometimes it is neutral or positive, in a sense of “stepping free from the restrictions of gender roles” but more often it has a negative tone. But the third item is quite fascinating as it gives us an 1883 citation for the phrase “Lesbian love” in an unambiguous sense of “a romantic and erotic relationship between two women.” Of course, one of the things I regularly harp on is that this sense of “lesbian” is much older than the myth of “invented by sexologists,” but solid citations are always useful.

Wise’s case history is also interesting in that it concludes with a discussion of the theories of Krafft-Ebing about same-sex desire which perhaps provides a basis for the doctor’s more clinical approach to Lobdell’s life history. He writes of Krafft-Ebing’s work that he “suggests they should be excepted from legal enactments for the punishment of unnatural lewdness; thus allowing them to follow their inclinations, so far as they are harmless, to an extent not reaching public and flagrant offense.” A somewhat mild endorsement since Wise continues with a discussion of Lobdell’s condition as insanity. (Note that neither Krafft-Ebing nor Wise are clearly distinguishing cross-gender presentation from same-sex desire in their discussions.) Wise concludes with, “The subject possesses little forensic interest, especially in this country, and the case herewith reported is offered as a clinical curiosity in psychiatric medicine.”

Of course, as the century turned over and the sexological view of homosexuality became more widespread in the public consciousness, the idea of considering it a “curiosity” gave way to greater persecution.

Time period: 18th c19th cPlace: USAMisc tags: cross-dressinggender disguise f>mfemale husbandEvent / person: Charles/Mary HamiltonThe Female Husband (Henry Fielding)Lucy Ann Lobdell (Joseph Lobdell) & Marie Louise Perry View comments (0)
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Published on June 10, 2025 07:30