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A Gay First Lady? Yes, We’ve Already Had One, and Here Are Her Love Letters.
Rose Cleveland declared her passion for the woman she had a relationship with spanning three decades in letter after letter.
by
Gillian Brockell
via
Retropolis
on
June 20, 2019
Back to the Women’s Land
A new book looks at four different experiments in feminist separatism.
by
Daphne Spain
via
Public Books
on
January 11, 2019
Rarely Seen 19th-Century Silhouette of a Same-Sex Couple Living Together Goes On View
A new show, featuring the paper cutouts, reveals unheralded early Americans.
by
Roger Catlin
via
Smithsonian
on
May 25, 2018
The Physical Education of Women is Fraught With Issues of Body, Sexuality, and Gender
A new book, ‘Active Bodies,’ explores the history.
by
Nina Renata Aron
via
Timeline
on
September 21, 2017
Why We Can (Partially) Thank the Military for American Gay Identity
How anti-homosexual policies throughout military history helped shape gay culture today.
by
Carson Leigh Brown
,
Ross Benes
via
Pacific Standard
on
April 24, 2017
Hillary Clinton Just Said It, But ‘The Future Is Female’ Began as a 1970s Lesbian Separatist Slogan
'The Future Is Female' was popularized in 2015, but the slogan was created 40 years earlier.
by
Katie Mettler
via
Washington Post
on
February 8, 2017
A Short History of the Tomboy
With roots in race and gender discord, has the “tomboy” label worn out its welcome?
by
Elizabeth King
via
The Atlantic
on
January 5, 2017
The Turn-of-the-Century Lesbians Who Founded The Field of Home Ec
Flora Rose and Martha Van Rensselaer lived in an open lesbian relationship and helped found the field of home economics.
by
Megan Elias
,
Erin Blakemore
via
JSTOR Daily
on
December 30, 2016
NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project
The first initiative to document historic and cultural sites associated with the LGBT community in the five boroughs.
by
Andrew S. Dolkart
,
Ken Lustbader
,
Jay Shockley
via
NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project
on
January 1, 2016
The Perfect Wife
How Edith Windsor fell in love, got married, and won a landmark case for gay marriage.
by
Ariel Levy
via
The New Yorker
on
September 30, 2013
Twain Dreams
The enigma of Samuel Clemens.
by
John Jeremiah Sullivan
via
Harper’s
on
April 29, 2025
“I Am Making the World My Confessor”: Mary MacLane, the Wild Woman from Butte
In 1902, a woman named Mary MacLane from Butte, Montana, became an international sensation after publishing a scandalous journal at the age of 19.
by
Hunter Dukes
via
The Public Domain Review
on
April 23, 2025
When the Personal Was Political
Second-wave feminists meant business—but they had a lot of fun at it, too.
by
Jill Filipovic
via
Democracy Journal
on
December 17, 2024
Eroticize the Hood
A new book revamps Newark's reputation as unsexy, violent, destitute, defiantly declaring it “a place of desire, love, eroticism, community, and resistance.”
by
José Sanchez
via
n+1
on
October 8, 2024
A New Look at the Feminist Earthquake
How women's liberation transformed America and why our understanding of 1963-1973 needs to include more voices.
by
Sara Bhatia
via
Washington Monthly
on
August 25, 2024
Who's Afraid of Social Contagion?
Our ideas about sexuality and gender have changed before, and now they’re changing again.
by
Hugh Ryan
via
Boston Review
on
July 31, 2023
Queer History Detective: On the Power of Uncovering Stories from the Past
With more queer history detectives, what could our future look like?
by
Amelia Possanza
via
Literary Hub
on
May 30, 2023
The New York Times is Repeating One of Its Most Notorious Mistakes
The paper’s anti-trans coverage parallels its failings over gay rights and AIDS. But the Times appears determined not to learn from its own history.
by
Jack Mirkinson
via
The Nation
on
February 20, 2023
Gertrude Stein's Pulp Fiction
It has taken decades for an appreciation of Stein’s crime fiction to really take hold.
by
Gertrude Stein
,
Cornelius Fortune
,
Mark McGurl
,
Brooks Landon
via
JSTOR Daily
on
June 22, 2022
A People’s History of Baseball
Communists fighting the color line. Baseball players resisting owners. Baseball's untold history of struggles against racial injustice and labor exploitation.
by
Peter Dreier
,
Michael Arria
via
Jacobin
on
May 25, 2022
Eleven Black Women: Why Did They Die?
Barbara Smith, a key contributor to contemporary Black feminist thought, formed the Combahee River Collective to address Black women's interlocking oppressions.
by
Huda Hassan
,
Barbara Smith
via
Mother, Loosen My Tongue
on
March 8, 2022
The Radical Woman Behind “Goodnight Moon”
Margaret Wise Brown constantly pushed boundaries—in her life and in her art.
by
Anna E. Holmes
via
The New Yorker
on
January 27, 2022
The Roe Baby
After decades of keeping her identity a secret, Jane Roe’s child has chosen to talk about her life.
by
Joshua Prager
via
The Atlantic
on
September 9, 2021
Who Lost the Sex Wars?
Fissures in the feminist movement should not be buried as signs of failure but worked through as opportunities for insight.
by
Amia Srinivasan
via
The New Yorker
on
September 3, 2021
Why the Marriage-Equality Movement Succeeded
The author of “The Engagement" discusses the activists, politicians, and judicial figures who were at the forefront of the battle over same-sex marriage.
by
Isaac Chotiner
,
Sasha Issenberg
via
The New Yorker
on
June 10, 2021
The Precious, Precarious Work of Queer Archiving in the Pacific Northwest
Local legacy-keepers are working to ensure that the histories aren't lost or forgotten.
by
Emma Banks
via
Atlas Obscura
on
June 9, 2021
Alternative Internets and Their Lost Histories
What has been gained and lost from overlooking histories about the wild heterogeneity of networks that existed for well over a century?
by
Lori Emerson
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
April 12, 2021
When New Money Meets Old Bloodlines: On America’s Gilded Age Dollar Princesses
The intersecting lives of robber barons and floundering French aristocrats.
by
Caroline Weber
via
Literary Hub
on
November 13, 2020
Pointing a Way Forward
The history of suffrage in the South—indeed, the nation—is messy and fraught, and more contentious than is typically remembered.
by
Jessica Wilkerson
via
Southern Cultures
on
October 1, 2020
The Forgotten Feminists of the Backlash Decade
The activists of the 1990s worked so diligently that they were written out of history.
by
Maggie Doherty
via
The New Republic
on
September 24, 2020
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