INTRODUCTION
This article aims to provide examples of the diverse resources at the British Library which might be of value to researchers investigating intersections between law, gender and sexuality. While certain harder to access primary legal and preparatory legislative sources are noted, this very selective survey looks beyond what might be called the doctrinal info-sphere of legislation, law reports, and exposition of legal rules.
Academic literature treating these intersections with cross-disciplinary, social-theoretical and critical legal frameworks and methods, although collected at the British Library, is not covered here in great detail. However these literatures can be searched and accessed via numerous abstracting, indexing and full text e-resources and via the library catalogue Explore.bl.uk. Work including feminist legal theory, or examination of law's silence on gender and sexuality and its default male hetero-normativity, or biographical and empirically based work on gender and sexuality in the legal professions is introduced in surveys of the literatureFootnote 1 and elsewhere in this issue. Resource guides on Women's and Gender studies more generally are also found on the Library website.Footnote 2
Paying attention instead to the historical, disciplinary, format and geographic scope of the Library's collections, examples of resources in different collection areas suggest opportunities to explore intersections between law, gender and sexuality in their wider social, cultural, spatial and historical contexts and manifestations. Examples of governmental, religious and medical sources, and of popular cultural, news and visual media are offered as possible opportunities to investigate varied perspectives and types of discourse on law, gender or sexuality. Details of collections, items, British Library shelf marks and collection guides are provided in the end notes. Reflecting the broad view of the Library offered at the training day, this article should be read with Dr. Polly Russell's discussion of the Sisterhood and After oral history project which provides a more in depth survey of one particular collection.
NEWS AND MAGAZINES
In April 2014, shortly before the training day, Rashida Manjoo, UN Special Rapporteur on the causes and consequences of violence against women,Footnote 3 drew attention to over-sexualized portrayals of women and girls in the media and to the international framework of women's human rights.Footnote 4 In light of this, and recently having been alerted to Shannon Sampert's critical content analysis in Newspapers and Sexual Assault Myths Footnote 5 it was not hard to see how the Library's collections of tabloid newspapers, so called women's glossies, lads' mags, and more explicitly pornographic material might help to inform research focussing on relationships between law and a socially constructed view of gender and sexuality.
The news collectionsFootnote 6 for example can support investigations of salacious journalism, or the circulation and reinforcement of sexualised gender stereotypes, as part of understanding the cultural environment in which violent crimes are perpetrated, and in which women's human rights operate on a daily basis. The new, St.Pancras based Newsroom houses long back files of easily accessible press guides that offer point in time circulation figures for newspapers and popular magazines. It is also possible to see how these sources might facilitate investigation of relationships between the social construction of sexualised gender identity, and low reporting and conviction rates for violent crimes against women and girls, or unresponsive and unsupportive processing of crimes reported to the police.
Nor is it hard to imagine how newspaper articles published in the 1920s or 1980s might be used to research historical context, the mediation of social facts, and the circulation of ideas about sexuality, law and public policy. On the subject of the Well of Loneliness Footnote 7 obscenity trial, readers of the Daily Express on Monday 20 August 1928 saw a dapper Radclyffe Hall exhibited in the centre of the front page. Under a banner announcing the death of Richard Burdon Haldane, beside an advertisement in which a fashionably hatted woman silently observes as two men discuss furniture finance, we can read the terms in which the editor of the previous day's edition had condemned the book and pushed for prosecution.Footnote 8 Early on in the controversy over the Section 28 ban on local authorities “promoting homosexuality”,Footnote 9 whether helping to create or reflect public opinion and the conditions for political consent with regard to the legislation, the Daily Mail ran an article entitled Save the children from sad sordid sex lessons.Footnote 10
