"Lesbian* Modernists" with Diana Souhami
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Description
In this episode, Diana Souhami explains how Modernism was fundamentally shaped by lesbians* and queer people. We talk about how Sylvia Beach published Joyce’s "Ulysses" when no publisher would touch...
show moreAuthors and books mentioned:
Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of Loneliness
Sappho
Natalie Barney
Getrude Stein
Bryher
H.D.
Sylvia Beach
James Joyce’s Ulysses
T.S. Eliot’s The Wasteland
Ezra Pound
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Ernest Hemingway
Virginia Woolf’s Orlando
Vita Sackville-West
Violet Trefusis’ Broderie Anglaise
Oscar Wilde
Dolly Wilde
Janet Flanner
Publishers mentioned:
Contact Editions
Shakespeare and Company
Visual artists mentioned:
Picasso
Matisse
Cezanne
The Fauves
Diana Souhami’s books mentioned:
Gluck, 1895-1978: Her Autobiography
No Modernism Without Lesbians
Alice and Gertrude
Mrs Keppel and Her Daughter
Find out more about Diana here: https://dianasouhami.com/
If you’re looking for more lesbian content, follow @DianaSouhami on Twitter and check out @Lena_Mattheis as well.
“Silence is the biggest enemy of women* and lesbian women*. […] If you don’t exist, you can’t be any trouble.” (Diana Souhami in this episode)
Questions you should be able to respond to after listening:
1. Why were people such as Natalie Barney so inspired by Sappho? Why go back all the way to Ancient Greek poetry?
2. Why was Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of Loneliness banned?
3. Why, according to Diana, would Modernism not have happened without lesbians*?
4. Why was Sylvia Beach “intrinsic to Modernism”?
5. What is a lavender marriage?
6. Which Paris salons were important for queer women and Modernist artists and why?
Information
Author | Lena Mattheis |
Organization | Lena Mattheis |
Website | - |
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