Let the Bodice Hit the Floor

By: Angela Toscano Candy Tan and Molly Keran
  • Summary

  • Three romance readers discuss the old school bodice-ripper: what it is, why it matters, and where it’s gone since the heyday of shirtless men and heaving bosoms on book covers. In each episode, Candy, Angela, and Molly will take on an aspect of the bodice-ripper’s history—including landmark texts—as well as its cultural context, the responses the genre provoked both within and outside of the publishing world of romance novels, and its afterlives in places like dark romance and online serialized novels. Please note that some disturbing content may be discussed.
    Angela Toscano, Candy Tan, and Molly Keran
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Episodes
  • Endless Forms Most Booty-ful: The Evolution of the Bodice Ripper
    Aug 11 2022

    The bodice ripper is not only stranger than we suppose, but stranger than we can suppose. (With apologies to JBS Haldane.) This episode, we look at how the bodice ripper emerged, glistening, out of the primordial soup of its various predecessors (Gothics, historical epics, family sagas, and coming-of-age stories) only to beget progeny of its own, which in turn begat many, many more--some of which now bear almost no resemblance to the bodice ripper.

    CONTENT NOTE: This episode contains discussions of sexual violence.

    The texts we discuss:

    The Old School/First Wave: 1972-1984

    The Flame and the Flower by Kathleen E. Woodiwiss: The big bad mama who kick-started it all. Also mentioned in the first episode.

    Sweet Savage Love by Rosemary Rogers: Featuring Ginny and Steve, who are not, contrary to what their name suggests, middle-aged swingers from the 1970s.

    Devil's Embrace by Catherine Coulter: The bodice ripper that scarred all of us.

    The Black Lyon by Jude Deveraux: Kicked off the epic Montgomery/Taggert series, which encompasses 33 books and counting.

    Second Wave: 1984-1994

    The Windflower by Laura London (Sharon and Tom Curtis): A gentler, kinder bodice ripper! No rape, with misogyny for flavor instead of the main course.

    Whitney, My Love by Judith McNaught: Yes rape, but also: a lot more hero interiority, and a somewhat more gormful heroine. A crucial bridge book; the two that followed (Once and Always and Something Wonderful) were fully in the second wave: no rape, with the hero's point of view getting equal time on-page as the heroine's.

    Gentle Rogue by Johanna Lindsey: Utterly unmemorable, except for the incredible cover.

    BONUS: Savage Thunder by Johanna Lindsey, which is also utterly unmemorable except for one Particular Scene, and one Particular Scene only.

    Not a Bodice Ripper But....

    Dangerous Men and Adventurous Women: Romance Writers on the Appeal of Romance, edited by Jayne Ann Krentz: Collection of essays by many of the biggest names in historical romance that collectively talk about the appeal of the genre, the place rape has in it, the roles heroes and heroines play in the reader imagination, and the direction the genre was headed.

    Responses and Reworkings: 1994-2005

    Lord of Scoundrels by Loretta Chase: Inverts every single bodice ripper trope with great glee and verve.

    Dreaming of You by Lisa Kleypas: Lots of attempted rape, but...not by the hero? The hero STOPS the rapes? What's going on here? What happened to our bodice rippers??

    To Have and to Hold by Patricia Gaffney: It's like Gaffney went, oh. Oh. You want a libertine hero? You want a true rake? Here. I'm gonna give you a rake. I'm going to show you exactly how repulsive and empty yet strangely compelling he is. And the result is stunning and harrowing.

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    1 hr and 16 mins
  • Bodice rippers 101
    Jun 14 2022

    Bodice rippers: what are they? (Spoiler alert: they've mostly disappeared from the romance publishing landscape.) Where did they come from? (It's complicated and messy!) And why should you care? (So many reasons.) Let Candy, Angela, and Molly sweep you away on a rearing stallion and take you on a romp through a landscape filled with cinnabar caverns, feisty ingenues, and the hard-eyed, hard-mouthed men who (claim to) love them.

    CONTENT NOTE: This episode contains discussions of sexual violence.

    Some of the texts we mention:

    The Flame and the Flower by Kathleen E. Woodiwiss: The ur-bodice ripper! Published in 1972.

    Sweet Savage Love by Rosemary Rogers: Another famous bodice ripper, published shortly after The Flame and the Flower.

    Wuthering Heights by Emile Brontë: Big-R Romantic, but not a small-r romance.

    Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë: Big-R Romantic AND a romance.

    The Sheik by E.M. Hull: Published in 1919, is widely recognized as one of the first modern romance novels.

    Devil's Embrace by Catherine Coulter: Bodice ripper published in 1982; infamous for its brutal hero and what he does to the heroine he kidnaps.

    Follow us on Twitter: @bodicehitsfloor

    Angela: @lazaraspaste

    Candy: @gleebags

    Molly: @mjkeran

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    1 hr and 20 mins

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