VISUAL AND SPATIAL MANIFESTATIONS OF LAW, GENDER AND SEXUALITY
The Library's new St. Pancras based Newsroom also provides access to a growing Broadcast News archive in addition to print and digital newspaper sources.Footnote 11 Covering free to air channels, Broadcast News includes televised reporting aired by France 24, offering the opportunity to scrutinise both media discourse and the visual language of protest around the introduction of French legislation on same sex marriage and parenting. Frame by frame visual analysis can be conducted of the emblems of the variously constituted body of protesters demonstrating in the streets of Paris to protest against the legislation and support what were described as traditional family values under the banner of La manifestation pour tous.Footnote 12
Pictorial representation in the Illustrated Police News of the 1890s trials of Oscar Wilde enables examination of the means by which the legal interrogation of the man's sexuality was encountered publicly at the time, both in the popular press and as a crowded, live spectacle.Footnote 13 Published in 1855, thirty years before the introduction of the gross indecency offence under which Wilde was convicted and sentenced to two years hard labour,Footnote 14 and still six years before the capital sentence for sodomy was reduced to life imprisonment,Footnote 15Yokel's Preceptor offers potential support for researching relationships between criminal law and spatial, cultural, visual and performative aspects of gender, sexuality and identity in Victorian London. Signposting particular streets and locations the book highlights pejorative language appearing in window notices as well as the visually coded body language and dress habits of “marjories”, “poofs” and “wagtails.Footnote 16 Published in 1937, twenty years before the Wolfenden report,Footnote 17 thirty years before the decriminalisation of sexual acts in private between two consenting men over the age of twenty one, For Your Convenience, includes a map of London cottages (public lavatories used for anonymous sexual encounters between men) facilitating further geographic and architectural construction of the public urban spaces in which a strand of gay subculture and sexual practice was regulated by criminal law.Footnote 18
Elsewhere in the British Library collections are photographic and other images of Indian architectural structures providing segregated space for women pursuant to religious cultural practice. Employing the term zenana, a key word search of the Library website via Explore.bl.uk retrieves several images; a gender segregated hospital, a school, a carriage, gardens and living quarters. Separately, one of four colour photographs accompanying reportage in Time (Atlantic edition) from Afghanistan in June 2012 brings us to an all-male, outdoor law class seated in the grounds of Kabul University. While offering opportunities for visual analysis of legal education, and stimulating further questions about the spatial dimensions of the relationships between law, religion and gender, variety between editions stimulates questions about the role of publishing and information management mediating our understanding of law in action. The Atlantic International edition provided by EBSCOhost Business Source Complete does not appear to include the four photographs, while the Chicago edition does not appear to have run the article at all.Footnote 19
The pejorative language highlighted in the Preceptor also provides possible search terms with which to generate visual representations of word prevalence from the increasingly digitised literature. Google Books and Old Bailey Online, both of which include content digitised from British Library collections, provide data visualisation tools. Google Books Ngram Viewer Footnote 20 facilitates visualisation in graph form of the comparative prevalence, across its entire corpus, of different words and phrases over time. Search techniques, statistical reporting and visualisation tools, and the Old Bailey API (application programming interface) are all introduced on Old Bailey Online.Footnote 21
RELIGION
Various sources at the Library facilitate investigation of religious doctrine on gender and sexuality and the influence that this thinking might have had on the judicial realm or more broadly in ways that overlap with legal issues.
