Digital Transgender Archive

Urania, Nos. 103-108 (1934)

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Issues of Urania published in 1934, including Nos. 103-104 (Jan-Apr), Nos. 105-106 (May-Aug), and Nos. 107-108 (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 gendered attitudes towards war, marriage and celibacy, gender affirming surgery, and reviews for a book by editor Irene Clyde, who also published in the journal as Thomas Baty.

Item Information:

Identifier
tq57nr45x
Collection
Urania
Institution
LSE Archives & Special Collections
Creator(s)
Baty, Thomas
Cornish, Dorothy Helen
Roper, Esther
Wade, Jessey
Clyde, Irene
Contributor(s)
Gore-Booth, Eva
J.F.
Fisher, H.L.
Mumford, Elisabeth
Jailal, Sharda
Andrews, Constance E.
Cousins, James H.
Milne, Annabella
Spring, Howard
Bedel, Maurice
Machen, A.
Publisher
London: T.Baty
Date Issued
1934
Genre
Periodicals
Subject(s)
Eve's Sour Apples
Margaret Hutchison
Places
England
Australia
Japan
Turkey
France
Germany
India
United States
Finland
Topic(s)
Celibacy
Educational change
Fascism
Feminism
Feminists
First-wave feminism
First-wave feminists
Gender non-conforming people
Gender roles
Gender-affirming surgery
Intersex people
Marriage
National socialism
Non-binary identity
Pacifism
Poetry
Religion
Suffragettes
Transgender people
Resource Type
Text
Language
English
French
Rights
No known copyright
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