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Hot Girl Histories

Hot Girl Histories

Author: Hot Girl Histories

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Join Claire Elizabeth Taylor, an aspiring academic girlboss on her journey to bring to life the unspoken histories of girls, gays and non-binary slays. A podcast made by and for the aforementioned parties. Let’s get hip, hot, and hilarious loves!!

For all things HGH, including works discussed in episodes: https://beacons.ai/hotgirlhistories

Instagram: @hotgirlhistories

Email: hotgirlhistories@gmail.com with episode ideas or to come on!
13 Episodes
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The history of Sabrina Pasterski may be the most recent history covered so far, but it is no less jampacked. From building a plane at nine years old to offering Jeff Bezos that she can send him Mars, and being the first woman to graduate with a perfect GPA from MIT in two decades (in addition to being cited by Stephen Hawking), Sabrina has lots to brag about but hates hype. Five years after Sabrina's hype has calmed, the season one finale of Hot Girl Histories includes discussions on the consequences of being called "the Next Einstein" as a twenty-two-year-old woman, imposter syndrome, dislike for the Internet, pop-science, turning bad into good, and talking too fast. Sabrina's website: http://physicsgirl.com Cover credits: Photo taken by Jan Welters for Marie Claire Young Women's Honors article by Brooke Hauser (January 2017, p. 100). --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
Grab your favorite mug, some tea, and a cozy blanket for this chilllll episode <3 besides chatting about Gloria Steinem and entering a 1980 beauty pageant to get into college, my mother and I speak mostly about dreams: being a young woman with big writing dreams, then transitioning into being a single mom with big dreams. Holding onto dreams, putting them down, picking them back up. Silences, pauses, aging, faith,and feeling worthy enough, all tied together with a big announcement.... The Courage to Write: https://www.amazon.com/Courage-Write-Devotions-Encourage-Writing/dp/B0B1CP8FBW HGH Reading List to find all the sources we talk about, and further reading related to episodes: https://locrian-sociology-cc4.notion.site/Reading-List-Hot-Girl-Histories-b82200d1eb604b12b1731422f9bccfca --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
Theory will take you only so far? MEN will take you only so far! Joined by my particle physicist father, we dissect Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer and some of the many women involved in the Manhattan Project that the movie fails to mention including Mary Frankel, Elizabeth Riddle Graves, Naomi Livesay, Maria Goeppert Mayer, and C.S Wu. But before that, we break down all the men on the screen and the ways in which the movie ignores the Trinity Test's impact on native populations. From babies to blue jeans to espionage, we discuss family life at Los Alamos, and (however surprising to the modern audience) how many women look back on their war-time at Los Alamos as the best years of their lives. Go to the HGH Reading List to find all the sources we talk about, and further reading related to this episode: https://locrian-sociology-cc4.notion.site/Reading-List-Hot-Girl-Histories-b82200d1eb604b12b1731422f9bccfca Leave a rating here on Spotify, and a review on Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/hot-girl-histories/id1694099420 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
Hot Girl Historian Mayu returns to speak on the first mental disorder attributed to women: hysteria, aka the daughter's disease, aka the madness of love! We start in 2000 BC with Hippocrates' idea of hysteron, move to Galen and Soranus' thoughts on how to deal with venomous humours coming from "bad" uteruses, then entertain the feminization of madness at the beginning of the 19th century and Freud's psychoanalytical views, and end with our thoughts on today's TikTok girlies calling themselves delulu. We examine questionable theories on the prevalence of hysteria in women living in non-western societies, the role syphilis played in hysteria diagnoses, and the reasons why hysterical neurosis was only deleted from the DSM in 1980. TW: mention of mental illness and its consequences (hospitalization, suicide, murder) and medical and non-medical abuse toward women. Check out The Feminist Space on Instagram (especially our post on Female Rage!): https://www.instagram.com/the_feminist_space/ Also, go to the HGH Reading List to find all the sources we talk about, and further reading related to this episode: https://locrian-sociology-cc4.notion.site/Reading-List-Hot-Girl-Histories-b82200d1eb604b12b1731422f9bccfca --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