Together with decrees of the ecumenical councils, selected key works of canon law may be found on the open shelves in the Humanities reading room. A subject index to the papers and proceedings of the General Synod of the Church of England and miscellaneous synod publications from the 1970s onwards can be retrieved from storage areas.Footnote 22 Rare book and manuscript items retrievable from storage via the appropriate reading room contain early cannon law works of continuing scholarly interest according to one legal historian.Footnote 23 The sacred texts of numerous religions are also introduced on the websiteFootnote 24 while, in addition to published works found in the main catalogue covering printed books, a selection of works on religious law can also be found via the manuscripts catalogue grouped with official publications of the India Office collections.Footnote 25
Early C20th papers belonging to Cornelia Sorabji, (Indian lawyer and social reformer 1866–1954) report on legal difficulties experienced by purdahnashins (orthodox Hindu and Muslim women living in secluded, women's quarters described as zenana).Footnote 26 Frequently these women seem to be widowed mothers of male heirs whose inheritance, during their minority, was supervised by the Court of Wards. Printed records of court proceedings transmitted to London for Privy Council appeal hearings also frequently include inheritance claims and family cases from India in which the legal adjudication of disputes impacting women and girls is conducted with reference to personal status laws, and religious cultural practice. These sources offer rare insight into the action of the litigation and the process by which dispute and dialogue over evidence and varied sources of law are distilled into the monologue of an appeal judgment.Footnote 27 India Office Records can be explored for further reference to the administration of law and policy relating to these practices.Footnote 28
Academic literature offers introductions to many relationships between law, religion, gender and sexuality. Numerous research publications and journals bring perspective on Islamic religious law particularly around family law and women. While the Kerala Law Times offers, for example, late twentieth century dialogue around interpretations and misinterpretations of polygamous marriage practices,Footnote 29 recent issues of the journal Islamic Law and Society have offered articles and book reviews on issues such as women's assertion of marriage rights in Islamic law as a means of contesting elders' authority, embryology and reproductive technologies, Muslim women in Indonesian religious courts and gender, sex, space and sovereignty in Ottoman Islamic law.Footnote 30
Elsewhere on the religious spectrum's take on law, gender and sexuality Klarman addresses the struggle for same sex marriage,Footnote 31 while Ferrari and Cristofori bring together essays examining law, religion, and women in the hands of multiculturalism, the reconciliation of women's human rights and religion, the tensions between sex equality and religious freedom, the pitfalls for gender equality and the politics-religion relationship , homophobic speech, equality denial and religious expression, and finally, religious group autonomy, gay ordination, and human rights law.Footnote 32 Ingram investigates historical church courts, sex and marriage.Footnote 33
Accounts of 17th Century and 18th Century English trials reveal a range of sexual acts classified as sodomy, and the capital sentences passed, and appear to indicate the influence of religious discourse on the legal construction of certain sexual behaviours by reference to sin and offenses against nature.Footnote 34 For comparison, a record of the verdict on thirty three men accused of ‘sodomy’ in the Netherlands in 1731 may also be accessed. These reportedly reveal that although capital sentences had been used in the past all the men in this case received life time banishment.Footnote 35
OFFICIAL PUBLICATIONS
In the context of international development policy or human rights bodies aiming to eliminate violence and discrimination against women, reports and statistics from international organisations contribute to our understanding of law's role in facilitating discrimination as well as in protecting rights. While once-elusive United Nations reports with references like A/HRC/26/38 or A/HRC/26/39Footnote 36 now can be found routinely on the web, various guides to the British Library's print and electronic collections facilitate exploration and retrieval of official publications for the E.U., United Nations, national governments across Europe and Africa, for some of Asia, and the United States.Footnote 37 Electronic subscription resources accessible freely in the reading rooms, and selected free online sources are also listed and linked on the website.Footnote 38
Gender, Institutions and Development, a statistical data set within the subscription based OECD i-Library, provides comparative international figures on, for example, women's inheritance rights, female genital mutilation (FGM), legal age of marriage, levels of domestic violence, custody and guardianship rights, reproductive rights and unmet need for contraception, and access to public space. This database is free to access in the St. Pancras reading rooms.Footnote 39
At a national level, the 2009 Ugandan Anti-Homosexuality or Marriage and Divorce bills can be found intermittently online, but print copies are held at the British Library as part of an extensive collection of Government gazettes.Footnote 40 Closer to home, comprehensive collections of UK official publications include statistical reports, Home Office research reports, and social surveys offering intelligence and research on issues such as domestic violence, sexual offences or more general demographics.Footnote 41
BIOMEDICAL AND HEALTH SOURCES
Further intersections between different perspectives on law, gender and sexuality are found in medical and public health sources. Interdisciplinary investigation of the impact of the Ugandan Anti-Homosexuality bill, including work on closeting and consequential difficulties for HIV prevention and treatment, was quickly identifiable and accessible by use of Africa Wide and Sabinet. Footnote 42 Elsewhere in the collections a US epidemiological surveillance report from June 5th 1981,Footnote 43 and collections of public health leaflets shed light on some of the modes by which awareness of HIV/AIDS entered medical, state and popular consciousness. Such items include Play Fair, a sexual health education leaflet produced in 1982,Footnote 44 and campaign materials from the Central Office of Information, focussing for example on condom use, needle sharing, and campaigns designed particularly for the gay press.Footnote 45
The Library's extensive Science Technology and Medicine (STM) collections offer opportunities to investigate both the contribution of the medical discourse to the construction of gender and sexuality, but also the transmission of this form of knowledge to literary, social policy, legislative and judicial domains. Entry points to the STM literature, accessible in the reading rooms,Footnote 46 can be interrogated in search of literature on gender assignment, or the construction of homosexuality as a malady (compared with constructions in other discourses focusing on sin, morality or vice), or regarding hormone therapies or chemical castration.
