Calling an historical figure a lesbian can be misleading. Women who have written about their affection for each other, along with spinsters who lived together for years, have often been viewed without much hint they had intimate relationships. With the coming of second wave feminism in the later 20th century a tendency to view all women in more or less heterosexual terms stirred a rebellion in which the definition of lesbian was challenged. Some groups widened the definition to mean any woman who didn't live a traditional heterosexual life. In 1970 the Radicalesbians stated, "A lesbian is the rage of all women condensed to the point of explosion." In 1980 feminist writer and poet Adrienne Rich proposed a continuum of lesbian relationships ranging from sexual to platonic. Rich wrote that instead of genital or sexual relationships between women, lesbian can mean any woman who skirts a conventional married life and resists male tyranny. Rich suggested lesbian relationships can happen between women who live or work together, even within the same family.
An updated take on this wider definition has to do with the girl crush as written about by Stephanie Rosenbloom in The New York Times. Rosenbloom defines a girl crush as "that fervent infatuation that one heterosexual woman develops for another woman who may seem impossibly sophisticated, gifted, beautiful or accomplished." Such girl crushes may trigger the same kind of feelings involved in a romance and although not sexual in nature, these feelings may sway relationship dynamics if the object of the crush learns about them. This broadening of the meaning for lesbian as any woman who bonds with another woman became known as woman identified woman. However, this usage has been criticized as desexualizing lesbians. Cheshire Calhoun wrote in 1995 "When feminist woman loving replaces lesbian genital sexuality, lesbian sexual identity disappears into feminist identity.".


The Guide to Lesbian Sex - Jude Schell Brand New This is a Brand New Book. 224 pages large format paperback. The Guide to Lesbian Sex - Jude Schell Nibble. Bite. Suck. Spank. These are just a few of the erotic activities covered in this alluring and offbeat guide to lesbian sex. The ultimate pleasure book for women The Guide to Lesbian Sex explores formerly forbidden fantasies in stunning 4-color and black-and-white photography. Covering everything from oral and manual positions to anal and insertive vaginal techniques The Guide to Lesbian Sex is packed with positions and methods-both simple and intricate-of lesbian sex. A practical yet fascinating and irresistible guide to dynamic sex this find out more.....


The Lesbian Kama Sutra - Kat Harding Brand New This is a Brand New Book. Hardback 114pp The Lesbian Kama Sutra - Kat Harding A beautifully presented hardback book. Illustrated throughout with fine-art paintings and erotic drawings that capture the female form in all it's glorious beauty. Almost 2 400 years old the Kama Sutra still has resonance for modern living and loving. The Lesbian Kama Sutra is the first guide to reinterpret for lesbian women the timeless erotic advice of this iconic ancient Indian guide to lovemaking and celebrate the passion and emotion of love between women. Featuring a luscious illustrated journey through different sexual positions and covering everything from meeti more.....



Lust - Bisexual Erotica by Marilyn Jaye Lewis This is a Brand New Book. paperback 200 pages Lust - Bisexual Erotica Sizzling women's erotic fiction with a decidedly bisexual bent from the very open mind of noted erotica writer Marilyn Jaye Lewis. From a high-priced hooker whose schoolgirl act includes a daddy and a mommy to a superstar actor who's trading his playboy days for a wife who takes it both ways from small-town scandal to sin on the streets of NYC from a time before the stars were born to a day when computers suggest some seriously sexy scenarios - there truly is something for everyone in these sizzling stories of bisexual escapades. Wonderfully written both cunning and stunning th click here.....



Best of Both Worlds : Bisexual Erotica by Sage Vivant M Christian This is a Brand New Book. paperback 225 pages Best of Both Worlds : Bisexual Erotica by Sage Vivant M Christian The Best of Both Worlds: Bisexual Erotica introduces you to men and women some experienced some simply curious who tear down the walls of gender to explore all of their desires. The unbridled heat of these stories is undeniable. But beyond that these authors explore the true nature of bisexuality and the conflicts between desire and the expectations of family and society. No matter what your taste in erotica-male/male female/female threesomes orgies swinging dominance and submission-there's something here to tempt yo more details.....



The Lesbian Sex Book by Wendy Caster Rachel Kramer Bussel This is a Brand New Book. paperback 231 pages The Lesbian Sex Book by Wendy Caster Rachel Kramer Bussel A best-seller for more than a decade THE LESBIAN SEX BOOK in alphabetical entries tells you everything you want and need to know about sex between women whether you're simply curious about what they do or want to explore the finer points of achieving ecstasy with your lover. Whether the topic is sex practices gender politics relationship building polymory edible body oils THE LESBIAN SEX BOOK is the only source for both the sexuality adventurous and the erotic novice. More than just a sex manual however this updated edition offers f more.....



Best Bisexual Women's Erotica - Edited by Cara Bruce This is a Brand New Book. Paperback 200 pages Best Bisexual Women's Erotica - Edited by Cara Bruce Best Bisexual Women's Erotica presents stories that explore in provocative detail the steamy sex lives and loves of bisexual women everywhere. Among the settings are sex parties threesomes first time encounters partner-switching and anonymous sex. Contributors include Carol Queen Kathleen Bryson and Anne Marino as well as many others. "Cara Bruce is a fresh voice in the pantheon of sex writers and editors. She gives expression to a new generation's perspective yet her voice bespeaks the wisdom of an old and experienced soul. Her work consiste click here.....



On Our Backs Guide to Lesbian Sex edited by Diana Cage This is a Brand New Book. paperback 314 On Our Backs Guide to Lesbian Sex World-renowned authorities on lesbian sexuality explain it all for you.This remarkable volume showcases the best writing on lesbian sex and desire in the 20-year history of "On Our Backs "magazine. Illustrated with stunning photographs by Phyllis Christopher Michele Serchuk Christine Kessler and Rebecca McBride "The On Our Backs Guide to Lesbian Sex "provides expert advice on virtually all topics related to women's sexuality including gender BDSM body-image issues polyamory fisting strap-on use topping and bottoming and anal sex. Even basics such as kissing cruisin more.....



Trans Figures - Transgender Erotica M. Christian This is a Brand New Book. paperback 245 Trans Figures - Transgender Erotica Transgender Erotica: Trans Figures is an erotic anthology of fiction and personal account that explores the creative limits of human sexuality—the transgender experience. Long misunderstood and under-represented in literature emotional and sexual transsexuality exposes what erotic experience can and should be—limitless. Erotic stories where men and women each discovering their true sexual selves find desire and boundless passion waiting for them through self-acceptance and self-revelation. These are beautifully crafted tales of heat and desire always stimulating always extra info.....



The Whole Lesbian Sex Book: A Passionate Guide for All of Us by Felice Newman - 2nd edition Brand New This is a Brand New Book. paperback 250 pages The Whole Lesbian Sex Book: A Passionate Guide for All of Us A Passionate Guide for All of Us - 2nd Edition Five years after the original publication of this 'The Classic' sex guide the new second edition brings us new information experiences illustrations and an entirely new chapter. Drawing on a wide range of published sources as well as her own questionnaire circulated by e-mail the author has compiled an exhaustively thorough how-to guide with an entirely new chapter on relationships. It speaks to lesbian bi-sexual and transsexual readers; bu extra info.....



Bi Lives: Bisexual Women Tell Their Stories by Kata Orndorff This is a Brand New Book. paperback 252 pages Bi Lives: Bisexual Women Tell Their Stories by Kata Orndorff In-depth interviews with several dozen bisexual womenNwomen in monogamous relationships; women in open relationships; women in a group marriage; women who are very "out"; others still in the closet; an HIV+ woman; women into S M; mothers; professionals; artists; office workers; midwives; etc. Topics include sexual awakening; life and relationship histories; sexual practices; being "out" to friends family and co-workers; dealing with the lesbian gay male straight and bi communities; differences between relationships with women find out more.....



