Bölümler
-
This week Hannah explores queer coded robot characters in film, and Daisy tells us about the amazing life of the lesbian Tove Jansson, creator of the Moomins!
-
In this episode Hannah speaks to the extremely talented Kate Marks about the history of the Lesbian Tide magazine!
-
Eksik bölüm mü var?
-
This week Daisy teaches us about the history and the importance of the Molly House for queer people, and Hannah explores whether taxidermy can be considered a queer art form?
-
This week Hannah tells us about the history of protest badges and the changing landscape of queer badges, and Daisy tells us about queerness in cartoons for both children and adults!
Sources for badges:
The Long-Lasting Legacy Of Lesbian Button Badges - Eleanor Medhurst
The History of Protest Buttons - Busy Beaver Net
LGBTQ badges in the British Museum - Philip Attwood
How the Nazi Regime's Pink Triangle Symbol Was Repurposed for LGBTQ Pride - Olivia B. Waxman
Badges, Pins, Buttons - LGBT Cultural Heritage
The Politics & Protest Badge Collection - Patricia Nistor
Paud's Pins – a queer history project
Sources for cartoons:
The unstoppable queering of TV cartoons - V.S. Wells
Bugs, as a Lady Bunny, Was America’s First Drag Superstar! Watch - TREY SPEEGLE
Queer Images: A History of Gay and Lesbian Film in America - Griffin Benshoff
‘Steven Universe’: 5 Ways This Kids Show Was Queer Before Its Lesbian Kiss - Caroline Cao
THE COMPLETE HISTORY OF QUEER CHARACTERS IN CARTOON SHOWS
After Decades In The Background, Queer Characters Step To The Front In Kids' Media - VICTORIA WHITLEY-BERRY
The evolution of queer characters in children's animation - Chris Snyder and Kyle Desiderio
LGBTQ+ CARTOON CHARACTERS ARE VITAL FOR TODAY’S QUEER YOUTH - Joshua Mackey -
UPDATE! Full episode now updated!
Thank you to everyone who listened to the dodgy mobile recording we uploaded on New Years Day! Daisy and Hannah have now recorded a full length Qs round episode to round up the year 2021 in queer news! -
Episode 30! This is quite a milestone for our little podcast and so in this episode Daisy tells us about Section 28 and how it impacted so many queer people growing up, and essentially why we do this podcast at all. And Hannah talks about the Bible and the 6 passages on homosexuality and why they cannot be used to condemn homosexuality.
-
This week Hannah gives us a brief intro to chemsex, what it is and why it can be risky, and Daisy tells us about the life and loves of renowned sculptor (and notable larky lesbian) Harriet Hosmer.
-
This week Daisy and Hannah talk to Agnes Török about the importance of queer joy and queer joy as resilience. We hear about their book All The Days We Don't Revolt, available from their website at https://agnestorok.org/
-
this week daisy takes us on a journey to learn about the origins of the handkerchief code/flagging, and its modern iterations and Hannah talks about the queer legacy of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
-
This week Hannah takes some time to actually read about and understand what furries are and what they do, and Daisy takes us in the way way back machine to talk about the history of male impersonation in China, starting with the first ever recorded example in ~600 AD!
-
This week Daisy takes on a full episode for a deep dive into the history of western male impersonation which has become known as drag kings today. There's a lot here but there some saved back for a whole other episode later too on drag in other parts of the world!
-
This week Daisy tells us about the notable gays in space and the important queer people in space right now, and Hannah tries to shed light on the tangled web of affairs in the Bloomsbury Group.
Sources:
Dear Moon Project
The illustration referenced is a piece called Relationships of The Bloomsbury Group by Rory Midhani
Twisted Love Affairs of the “Lost Generation” of English Eccentrics
Painting in circles and loving in triangles: the Bloomsbury Group’s queer ways of seeing
What was the Bloomsbury group? -
This week we discuss whether the Wind in the Willows is a secret gay manifesto of author Kenneth Grehame?
Sources:
https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/wind-willows-gay-manifesto-according-literary-expert-1657132
https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/the-wound-in-the-willows/
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/mar/28/making-wind-in-the-willows-kenneth-grahame-review
https://www.sbs.com.au/topics/pride/fast-lane/article/2018/01/29/scholar-calls-wind-willows-gay-manifesto
-
This week Hannah discusses the history of research into the elusive "gay gene" and recent large studies, and Daisy pays tribute to the immensely interesting Alan Turing.
With special thanks to Research Assistant Jack Bestwick for his work on this episode.
Sources on Genes:
- Study of gay brothers may confirm X chromosome link to homosexuality (Science Mag)
- No ‘gay gene’: Massive study homes in on genetic basis of human sexuality (Nature)
- Largest study of gay brothers homes in on 'gay genes' (New Scientist)
- Large-scale GWAS reveals insights into the genetic architecture of same-sex sexual behavior - Ganna et al (2019)
- Male homosexuality: absence of linkage to microsatellite markers at Xq28 - Rice et al. (1999)
- Linkage between sexual orientation and chromosome Xq28 in males but not in females - Hu et al. (1995)
- A linkage between DNA markers on the X chromosome and male sexual orientation - Hamer et al. (1993)
- Homosexual orientation in twins: A report on 61 pairs and three triplet sets - Frederick et al. (1993)
Sources on Turing:
- Spartacus Education
- What Alan Turing £50 notes mean to the LGBT community (BBC)
- How alan turing inspires me as a queer woman of color in tech (glad)
- Overlooked No More: Alan Turing, Condemned Code Breaker and Computer Visionary (New York Times)
- Alan Turing: The Enigma (Turing Org)
- 8 things you didn’t know about Alan Turing (PBS)
-
This week Daisy gives us a rundown of queer connections to gardening and horticulture and Hannah tells the tale of the lesbian pirates Anne Bonny and Mary (Mark) Read.
Sources:
Queer Undergrowth - Joe Crowdy
The Pansy Project
The Disorder of Things - Julia Bell
Queer Undergrowth: Weeds and Sexuality in the Architecture of the Garden - Joe Crowdy
Queer growth: peace and refuge in the garden - Joe Crowdy
Lesbian Pirates: Anne Bonny and Mary Read - Rictor Norton
Daily Mail article by Amie Gordon
If There’s a Man Among Ye: The Tale of Pirate Queens Anne Bonny and Mary Read - Karen Abbott
-
This week Hannah talks about the options for queer summer camping for kids and adults, and Daisy gives us a lesson on queer Egyptian legacies.
Hannah forgot to credit her sources in the episode so below is a list of articles used in her research:
These Two LGBTQ Sleep-away Camps Are Giving Queer People A Chance to Connect IRL - Trish Bendix
10 Best Summer Camps For LGBTQ Youth - Brave Trails
LGBTQ Summer Camps 2020 List - Jessica Ann Vooris
-
This week Daisy introduces us to the role queer people play in rural settings and notable countryside queers, and Hannah talks about the world's most bisexual animal and why they are so iconic.
-
This week Hannah discussed Differences in Sex Development (DSDs) and why there are not only two sexes, and Daisy divulges the queer historical and cultural significance of the rainbow.
-
This week Daisy TG tells us about being the queer side of cycling and Hannah explores some queer themes in video games!
-
This week Hannah discusses a classic trope in stories about queer people and Daisy fills us in on the queer legacy of The Wizard of Oz!
Referenced in the show:
Hey Vasquez, have you ever been mistaken for a man?
Bury Your Gays - TV Tropes
Incorrect Wicked Quotes
"Defying Gravity": Queer Conventions in the Musical "Wicked"
- Daha fazla göster