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Lauren Gutterman
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‘A League of Their Own’ Chronicles Life for LGBTQ Women in the 1940s
Even at a time of repression, these women found ways to create a culture and life for themselves.
by
Lauren Gutterman
via
Made by History
on
November 2, 2022
partner
The Lesbian As Villain or Victim
In Oregon in the 1960s, the debate over capital punishment hinged on shifting interpretations of the gendered female body.
by
Matthew Wills
,
Lauren Gutterman
via
JSTOR Daily
on
June 19, 2022
partner
The Golden Era of ‘Traditional Marriage’ Was Never What Conservatives Thought
Law and culture forced LGBTQ people into marriages, but that didn't prevent them from exploring their sexuality.
by
Lauren Gutterman
via
Made by History
on
September 28, 2021
How the 'Girl Watching' Fad of the 1960s Taught Men to Harass Women
In name, 'girl watching' is long gone. In practice, the trend lives on.
by
Gillian Frank
,
Lauren Gutterman
via
Jezebel
on
October 8, 2020
Queering Postwar Marriage in the U.S.
In the post-WWII era, American lesbians negotiated lives between straight marriages and homosexual affairs.
by
Lauren Gutterman
via
Not Even Past
on
February 1, 2020
How Flight Attendants Organized Against Their Bosses to End Stereotyping
The marketing of stewardesses’ bodies was long an integral part of airline marketing strategies.
by
Gillian Frank
,
Lauren Gutterman
via
Jezebel
on
November 29, 2018
partner
Why the Courts Had to Force the Trump Administration to Let a 17-Year-Old Have an Abortion
A 1974 case gave the antiabortion movement a new playbook to whittle away abortion rights for poor women.
by
Gillian Frank
,
Lauren Gutterman
via
Made by History
on
October 26, 2017