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Edith Lees Ellis (1861 - 1916)

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Becoming Visible : A Reader in Gay & Lesbian History for High School & College Students

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Gay Essentials: Facts for Your Queer BrainGay Essentials: Facts for Your Queer Brain by David Bianco

"Who was Sappho? How did San Francisco get so gay? Was Eleanor Roosevelt really a lesbian? In this lively volume, Bianco answers these and 98 other questions about gay history. Largely culled from Bianco's newspaper column 'Past Out', the entries in Gay Essentials are succinct, witty and anecdotal. Bianco does a sensible, entertaining job of covering the kind of history that isn't taught in most schools." -- Library Journal, September 15, 1999  

Includes the answer to the question:  Who were Havelock Ellis and Edith Lees Ellis? 

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Edith Mary Oldham (Lees) Ellis

Edith Mary Oldham (Lees) Ellis (1861- 1916), the wife of Havelock Ellis, was an author in her own right. The two volumes here published by Ishill (volume 1 on display) clearly demonstrate her proficiency as a writer. This is one of the few publications which Ishill offered for sale. Most of his work was distributed privately to friends and others whom he knew would appreciate the contents of his publications...

 

Romantic Friendship? Some Issues in Researching Lesbian History and Biography

By Liz Stanley, University of Manchester, United Kingdom

Excerpt:

The main feminist conceptualisation of women's close relationships from the eighteenth to the early twentieth century characterises these as 'romantic friendships' and argues that a stereotype of 'the lesbian' was invented by sexologists such as Havelock Ellis and applied to these relationships in order to condemn them. A number of pieces of primary research are presented which suggest that this approach is highly problematic. In the case of Emily Wilding Davison's close relationship with Mary Leigh there is simply too little historical evidence to be able to draw any conclusions as to its character or its meaning for the women concerned. In addition, Edith Lees Ellis has been seen as a woman whose romantic friendships were 'morbidified' as lesbianism by her husband Havelock Ellis, although in this case archival evidence clearly shows that she certainly saw herself as a 'invert'. And relatedly, the same archival source also shows that some women experienced their sexuality in 'mannish' terms in the absence of any evidence of an influence on them of the pejorative writings of sexologists. Rather than premature theoretical generalisation, what is needed is more primary research on particular women's close relationships and the social context in which these were located...

 

Mr. and Mrs. Havelock Ellis

This site lists books with photos by and about Havelock Ellis and Edith Lees Ellis.

 

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