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Lisa Featherstone

Lisa Featherstone reviews ‘Histories of sexuality: Antiquity to sexual revolution’ by Stephen Garton

March 2005, no. 269 01 March 2005
In the 1740s a little-known English excise officer and master of a charity school published a frank memoir of his life. John Cannon wrote extensively of his partnerships and his marriage, and also of his sexual exploits. Beginning at the age of twelve, he was taught to masturbate by a school friend and he continued with this until his early twenties. From this time, he had regular sexual contact w ... (read more)

Lisa Featherstone reviews 'The Racket: How abortion became legal in Australia' by Gideon Haigh

December 2008–January 2009, no. 307 01 December 2008
In May 1965 the Victorian police raided a nondescript terrace house in East Melbourne. They were tracking illegal abortionists. Two doctors, one an outgoing social figure, bold and brassy, the other a quiet, studious man, were performing abortions on the premises. They had refused to pay protection money, and probably the raid was inevitable. The police rampaged about, taking files and notes, and ... (read more)