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June 22nd, 2009

06:05 pm: Is that you, Doctor Barry?
Two or three weeks ago, someone contacted me to ask if I could recommend any LGBT historical novels set in Scotland/around Scots. So I pointed him at Iona McGregor's Death Wore a Diadem, and a novel that (I conscientiously admitted) I hadn't read, but looked interesting: James Miranda Barry, by Patricia Duncker, about the famous Doctor Barry who may have been the first woman to qualify as a doctor at a British medical school: we don't know. Neither do we know if she was a lesbian, or he was a trans man, or even if ke was intersexed.

James Barry seems to have come into existence in 1809: that was the year the student James Barry matriculated at Edinburgh University as a "literary and medical student". Barry qualified as an M.D. in 1812, nine years before Elizabeth Blackwell was born, fifty-three years before Elizabeth Garrett Anderson had her name entered on the medical register as qualified to practice medicine in Great Britain, and it was fifty-seven years later that Sophia Jex-Blake finally persuaded Edinburgh University to let her register as a medical student.

Barry then went to London and qualified as a surgeon, evidently with a view to an army career, receiving a commission in 1813. In 1817, Barry became the army Medical Inspector for Cape Town in South Africa, until 1828, during which time the surgeon performed one of the first known successful Caesarean sections: the baby and the mother both survived. After Cape Town, Doctor Barry's career included the West Indies - where John and Doctor Barry met - and Corfu, the Crimea, and Canada. (History of Medicine article - VERY BIG PDF)

Who was John? Described as a "black manservant", John is the only human life companion Barry had. (The film Heaven and Earth, apparently planned for this year, is set in Cape Town in 1825 and invents a heterosexual relationship for Doctor Barry with an English milord, the governor of the colony: Barry is blurbed as "the first woman doctor, who had to masquerade as a man".)

Though known in the army as a "ladies' man", who fought several duels, it's not known - and if we could call James Barry back from the grave to ask and get an answer, I doubt if we'd be any better informed - how we may identify this person in modern categories. James Barry was probably born Margaret Ann Bulkley - a letter from young James Barry to the family solicitor exists, with "Miss Bulkey" written on the reverse of the paper by the solicitor - and Margaret Ann Bulkey probably was allowed by her guardian to dress as a boy in order to take a medical degree - but when and why did Margaret Ann Bulkey decide that James Barry was how she would live and die?

Lesbian? Trans man? Should we even impose these ideas on a person who lived and died before the modern concepts of heterosexuality/homosexuality and transgender were thought of? How would James Barry have identified, if asked - aside from as "Doctor James Barry"? (Well, technically: Doctor Barry died just as these concepts were being thought of.)

Doctor Barry died in London, in 1865, after a successful military and medical career: was buried in Kensal Green with full rank: and then the woman who laid out the body after Barry's death revealed that the corpse had not been a man. (I find from wikipedia that the British Army, with its usual strong feelings about freedom of information, promptly sealed all records for 100 years - normally only practiced with matters affecting the personal embarrassments of the Royal Family or the safety of the realm. Oddly and interestingly, the first historian to look at the sealed records in the 1950s was a woman, Isobel Rae.) There was no autopsy, but apparently the layer-out claimed not only was the body of a woman, there were stretch marks indicating pregnancy.

Doctor Barry was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery: John went home to Jamaica, and no one ever seems to have asked him what he knew. I don't even know if anyone knows or would be able to find a family name for John. Four years later, Sophia Jex-Blake entered Edinburgh University's medical school, under no disguise.

Anyway. And the reason why all this is on my mind: I got a copy of James Miranda Barry in the mail this morning, because the person who'd asked for advice had evidently looked it up on abebooks, found two copies (mine cost a £1) and got one for me, too.

Adopt one today! Adopt one today! Adopt one today! Adopt one today!
Adopt one today! Adopt one today! Adopt one today!