Joined by medievalist Naoki Matsumoto, Hot Girl Histories says HAPPY PRIDE MONTH! by diving into trans studies in medieval history. We examine cases of "transvestites," "sodomites," and lesbians, then digress into sex work and physical disability histories in the medieval period. Starting in 1394 with the case against Eleanor Rykener in London, we debate historiography about deadnaming and pronouns in relation to historical actors. We also discuss Rolandina Ronchaia, a transwoman from mid-fourteenth century Venice, and the trial of Katherina Hetzeldorfer in 1477 Nuremberg, the only case of lesbian female sodomy. Finishing off with examples of medieval communal solidarity for those suffering from Hansen's disease and blindness, we debunk popular perceptions of the "dark ages." HGH IS NOW ON APPLE PODCASTS!!! Go leave a review and I will love you forever :) For all things HGH: https://beacons.ai/hotgirlhistories Works Cited and Related Reading On queer people, women, and sex workers in the medieval period: Boyd, David Lorenzo, and Ruth Mazo Karras. “The Interrogation of a Male Transvestite Prostitute in Fourteenth-Century London.” GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 1, no. 4 (1995): 459–65. https://doi.org/10.1215/10642684-1-4-459.Bychowski. The transgender turn, Eleanor Rykemer speaks back. in Trans historical, gender plurality before the modern ed. Greta Lafleur, Masha Raskolnikov and Annna Klosowka, (Ithaca, 2021)https://transreads.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/2021-12-23_61c4ded98f1a1_TransHistoricalGenderPluralitybeforetheModernbyGretaLaFleureditorMashaRaskolnikoveditorAnnaKlosowskaeditor.pdfKarras, Ruth Mazo, and Tom Linkinen. “John/Eleanor Rykener Revisited.” In Founding Feminisms: Essays in Honor of E. Jane Burns, edited by Daniel O’sullivan and Laine Dogged. D.S. Brewer, 2016.http://hdl.handle.net/2262/91231 Karras, Ruth Mazo. Common Women : Prostitution and Sexuality in Medieval England. Cary: Oxford University Press, USA, 1996. McSheffrey, Shannon, ‘The Case of Rolandina Ronchaia, a 14th-century transwoman?’, Princeton University <https://middleagesforeducators.princeton.edu/sites/g/files/toruqf351/files/2020-12/Ronchaia%20translation.pdf> [accessed 26 November 2022] Page, Jamie, Prostitution and Subjectivity in Late Medieval Germany (Oxford, 2021). Paolella, Christopher, Human trafficking in Medieval Europe: Slavery, sexual exploitation and prostitution, (Amsterdam, 2020). Rasmussen, Ann Marie and Westphal-Wihl, Sarah (eds.), Ladies, whore and holy women: A sourcebook in courtly, religious and urban culture of late Medieval Germany, (Kalamazoo, 2010). Spencer-Hall, Alicia, and Blake Gutt, eds. Trans and Genderqueer Subjects in Medieval Hagiography. Amsterdam University Press, 2021. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1ks0cj4. 'The Trial of Katherina Hetzeldorfer (1477)', in Helmut Puff, 'Female Sodomy', 60-61, https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/4/article/16457/pdf On disabilities: Scott, Anne M. Experiences of Charity 1250-1650 Revisiting Religious Motivations in the Charitable Endeavour. Lund Humphries Publishers, 2015. https://r3.vlereader.com/Reader?ean=9781472443397. Eyler, Joshua. Disability in the Middle Ages : Rehabilitations, Reconsiderations, Reverberations. Farnham: Ashgate, 2010. 'Humbert of Romans, To the Leprous', in Goodich, Other Middle Ages, 146-149 https://doi-org.ezproxy.st-andrews.ac.uk/10.4324/9781315577388. Metzler, Irina. Disability in Medieval Europe. Routledge, 2006. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/st-andrews/reader.action?docID=261311. O'Tool, Mark P., 'The povres avugles of the Hôpital des Quinze-Vingts: disability and community in Medieval Paris' in Difference and identity in Francia and medieval France, ed. Meredith Cohen & Justine Firnhaber-Baker (Farnham, 2010) 157-174 https://content.talisaspire.com/sta/bundles/61dc28901b02c958c5778774. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
