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Professor Rebecca Jennings: Inaugural Lecture

11 March 2025, 6:30 pm–9:00 pm

A sepia image of a woman hugging a cat

Join UCL History to celebrate Rebecca Jennings' professorship with a welcome from Dr Antonio Sennis (UCL) and an introduction by Professor Matt Cook (University of Oxford).

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Queenie Lee – UCL History

Location

Room 106
Roberts Building
Torrington Place
London
WC1E 7JE

‘I simply rejected femaleness’: Diana Chapman’s narratives of gendered and sexual selfhood in mid-twentieth-century Britain

This inaugural lecture will take the personal testimonies of Diana Chapman (1928-2015) as a case study for opening up questions about the entangled nature of gendered and sexual subjectivities in mid-twentieth-century Britain. As a founding member of Minorities Research Group, which published Britain’s first lesbian magazine in the 1960s, Diana Chapman narrated her story to several lesbian oral history collections. While Chapman explicitly claimed a lesbian identity, her accounts contain several trans themes which point to a more complex understanding of her own gender and sexual identity.  Teasing out some of these moments of discomposure and paying attention to the subtle differences between the versions of her story, I will suggest that her testimonies provide evidence of the tensions in categories of gender and sexuality in the mid-century. Chapman’s attempts to narrate her self to others indicate that, far from being a historical moment characterised by clear, binary gender and sexual norms, as popular narratives have portrayed the 1940s to 1960s, post-war British society was in fact grappling with shifting and uncertain cultural modes of understanding gendered and sexual selfhood.

Dr. Antonio Sennis, Head of the History Department at UCL, will deliver the welcome address, followed by an introduction from Professor Matt Cook, Chair of the History of Sexuality at the University of Oxford.

Lecture: Room 106, Roberts Building (6:30-7:30pm)
Reception: G02, Roberts Building Foyer (7:30-9pm)

Image: Portrait of Diana Chapman by Lynne Connolly, in Hall Carpenter Archives Lesbian History Group, Inventing Ourselves: Lesbian Life Stories (Routledge, 1989).

About the Speaker

Professor Rebecca Jennings

Professor of Modern Gender History at UCL History

Rebecca Jennings is Professor of Modern Gender History. Her research focuses on twentieth-century British and Australian lesbian history and her publications have explored notions of selfhood and subjectivity; personal testimonies and oral history; intimacy, kinship and family life; cultural representations of lesbianism; transnational networks and sexual subcultures. She is the author of Lesbian Intimacies and Family Life: Desire, domesticity and kinship in Britain and Australia, 1945-2000 (London: Bloomsbury, 2023); Unnamed Desires: A Sydney lesbian history (Melbourne: Monash UP, 2015); Tomboys and Bachelor Girls: A lesbian history of post-war Britain (Manchester: Manchester UP, 2007); and A Lesbian History of Britain: Love and sex between women since 1500 (Santa Barbara: Greenwood World Publishing, 2007). Rebecca is currently working on a project exploring the entanglement of lesbian and trans subjectivity in post-war Britain and her lecture will draw on this latest research.

More about Professor Rebecca Jennings