Krafft-Ebing's 1886 Psychopathia Sexualis: a clinical forensic study, aimed at least partly at the judiciary, is available at the Library in German editions and English translations.Footnote 47 Published first in 1886, reaching an English translation of its tenth edition by the end of the nineteenth century, Krafft Ebing's work finds its way into the legislative realm looking at sexuality in 1921 to inform the men of the house for whom lesbian women were invisible and not regarded as appropriate for discussion in the space of the legislative chamber. Krafft-Ebing is cited by Ernest Wild in Hansard on August 4th 1921 along with Havelock Ellis' Sexual Inversion,Footnote 48 to inform the proposal of an amendment which ultimately failed to criminalise “gross indecency between females”.Footnote 49
Whether the clause was introduced in earnest or for political tactics is unfortunately beyond the scope of this article. However the Parliamentary debate on the bill reveals varied contexts with which women and same sex sexual relations were framed by the men of both houses. (Nancy Astor voted against the clause) With reference to the supposed role of women in the destruction of ancient empire and civilization,Footnote 50 passing anecdote from family law practice, and to the erosion of family structures and social institutions, talk of “feminine morality”, vice and “perversion” is also couched in terms of “brain abnormalities” and neuro-science.
This “medico-legal” stance on sexuality enters the legislative discourse in the alarming shadow of eugenics. While Wild's citation of Havlock Ellis' Sexual Inversion brings to mind the author's later work in The Task of Social Hygiene,Footnote 51 Lieutenant Colonel Moore-Brabazon's proposal is that when “dealing with perverts” the best policy is to “not advertise them… because these cases are self-exterminating”.Footnote 52 (Sources on women's writing such as Orlando Footnote 53 suggest that Krafft-Ebing and Ellis also influenced Radcliffe Hall. She reportedly drew from case studies of the former for character development, and to recount the process by which the protagonist constructs her identity, drew from Ellis' Sexual Inversion.)
Freely available online, BL Sounds offers access to a discussion of the cultural influence of the social hygiene movement in relation to gender and sexuality in the form of a 1987 recording of Frank Mort and Lucy Bland in conversation as part of the ICA Talks.Footnote 54 The papers of another proponent of social hygiene, Marie Stopes, co-founder of the Mother's Clinic for Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress, can be found in the manuscript collections.Footnote 55
More recent focus on reproductive rights, the medical profession and both legislative reform and adjudicatory process can be found in the UK Open Web Archive and among printed records of proceedings from Privy Council appeal cases emanating, this time, from the disciplinary committee of the General Medical Council. Reports on barriers, including a ban on abortion in Nicaragua, to women's control of their own bodies in the context of human, sexual and reproductive rights are preserved in archived instances of the Amnesty International UK website.Footnote 56
Following the UK Abortion Act of 1967, at least two disciplinary appeals to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, address within the context of self-advertisement and unbecoming professional conduct, medical practitioners' circulation of information about the legality and practical procurement of medical termination of pregnancy. Footnote 57 Providing transcripts of oral evidence and cross examination as well as documentary exhibits, a book with the cover title Abortion: a Sunday Times guide to abortion within the law, the proceedings facilitate close examination of the language used.Footnote 58
CLASSICAL, THEATRICAL, LITERARY AND POPULAR CULTURE
Classical Greek works, that typically may not be available in a law library, provide sources for the examination of both ancient and modern historical attitudes on gender politics and law. English translations are widely available but can be accessed in the British Library along with academic analysis and evidence of the impact of ancient history and culture on the legislative and judicial domain. Other resources help to explore the way in which law has also contributed to the control of cultural representations of gender and sexuality.