Hot Girl Historian Charlotte Oakes joins Claire to discuss second-wave feminist movements in East and West Germany, Chornobyl's impact on the evolution of eco-feminism, real-existing socialism for women, mummy politics, and the double burden of women in East Germany during Soviet times. We also discuss the complications of the wave metaphor being used to refer to feminist movements, universal womanhood, global feminisms, and how every day is a school day when it comes to learning feminist histories!!! But first, we learn a bit about Charlotte who is currently completing her MLitt in Modern History at the University of St Andrews and will soon begin her PhD in Women's Studies at the University of York. Mentioned works and further reading: Tara Anand, "A Brief Summary Of The Second Wave Of Feminism" https://feminisminindia.com/2018/04/25/summary-second-wave-of-feminism/ Barbara Molony and Jennifer Nelson, Women's Activism and "Second Wave" Feminism (2017), specifically Introduction: https://www.bloomsburycollections.com/book/womens-activism-and-second-wave-feminism/introduction and Chapter 8: https://www.bloomsburycollections.com/book/womens-activism-and-second-wave-feminism/ch8-making-a-point-by-choice-maternal-imperialism-second-wave-feminism-and-transnational-epistemologies Mary Daly, Gyn/Ecology: The Metaethics of Radical Feminism (Boston: Beacon Press, 1978). Betty Friedan, The Feminine Mystique (1963). Kristen Ghodsee, Why Women Have Better Sex Under Socialism: And Other Arguments for Economic Independence (2018). Lucy Delap, Feminisms: A Global History (2020). --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
I'm honored to have Janey Jones, the author of The Edinburgh Seven, on the podcast to discuss the incredible stories of Sophia Jex Blake, Isabel Thorne, Edith Pechey, Helen Evans, Matilda Chaplin, Emily Bovell, and Mary Anderson. In 1869, they fought to be the first women to study medicine in Scotland at the University of Edinburgh. We discuss the seven pillars of the book including the Hope Affair and the riot at Surgeon's Hall, and wider superstitions around women in science in the Victorian era: women were supposed to be midwives, but not doctors. Their brains were too small to practice other forms of medicine, and they would faint while dissecting a corpse! The Edinburgh Seven disproved these claims, scoring higher than their male peers on exams. Edith Pechey even achieved the highest mark in a first-term chemistry examination, but a male student received a scholarship instead for ranking second in this exam. A fascinating story about incredibly driven women, this history book highlights how men fear the ways in which confident, smart women can change patriarchal aspects of society. More broadly, Janey Jones' work proves (and we discuss!) how women in history need not remain a mystery. Order The Edinburgh Seven on Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Edinburgh-Seven-Story-Medicine-Trailblazing/dp/139909923X/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr= Order from Pen & Sword Books: https://www.pen-and-sword.co.uk/The-Edinburgh-Seven-Hardback/p/23121 Or go to your local bookstore! The paperback will become available this summer. New here? All Things Hot Girl Histories: https://beacons.ai/hotgirlhistories --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
Esperant...huh? Who's Zamenhof? What's Esperanto? You're telling me people in Dundee, Scotland were speaking this constructed language in 1910? Yes, and that's what Esperanto Wor(l)ds: Scotland, Postcards, and the Creation of an International Language, on display at the Wardlaw Museum until 29 May 2023, is all about! Joined by the Founding Director of the St Andrews Institute for Transnational & Spatial History and Reader in the School of History, Dr. Bernhard Struck, and Leverhulme Research Fellow in the School of History, Dr. Guilherme Fians, we discuss where scholarship on Esperanto is headed, how we decided to do this exhibition (none of us had any prior experience in historical curation), how we executed it, and, 11 days into the exhibition being on display, how it has been received by the St Andrews community. Learn more about the Esperanto and Internationalism, c. 1880-1920s project in the Institute for Transnational and Spatial History here at St Andrews: https://www.transnationalhistory.net/esperanto/en/705ea-home/ Guilherme Fians research profile: https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/persons/guilherme-moreira-fians(2ba6e892-ea90-4296-853f-240345d2b6a1).html and a link to his book: https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/esperanto-revolutionaries-and-geeks(9fff8609-a9d6-4030-9d02-9ea787d11b75).html Bernhard Struck's research profile: https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/people/bs50 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
In this first episode of our Women in CERN series on Hot Girl Histories, we are joined by HGH dad who happens to be a theoretical physicist (meaning he has studied really tiny things called particles for over 40 years now)! In the ethereal town of Fraserburg with seagulls squawking in the background, we dive into extremely important physicists who happen to be women! The first is Meitner, most famously known for her discovery of nuclear fission. This discovery later allowed for the development of the atomic bomb. But first, we discuss how the field of physics has changed for women since Tomasz started doing physics back in Poland. Because Lise Meitner was unable to attend university right away due to Austrian and Prussian laws that prevented women from completing higher education, and with no women's bathrooms at her uni, she experienced various professional barriers throughout her career as a physicist. Additionally, to most, she did not receive the recognition (such as a Nobel prize or prizes) she deserved for her contributions to chemistry and physics. Disclaimer: I am anything but a woman in STEM, so don't take any of my mathematical talk seriously, I tried but not hard enough here... Esperanto Wor(l)ds: Scotland, Postcards, and the Creation of an International Language zooms into the lives of several Scottish Esperanto speakers in the early twentieth century, particularly into the lives of John Beveridge and his family, and will be on display at the Wardlaw Museum until 29 May 2023. An exhibition curated by Bernhard Struck, Guilherme Fians, and Claire Taylor and sponsored by the University of St Andrews, the Laidlaw Foundation, and the Leverhulme Trust. In 1869, a group of women began arriving in Edinburgh to study at the medical faculty, led by the indomitable Sophia Jex Blake. They would eventually be known around the world as "The Edinburgh Seven." This is a story of turbulent times: women were not welcomed at Edinburgh University, and there were death threats, a violent riot, and a court case reported across the world. Pre-Order The Edinburgh Seven by Janey Jones, out April 30th, here: https://amzn.eu/d/boYjexr STOP THE RENT INCREASE IN ST ANDREWS: https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=yyZW-KgN00mqWGTvZ47wGu77IHD5lZtDtAviOFG0AZ1UOFdDQTBTNjcwNUFXOFo5QjJHTE1KM1pVTS4u Works consulted in episode: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lise_Meitner https://www.atomicarchive.com/resources/biographies/meitner.html https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/meitner-lise https://www.epa.gov/radtown/women-radiation-history-lise-meitner --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
Joined by half-Scottish half-Greek spatial historian Emil Eleftheriotis-Pratt, this excruciatingly long episode tackles the question: How can decolonization be more than a buzzword that Claire embarrassingly wears on an overpriced t-shirt? We discuss Boris Johnson's not very hot takes on the Parthenon belonging in the British Museum, The Past Is Now exhibition (2017) in Birmingham, Curators of Discomfort in Glasgow, St Andrews' recent Re:Collecting Empire exhibition made to "tackle institutional legacies," and how natural history isn't really natural, but instead requires distinct cultural context as seen by the presentation of the quassia amara in London. In conclusion, mouse deer. Real intellectual chat starts at around minute 20. SIGN THE STOP MEARS PETITION: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfZdSCmljglklmBJAc6qb75lnSLuFEgoGwCFs8_OxiErfUtgw/viewform?fbclid=IwAR1IODf13hVqp8ba8vCsue85VdlcHFxfGPEpYloTUUesCpOkUCH-lxUYStY Esperanto Wor(l)ds: Scotland, Postcards, and the Creation of an International Language zooms into the lives of several Scottish Esperanto speakers in the early twentieth century, particularly into the lives of John Beveridge and his family, and will be on display at the Wardlaw Museum April 13 - May 29 2023. An exhibition curated by Bernhard Struck, Guilherme Fians, and Claire Taylor and sponsored by the University of St Andrews, the Laidlaw Foundation, and the Leverhulme Trust. Works Cited and Further Reading: Tracy Ireland and John Schofield, 'The Ethics of Cultural Heritage', in Tracy Ireland and John Schofield (eds.), The Ethics of Cultural Heritage (Springer, 2016). Subhadra Das and Miranda Lowe, 'Nature Read in Black and White: Decolonial Approaches to interpreting Natural History', Journal of Natural Science Collections 6 (2018): 4-14. https://www.natsca.org/article/2509 Hodan Warsame, 'Mechanisms and Tropes of Colonial Narratives', in Wayne Modest and Robin Lelljveld (eds.), Words Matter (Netherlands: National Museum of World Cultures, 2018), pp. 78-85. https://issuu.com/tropenmuseum/docs/wordsmatter_english Knight, Sam, 'Britain's Idyllic Country Houses Reveal a Darker History', New Yorker 16 August 2021. http://hunterian.academicblogs.co.uk/curating-discomfort/ Dr Catherine Eagleton, University of St Andrews, https://museumblog.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/2022/08/01/why-are-we-re-collecting-empire. Museums & Galleries Scotland, ‘Museum Anti-Racist Practice’, https://www.museumsgalleriesscotland.org.uk/advice/empire-slaveryscotlands-museums-resources/museum-anti-racist-practice/ Museums of the University of St Andrews, Museums Blog, Posts about Re:Collecting Empire https://museumblog.wp.standrews.ac.uk/category/re-collecting-empire/ 'Golf balls are a product of colonial exploitation!', https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-11148913/Golf-murky-history-linked-colonial-exploitation-academics-say.html --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
