Digital Transgender Archive
Issues of Urania published in 1935, including Nos. 109-110 (Jan-Apr), Nos. 111-112 (May-Aug), and Nos. 113-114 (Sep-Dec). Urania was a privately circulated feminist journal published in England from 1916-1940. The journal's foundational philosophy revolved around the abolition of gender, as the founders believed true feminist liberation could not be realized within a binary gender system.
These issues contain discussions of gender affirming surgery, national versions of femininity, global conflict and pacifism, intersex people, crossdressing, and women's education, athletics, and occupations.
Item Actions
- Identifier
- g732d938d
- Collection
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Urania
- Institution
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LSE Archives & Special Collections
- Creator(s)
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Baty, Thomas
Cornish, Dorothy Helen
Roper, Esther
Wade, Jessey
Clyde, Irene
- Contributor(s)
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Shanafelt, Clara
Ara, Jehan
Gore-Booth, Eva
Milne, Annabella
Norris, Kathleen
Ali, Ayesha Shaukat
Pitt, I.J.
Sassoon, Siegfried
Frank, Glenn
Galsworthy, J
Mills, Ogden
White, Wiliam A.
Thesing, Curt
- Publisher
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London: T.Baty
- Date Issued
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1935
- Genre
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Periodicals
- Subject(s)
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Doreen Stafford
Eve's Sour Apples
John Hill
Maud Carter
O-Iwa-chan
O-Sat-chan
O-Yot-chan
- Places
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China
England
Japan
France
Ireland
India
Spain
United States
Scotland
Hungary
Romania
Czechoslovakia
South Korea
Myanmar
Poland
- Topic(s)
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Criminalization of cross-dressing
Crossdressing
Educational change
Femininities
Feminism
Feminists
First-wave feminism
First-wave feminists
Gender non-conforming people
Gender roles
Gender-affirming surgery
Intersex people
LGBTQ+ theater
Non-binary identity
Pacifism
Religion
Suffragettes
Transgender people
- Resource Type
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Text
- Language
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English
- Rights
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No known copyright
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