In Plato's Republic and Laws for example, researchers will find discussion of women's role in elite public office and the armed forces, while the final part of Aeschylus' Oresteia trilogy The Eumenides dramatises a matricide trial employing female symbolism in the representation of evolving forms of justice.Footnote 59
An academic and a parliamentary source suggest ways in which the C19th and early C20th circulation of classical treatments of gender and transgression may be considered in relation to their contemporary legislative and judicial domains. The influence of Greek and Roman ancient history on the way one legislator talked about women's sexuality in terms of imperial decline has been alluded to above already in the context of the gross indecency debate in 1921. Investigation of the prevalence of classical education among the legislature might be supported by biographical research.Footnote 60 Arnot, on the other hand, has examined tropes of “monstrous mothers” and “respectable but seduced maidens” at large in both the judicial domain of Victorian England and in contemporary theatrical productions of the story of Medea, whose infanticidal revenge was staged and inscribed by ancient poets including Euripides, Seneca and Apollonius of Rhodes.Footnote 61
Moving to the censorship of cultural representatives of gender and sexuality, in 1918 the publisher of Rose Allatini's treatment of homosexuality and pacifism in Despised and Rejected Footnote 62 was fined under the Defence of the Realm Act 1914 for prejudicing recruiting, discipline and training. As previously mentioned Hall's Well of Loneliness was trialled in 1928 under the Obscene Publications Act 1857. By the time Wolfenden reported in 1957 the Examiner of Plays at the Lord Chamberlain's Office, empowered by royal prerogative before acquiring statutory footing with the Theatre Act 1843 had, according to Nicholson, “never passed a play about Lesbianism and … very, very rarely one in which homosexuality is mentioned”.Footnote 63
A large archive of correspondence files and play transcripts amassed in the Lord Chamberlain's Office files is accessible in the British Library manuscripts reading room.Footnote 64 The archive appears to provide potentially valuable context for examining changing attitudes to homosexuality and its criminalisation. In particular the correspondence appears to provide interesting contemporary context for the public/private dichotomy present in Wolfenden,Footnote 65 offering some evidence of the way in which law appears to have operated on the censorship process at a bureaucratic level of negotiation and brinksmanship between the regulator and the regulated.Footnote 66
In the 1950s this seems to happen within a framework of poorly defined and outdated law, increasingly outdated notions of morality and artistic merit, economic considerations, and fear about the loss of authority, by trading transgressive content for public licence at the expense of the public visibility of gay and lesbian people in artistic works. For theatre managers with financial considerations at stake, this process involved the increasing use of private theatre clubs to circumvent the need for a licence. While the Chamberlain seems fearful that the law may decide on licensing issues in such a way as to further undermine his authority, “it would be his duty as custodian of the Act to take steps to test the law”. Footnote 67
Reporting the Assistant Comptroller's communication with the Home Office, Nicholson contextualises the reported policy on plays featuring “unnatural vice” by referring to a back story of panic over imperial decline, national security fears, removal of gay men from public office, and over one hundred cases of castration including the “enforced hormone therapy” on Alan Turing.Footnote 68 One year after Wolfenden, a memorandum from late 1958 is reported to have instructed the staff of the Office that plays on homosexuality or including homosexual characters, including works which criticised “the present Homosexual Laws” would be allowed, subject to assessment of merit. Serious treatment of “the subject” was deemed to be an indicator of merit, but “propaganda” and “violently” pro-homosexual plays would not be passed.Footnote 69
A list of plays refused a licence is indicated in the collection guide, hinting at possible value in their further exploration within the themes of this article.Footnote 70 Offending elements in other plays were censored to secure a licence for public performance. To receive a licence for The Maids, a work by gay playwright Jean Genet, “all indications of Lesbian relations” were removed from the text of a revised transcript submitted to the Chamberlain's office in the early 1950s.Footnote 71
