Rictor norton biography examples
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Paullett Golden
Publication Date: March 31, 2021
Good golly, Miss Molly!
Would it chock you to learn that homosexuality was not olagligt in the 18th century? How about if you learned there was a vibrant gay culture during this time? Now that I've shocked you to your toes, let's get to know what exactly was förbjudet.
This research section only scratches the surface, but it's an important section to include given the preferences of Patrick March, Viscount Kissinger, in The Heir and The Enchantress. The first point I'll make fryst vatten that if you really want to dig deeper into this subject, far beyond what my little scratching of the surface has provided (which isn't much, eh?), then betalningsmedel out historian Rictor Norton. He fryst vatten the go-to on this subject and has devoted his career to studying the historical, cultural, and literary presence of gay culture and homosexuality in and around the Georgian era.
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18th Century Queer Culture
This information is given as an overview and is not a definitive guide to all of queer history in the 18th century, especially as much of it is specific to England. However, as British subjects, many people in colonial America were still connected to the ideas here. This page is designed to grow and evolve as I learn more myself. There are much more topics within the vastness of 18th century queer culture that I have not even begun to dive into yet, for example, a closer look at gender identity beyond the example of Deborah Sampson below.
The "That's Just How People Were Back Then" Myth
A common misconception that seems to prevail among popular knowledge today is that queer identity is a fairly new concept. Historians and others discussing and presenting historical topics often add a caveat of "that's how people were back then" whenever sharing personal communications between people of presumably the same gender tha
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Interactive Storytelling Tools for Writers
Shortly after I placed this material on my website, I sent emails to a number of website owners, suggesting that they might want to correct their inclusion of Erasmus in their list of historical gays. Dr. Rictor Norton, author of My Dear Boy: Gay Love Letters through the Centuries, kindly replied, and an enlightening correspondence ensued. Here is that correspondence in its entirety. To make reading easier, I have presented my own writing in blue and Dr. Norton’s writing in black.
From Dr. Rictor Norton, 4/15/00
Dear Chris Crawford,
Thank you for your note about Erasmus. Have you actually looked at my anthology _My Dear Boy: Gay Love Letters through the Centuries_, or are you just responding to the presence of Erasmus in the table of contents published on the Web? The introduction to my book gives what I think is a good overview of the historical context of the writing of gay love letters, and deals with how to define “gay love letter