PS: Top Hot Butches

Current Mood: pleased
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April 16th, 2009

08:06 pm: Tired tired tired
I got something less than two hours sleep this morning, between when I fell into bed just after six am (having been at the office since 2pm the previous day, having been awake since 7am Wednesday. Today is Thursday. Tomorrow I'm going to see Waiting for Godot. With Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen. Yes, this does mean I am willing to go see them even if it means just sitting watching them do nothing for a couple of hours.

But. I have got the report that has been hanging over me since February done. And done well, moreover - I'm really very pleased with my three case studies, for example. And afterwards TS#1 and I went out and had afternoon tea with champagne.

So. I am going to have a hot bath with a thing from whatsisname, Lush. I am going to soak in the bath for a long time. I am going to go to bed afterwards. I am going to sleep. I am not going to wake up till Friday.

Unlike TS#1, I do not have to get up at godawfuloclock to fly to Dublin, though his reasons for doing so are very cool.

Oh, and I got some rather spiffy news about my work: an email I sent a month ago bore fruit, and how!

Good night.

Current Mood: exhausted
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March 30th, 2009

06:00 pm: This afternoon
About 4pm this afternoon I officially finished all of my work for this year. With one day to spare.

...of course I still have reports to write.

Current Mood: cheerful
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February 6th, 2009

01:10 pm: In honour of Waitangi Day
...I just had my first Tim Tam Slam.

(That website claims it's an Aussie thing, but KiwiSamurai assures me it is a New Zealand practice and custom.)

You bite off opposite corners of a Tim Tam, put one bitten-off corner in a mug of hot tea (or coffee), and suck. The moment the hot sweet tea is in your mouth, stop sucking, and eat the Tim Tam before it dissolves into a sticky mess.

(You can, briefly, see how the hot tea streaming through the biscuit has melted the chocolate in that line, before the biscuit begins to feel a bit soggy in your hand and needs eating now.)

Current Mood: chipper
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February 5th, 2009

10:39 am: I have found out what I can do with my birthday cupcakes....
They are going to a trans poetry/prose performance tonight, as the free entertainment, since the place where the event is happening doesn't have a cafe-bar at present. So, joy. (There are 24+ wee cakelets, chocolate with Guinness, banana-walnut, more chocolate-with-Guiness with a crumb topping, some rather precious almond with rosewater, and a very few of the gluten-free spice cakes with peanut butter.)

I hope they have a good time and embrace their destiny fully as cake.

Next major baking session, Redemption. Actually, I need to make another trial batch of gluten-free before then, as I have a notion for a different recipe that involves ground almonds... and so far, no one's poked their head up on the Redemption mailing list to say "I'm coeliac and vegan AND ALLERGIC TO NUTS" even though I specially asked.

Oh, I got a warning e-mail from someone suggesting I not produce a t-shirt that says "This is not a t-shirt. Anyone who insists that it is, is just putting on airs to be interesting" as it would just stir up trouble. Hm. The worst of it is, while I still think it would be very funny, he may well be right. What do you think?

Adopt one today! Adopt one today! Adopt one today!

Adopt one today! Adopt one today! Adopt one today!

Current Mood: amused
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January 21st, 2008

02:58 pm: Bring me the finest muffins and bagels in all the land!
It really gives me a joyful glow when I realise that the year or so I spent culling stock phrases from spambot posts and putting them into a database of "bad words" has finally paid off: more than half of the pr0n spam that arrives on the bulletin boards I monitor now arrives in a complete mess, the links dead and unclickable, the text unreadable because standard words and phrases have been replaced by lines like "Yeah, it's okay, Kendra killed the bad lamp." and "spam with every packet of cornflakes" and "I only go to a movie if it satisfies three basic requirements. One, it has to have at least two women in it, who, two, talk to each other about, three, something besides a man."

Current Mood: chipper
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December 5th, 2005

08:51 pm: Half a lifetime...
I am thirty-eight, nearly thirty-nine.

when I was eighteen )

...and today )

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April 6th, 2005

05:40 pm: I organised a training day today
and it was good.

an irrelevant poll )

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