The Straight Girls Guide to Sleeping with Chicks - Jen Sincero Brand New This is a Brand New Book. Paperback 320 pp The Straight Girls Guide to Sleeping with Chicks - Jen Sincero You can't swing a dead cat at a bridal shower without hitting a straight chick who's slept with another woman who's thought about it or who's ready to make the move as soon as someone breaks out the booze." Such are the incisive pearls of wisdom to be heard from straight chick and girl-on-girl dabbler Jen Sincero author of The Straight Girl's Guide to Sleeping with Chicks. A deliciously sexy how-to guide it gives curious straight women the complete inside scoop on girl-on-girl action -- from pickup lines and virgin more.....
The earliest known written references to same-sex love between women are attributed to Sappho (the eponym of sapphism), who lived on the island of Lesbos in ancient Greece from about 625 to 570 BCE and wrote poems which apparently expressed her sexual attraction to other females. Modern scholarship has suggested a parallel between ancient Greek pederasty and the friendships Sappho formed with her students. Lesbian relationships were also common among the Lacedaemonians of ancient Sparta. Plutarch wrote "love was so esteemed among them that girls also became the erotic objects of noble women."
Accounts of lesbian relationships are found in poetry and stories from ancient China. Research by anthropologist Liza Dalby, based mostly on erotic poems exchanged between women, has suggested lesbian relationships were commonplace and socially accepted in Japan during the Heian Period. In medieval Arabia there were reports of relations between harem residents, although these were sometimes suppressed. For example Caliph Musa al-Hadi ordered the beheading of two girls who were surprised during lovemaking. During the twelfth-century Etienne de Fougères derided lesbians in his Livre des manières (about CE 1170), likening them to hens behaving as roosters and reflecting a general tendency among religious and secular authorities in Europe to reject any notion women could be properly sexual without men.
The earliest American historical records concerned with female homosexual conduct were not drawn from sources sympathetic to lesbians, or women in general. Although it is through early records of colonial legislatures and writings that clearly consider lesbians a social outgroup, the sparse material shows mainstream attitudes toward lesbianism, and the opposition to homosexual women during the years prior to the Gay and Lesbian Rights Movement.
Some of the earliest published studies of female homosexual activity were written from observations of, and data gathered from, incarcerated women. Margaret Otis published "A Perversion Not Commonly Noted" in the 1913 Journal of American Psychology, coupling a decidedly Puritanical moral foundation with an almost revolutionary sympathy for lesbian relationships; her focus revolved more around her revulsion for sexual contact between those of different ethnic backgrounds, yet offered an almost radical tolerance of the lesbian relations themselves, as Otis noted "...sometimes the love [of one young woman for another] is very real and seems almost ennobling." This document provided a rare view from a tightly controlled setting monitored by a corrections supervisor. Kate Richards O'Hare, imprisoned in 1917 for five years under the Espionage Act of 1917, published a firsthand account of the life of incarcerated women In Prison complete with frightening accounts of lesbian sexual abuse among inmates. So wrote O'Hare: "...A thorough education in sex perversions is part of the educational system of most prisons, and for the most part the underkeepers and the stool pigeons are very efficient teachers..."
O'Hare then recounted a systematic induction of women into a cycle of forced prostitution to which authorities turned a blind eye: "...there seems to be considerable ground for the commonly accepted belief of the prison inmates that much of its graft and profits may percolate upward to the under officials...the...stool pigeon...handled the vices so rampant in the prison...she, in fact, held the power of life and death over us, by being able to secure endless punishments in the blind cell, she could and did compel indulgence in this vice in order that its profits might be secured."
Though these both provided second-hand accounts from two very different perspectives, no locatable known lesbian first-hand accounts of life in a correctional institution are known to exist, leaving this area of study incomplete and ripe for further investigation.
Boston marriage was a term used in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries for households where two women lived together, independent of any male support. These relationships were not necessarily sexual; the existence of platonic Boston marriages was used to quell fears of lesbianism following the loss of men in World War I.Today, the term is sometimes used when referring to two women living together who are not in a sexual relationship. Such a relationship may have intimacy and commitment, without sexuality.
The 20th century saw the birth of the earliest Lesbian rights organizations, most importantly of which was Heterodoxy, founded as a feminist luncheon club for "unorthodox women," in whose membership is included notable and prominent lesbians Katherine Anthony, Sara Josephine Baker, Helen Hull, and Elisabeth Irwin. Concurrently established in San Francisco, Mona's 440 club became the first recognized lesbian bar. Emma Goldman, internationally known anarchist and social activist, once dubbed "the most dangerous woman in America" by J. Edgar Hoover, was also an outspoken advocated of the rights of gays and lesbians, perhaps for the first time in American history. Whether or not Goldman was involved in any lesbian relationships is uncertain, but her advocacy has resulted in some calling her the Mother of the Gay and Lesbian Rights Movement.
Founded in 1955, the Daughters of Bilitis was the first exclusively Lesbian organization in the United States. A year after their founding in San Francisco, DoB began publishing The Ladder (Magazine), the first widely-distributed Lesbian American periodical. Soon after, a chapter was formed in New York City, and held the first Lesbian American conference in 1960. As the Women's Liberation Movement began, lesbians found an outlet to voice concerns shared with heterosexual women. In 1969 lesbian author and activist Rita Mae Brown joined the National Organization for Women and challenged homophobia within the organization: "I'm tired of hearing everyone moan about men. Say something good about women. I'll say something good. I love them. I'm a lesbian." One year later all lesbians were expelled from its ranks, and one year after that they were again admitted, with apologies from NOW's leadership.The Metropolitan Community Church was founded in 1968, the first Christian assembly of gays and lesbians. In 1969, the church's founder, Rev. Troy D. Perry, performed the first known same-sex marriage in the United States.
In the second half of the 1960s, LGBT activism spilled over into social protest and gay liberation. On the East Coast, beginning in 1965, homophile organizations picketed the White House, The Pentagon, the United Nations, and Independence Hall, demanding an end to anti-gay discrimination. The picketers were few in number, but received attention (generally unfavorable) in national news reports. More dramatically, transgendered people rioted in August 1966 at Compton's Cafeteria in San Francisco, the first time in history an organized group of LGBT people resisted arrest. In 1969, Rita Mae Brown, along with many other lesbians, took part in the Stonewall riots. This event, known as the birth of the modern Gay and Lesbian Rights Movement, began in response to a targeted effort by police to close known gay and lesbian establishments.