[Home]History of Lesbian

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Revision 14 . . (edit) November 9, 2001 10:27 am by (logged).191.188.xxx
Revision 12 . . (edit) November 7, 2001 8:06 pm by (logged).191.188.xxx
Revision 9 . . October 28, 2001 3:52 am by DCM [make first sentence a sentence, bold title]
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 1c1,14
A lesbian is a woman who prefers romantic and sexual relationships with other women. The word "lesbian" originally referred to an inhabitant of the island of Lesbos?, in ancient Greece. The term has come to have its current meaning due to the ancient Greek lyric poet Sappho, who lived on the island; some of her poems concerned love between women. Whether Sappho was in fact a lesbian, in the modern meaning of the term, is open to question; whilst she did indeed write poems about love between women, there is some dispute as to just how far to interpret her writings in this fashion.
A lesbian is a woman who prefers romantic and sexual relationships with other women.

The word "lesbian" originally referred to an inhabitant of the island of Lesbos?, in ancient Greece. The term has come to have its current meaning due to the ancient Greek lyric poet Sappho, who lived on the island; some of her poems concerned love between women. Whether Sappho was in fact a lesbian, in the modern meaning of the term, is open to question; whilst she did indeed write poems about love between women, there is some dispute as to just how far to interpret her writings in this fashion.

See also: lesbianism, gay, homosexuality.

See also feminism. (Suggest we leave this link here for convenience until more pages on these topics are produced.)




External links:

:"Lesbian Health" from Planned Parenthood
:http://www.plannedparenthood.org/articles/lesbian.html

Removed: 3d15
See also gay.

Removed: 5d16
See also feminism. (Suggest we leave this link here for convenience until more pages on these topics are produced.)

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
Search: