Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Book
Author Oram, Alison.

Title Her husband was a woman! : women's gender-crossing in modern British popular culture / Alison Oram
Published London : Routledge, [2007]
©2007

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  306.7780941 Ora/Hhw  AVAILABLE
Description xii, 192 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Series Women's and gender history
Women's and gender history.
Contents 1900-late 1920s : the traditions of gender-crossing -- Work and war : masculinity, gender relations and the passing woman -- Sexuality, love, and marriage : the gender-crossing woman as female husband -- The 1930s : entertaining modernity -- Gender-crossing and modern sexualities 1928-1939 -- "The sheik was a she!" : the gigolo and cosmopolitanism in the 1930s -- The 1930s "sex change" story : medical technology and physical transformation -- Gender and sexual identities since the 1940s -- "Perverted passions" : sexual knowledge and popular culture 1940-1960
Summary "'Astonishing' reports of women masquerading as men frequently appear in the mass media from the turn of the twentieth century to the 1960s." "Alison Oram's study of women's gender-crossing explores the popular press to analyse how women's cross-gender behaviour and same-sex desires were presented to ordinary working-class and lower middle-class people. It breaks new ground in focusing on the representation of female sexualities within the broad sweep of popular culture rather than in fiction and professional literature."
"Her Husband was a Woman! surveys these engaging stories of cross-dressing in mass-circulation newspapers and places them in the wider context of variety theatre, fairgrounds and other popular entertainment. Oram catalogues the changing perception of female cross-dressing and its relationship to contemporary ways of writing about gender and desire in the popular press. In the early twentieth century cross-dressing women were not condemned by the press for being socially transgressive, but celebrated for their trickster joking and success in performing masculinity. While there may have been earlier 'knowingness', it was not until after the Second World War that cross-dressing was explicitly linked to lesbianism or transsexuality in popular culture."
Notes Formerly CIP. Uk
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Cross-dressing -- Great Britain -- History.
Female-to-male transsexuals -- Great Britain -- History.
Lesbianism -- Great Britain -- History.
Male impersonators -- Great Britain -- History.
LC no. 2007022516
ISBN 0415400066 (hbk.)
0415400074 (paperback)
9780415400060 (hbk.)
9780415400077 (paperback)
Other Titles Women's gender-crossing in modern British popular culture