Explicit
Episode notes
In this episode of Our Dyke Histories, we travel deep into the smoky lesbian bars, queer parties (house, rent, and otherwise), and clandestine love affairs of the 1940s–60s with three powerhouse historians: Joan Nestle, Hugh Ryan, and Alix Genter. Together, with host Jack Jen Gieseking, they explore how desire itself created new genders, new communities, and new forms of resistance inside spaces policed by the state and shaped by racism, class struggle, and McCarthy-era repression.
From Greenwich Village’s lesbian bar circuits to the Women’s House of Detention and the surprising queer history of Coney Island, the episode uncovers the joy, danger, ...
Keywords
lesbian historyqueer historylesbian barsqueer partiesJack GiesekingSinister Wisdomqueer nightlifeLGBTQ barsfeminist historytrans historyqueer geographiesqueer spacesrent partiesqueer archivesJack Jen GiesekingBlack queer womenlesbian spacesqueer geographyHarlem historyJoan NestleLesbian Herstory ArchivesMabel Hamptonlesbian writersanti-fascismGreenwich VillageLower East SideSlummingJewsNew York CityLGBTQ persecution1940s queer culture1950s queer culture1960s queer culturetrans spacesHugh RyanWomen’s House of DetentionWomen's Courtbutch-femmebutchfemfemmequeer desire1950s sexualityqueer resistancegender historyAlix GenterRoy CohnHUACJoseph McCarthyElizabeth KennedyMadeline DavisAnne BannonBeebo Brinkerqueer pulpSylvia RiveraMarsha P. Johnsonlesbian pulpAudre LordeStonewallSea ColonyConey IslandBuffaloBrooklyn historyNew York City historyYoung LordsBlack Panthersqueer intergenerational