Lesbianism in the eighteenth century, a good specialist subject for Emma Donoghue if she ever does Mastermind. The range of her research here is impressive, and she shows a bumper selection of diaries, trial reports, medical texts, and close readings of assorted poetry and prose to show the range of ‘passions between women’ that were possible during the long eighteenth century. ‘Female husbands’, cross-dressers, male fantasies, hermaphrodism, female libertinage and dreams of women-only utopias all figure.
The prevailing view had been (and to some extent still is) that there was no emergent lesbian identity in this period, or not in the same way that a gay male identity was starting to come about. Donoghue's main thesis is to challenge that, and to recover moments of (what we would call) lesbian desires and relations that have been missed, misunderstood, or erased by other historians (her main target seems to be Lillian Faderman).
Concepts like ‘romantic friendship’ have tended to dominate discussions of close relationships between Georgian women, leading to an anachronistic sense of ‘rigid divisions between friendship and sex, social acceptability and deviance, innocence and experience’. In fact, these were likely to be sliding scales rather than binary options, and many women and men could hold contradictory ideas about such relationships in their heads at the same time, an ‘eighteenth-century doublethink’ as Donoghue appealingly calls it. Sometimes I think she overreaches when looking for evidence of this, but a little overcorrection was probably necessary since she does convince you that a lot has been missed.
This was Donoghue's first book, and it does read a little like a doctoral thesis at times; a little more narrative pep might have been nice. Also it has to be said that this edition from Bello is full of what looks like scanning errors (Diderot's The Nun has become The Nim) which are frustrating. Still, it's nice that it's been kept in print at all, and if you're interested in the period or the topic it should prove very rewarding.