Joined by a fellow hot girl historian and survivor of honours Modern History modules, Mayu Sadler and Claire unpack the various roles Algerian women played in the 1954-62 Algerian War of Independence (only recognized as a war by the French in 1999... yikes!) and the shapeshifting identities of Algerian women related to veiling, unveiling, and guerilla warfare, Frantz Fanon, and the struggle for these women's histories to be written and showcased from the archives. Other topics include the Student Association elections, My Year of Rest and Relaxation, snow in Africa, and female hysteria!  Also follow @mayuscrans on Instagram after you follow @hotgirlhistories TW: episode includes mention of rape, torture, and violence under colonial rule  Bibliography and further reading:  Daniele Djamila Amrane-Minne, Farida Abu-Haidar, ‘Women and Politics in Algeria from the War of Independence to Our Day’, Research in African Literatures, 30:3 (Autumn 1999), pp.62-77. Mildred Mortimer, ‘Tortured bodies, resilient souls: Algeria’s women combatants depicted by Danieele Djamila Amrane-Minne, Lousette Ighilahriz, and Assia Djebar, Research in African Literature, 43:1 (Spring 2012), pp.101-117. Catherine Sawers, ‘The women of Bataille d’Alger: Hearts and Minds and Bombs’, Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies, 10:2, (Spring 2014), pp.80-106. Micheala C. Petruso, ‘Propaganda, Nationalism, and Feminism: Algerian Women in the French-Algerian War, (BPhil, University of Pittsburgh, 2020). Lincoln Krause, ‘Rock the Casbah: tales of a female bomber’, War on the Rocks, March 7th 2018, [https://warontherocks.com/2018/03/rock-the-casbah-tales-of-a-female-bomber/] Donald Reid, ‘Re-viewing The Battler of Algiers with Zohra Drif, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Fiction and Film for Schoalrs of France, [https://h-france.net/fffh/reviews/re-viewing-the-battle-of-algiers-with-zohra-drif/] Ghania Mouffok, ‘Djamila Bouhired: Algerian Women between Glory and Contempt’, Assafir Al-Arabi, 21/12/2021, [https://assafirarabi.com/en/42861/2022/01/10/djamila-bouhired-algerian-women-between-glory-and-contempt/] Shiera S. el-Malik, ‘Intellectual work ‘In the world’: Women’s writing and anti-Colonial thought in Africa, Irish studies in International Affairs, 24, 2013, pp.101-120 Jacqueline Couti, ‘Am I My Sister’s Keeper? The Politics of Propriety and the Fight for Equality in the Works of French Antillean Women Writers, 1920s-40s’, in Felix Germain, Silyane Larcher, Black French Women and the Struggle for Equality, 1848-2016’, (Nebraska, 2018), pp.129-144 Jennifer Anne Biottin, ‘”Are you trying to play a White Woman?” La Mere Patrie and the Female Body in French West Africa’, Signs, 40:4 (Summer 2015), pp. 841-864. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
With radio show host and BEHAVE extraordinaire on the hot girl pod again, Claire and GetEduk8ed leave Frankie Knuckles at The Power Plant in 1982 to explore the transnational house scene that bursts in the 90s! From London to Johannesburg, we discuss women DJs, and highlight some influential women in the early house scene such as Stacy Hotwaxx, DJ Sharon White, and Ultra Naté, and conclude with contemporary slaystresses Peggy Gou and HAAi! Claire butchers some theory by trying to explain social reproduction theory, while Kate has some cute messages for any non-men thinking about DJing. Enjoy!!  Also, donate to the social initiative providing women-defenders of Ukraine fighting Russian imperialism on the front line or in the rear, with or without weapons, as a paramedic or tanker or artillerywoman women with military uniforms so every Ukrainian woman performs her military duty on equal grounds with men: https://armwomennow.com/en/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
Acquaint yourself with the hot girl mastermind behind this up-and-coming, not-your-average hot history podcast EXTRAVAGANZA made by, for, and about the girls and the gays!! xx Follow the Instagram: @hotgirlhistories Tik tok: hottt.girl.histories  personal insta: @cclairetaylor --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hot-girl-histories/message
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