Complementary, as contextual sources, to publications of the Homosexual Law Reform Society,Footnote 72 and those of the Netherlands Association for the Integration of Homosexuality,Footnote 73 is the correspondence tracing attempts to negotiate the licence for several attempted productions of another of Genet's plays The Balcony . The correspondence spans almost the entire period between the 1957 Wolfenden report and decriminalisation in 1967. Explicitly problematic to the censor for its “major themes of blasphemy and perversion”, correspondence lasted from 1957 until 1965, just two years before decriminalisation and three years before the abolition of censorship by the Theatre Act 1968.Footnote 74
Despite libel and obscenity trials, British comics are regarded as having offered a venue for the open discussion and hence greater visibility of gender issues and diverse sexuality. Exhibits in the 2014 Comics Unmasked exhibition may be seen in the accompanying printed catalogue. Some exhibits can be seen online.Footnote 75
One exhibited storyline appearing in a 1988 benefit comic published in aid of opposition to Section 28 illustrates, surrounded by a collage of clippings from The Sun newspaper, an episode of ranting homophobic boozing,Footnote 76 while another, Unstoppable If…, published in 2001 adds to this popular-cultural perspective on Clause 28 by recounting the story of one man's opposition to the enacted section's repeal in Scotland in 2000.Footnote 77 Published in 1977, Committed Comix “recounts unromantic legal precautions” taken by two male lovers on a first date. They check under the bed to ensure that ‘there's no fuzz hidden around’ to push the date beyond the boundaries of legality, regarding private space and the number of men involved, that had been at large for ten years since the Sexual Offences Act of 1967.Footnote 78 The grass routes feminist perspective is accessible in sources such as Riot Girl, Shrew, Spare Rib and Unskinny.Footnote 79
SOUND RECORDINGS
While space and time do not permit investigation of the collections' potential for contextualising or understanding the social dimensions of the intersections between law, gender and sexuality, the resources listed in the following note attempt quickly to place Dr. Russel's article in context of the wider collections of sound recordings and oral history.Footnote 80 Further guidance to oral history collections can be found on the website along with an introduction to the BBC Radio Archive in which programmes such as Women's Hour or Law in Action may offer relevant insights.Footnote 81
CONCLUSIONS
This article has attempted to highlight areas of the library's collections which can support socially and historically contextualised legal research, or research prioritising the social dimensions of law in action, in and out of court. Efforts have been made to highlight resources which might support investigation of the cross-pollination of the legal construction of gender and sexuality by religious and medical discourses, and those which offer insight into the popular sources of information which can propagate or reinforce particular views on gender and sexuality which impact the social context in which criminal justice operates. Additionally, sources have been proposed in support of research on some of the areas in which law impacts women in particular ways, such as abortion and inheritance rights, in court based and out of court scenarios, and resources which help with quantitative perspective on women's rights and demonstrate the impact of law and development.
More than this, interconnected and cross cutting themes emerge relating to relationships between law, public and private space and the visibility of women and gay and lesbian people. Hopefully, few further conclusions are necessary other than to say that this quick sample from the British Library collections hardly scratches the surface of the range of material that might be brought into socially contextualised examinations of law's relationships with gender and sexuality. To plan a visit to the Library, or find the appropriate reference service to support the varied collections, see ‘Visiting’ at: http://www.bl.uk/
Note: many of the links to the British Library web site contained in the footnotes may become rapidly obsolete as a new web management system is introduced in early 2015. While many pages may migrate to the new website those extant at www.bl.uk on the 18 November 2014 will continue to be accessible from the UK Web Archive by pasting the following text in front of the urls listed in the notes. http://www.webarchive.org.uk/wayback/archive/20141118194659.