Cart 0

THE GIANTESS SPEAKS

 

Development supported by Shape Arts, BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Arts, and Arts Council England.

A full list of contributors and collaborators can be found at the foot of this page.

 

JUMP TO SECTIONS

JUMP TO SECTIONS

 
LIVE PERFORMANCES
 
GALLERY
RESEARCH INTERVIEWS
SUPPORT ME ON KO-FI
AN 55.jpg

INTRODUCTION

 

The Giantess Speaks is a multidisciplinary creative research project encompassing experimental live performance, visual art, archival, curatorial, and DIY publishing practices, and (auto)ethnographic academic research.

Drawing from Abigail’s twin practices as an artist and independent academic researcher specialising in the study of alternative and queer sexuality, as well as Abigail’s own personal experiences of processing her at-times traumatic historical relationships with transgender identity, neurodivergence, and divergent erotic fantasies, The Giantess Speaks celebrates the potential of divergent erotic affinities, fantasies, and fandoms to serve as subversive, revolutionary tools of healing, transgression and protest for the marginalised body. Disseminating cutting-edge critical sexuality research through radical and avant-garde creative means, this project investigates the ways in which erotic expression, and the divergent erotic imagination, can serve as invaluable processing tools through which queer, gender-marginalised, disabled, and/or neurodivergent individuals can explore their relationships with bodies, identities, and neurotypes that differ from the social norm, and as a form of rebellious "pleasure-praxis” in the face of queerphobic and ableist social and political power structures. Furthermore, it seeks to bring the communities that have amassed around niche erotic affinities on ephemeral corners of the Internet out of the shadows and into wider consciousness. 


 

“My name is Abigail, but you can call me “Nancy” — if you like. I’m a 6’7” transgender woman, and I openly, publicly, and proudly identify as a giantess…”

 

The Giantess Speaks investigates the experiences and identities of marginalised members of the “size community”. Critically underexplored, and criminally misunderstood within what little academic and journalistic literature that has ever touched upon the subject, “Size” is an inclusive, gender-neutral umbrella term covering various affinities, fantasies, and fandoms, explicitly sexual and non-sexual alike, involving human and/or anthropomorphic bodies of superhuman scale: these include, among others, Giant(ess)/tiny fantasies, body expansion, inflation, weight gain, and muscle growth. Abigail’s research process specifically investigates the diverse ways in which marginalised individuals within the size community deploy their particular size affinities as emotional, psychological, somatic, and socio-political processing tools for an enormous range of purposes, including — for example — to cope with the grief of losing a parent at a young age; to engage in environmental activism; to experiment with ways of expressing and embodying trans, non-binary, and non-conforming gender identities; to process and manage complex trauma triggers, and to process living with conditions such as Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), and Alice-in-Wonderland Syndrome (AiWS).

Originating from a short series of recorded conversations Abigail conducted over the closing months of 2023, in order to help inform a series of scratch performances she was developing at the time using funding from Arts Council England’s Developing Your Creative Practice grant series, over the past eighteen months Abigail has conducted over sixty recorded interviews, totalling over two hundred combined hours of recordings, with marginalised members of the size community via Zoom video-call or Discord direct message exchange, with over thirty-five of these being recorded over the summer of 2025 alone. Titled Conversations with the Size Community, this interview series will be archived by the Bishopsgate Institute, London, in early 2026. Forming part of a much larger accession under the Giantess Speaks project banner, audio, visual, and written transcript recordings of these interviews will be archived alongside collections of size art and written fiction donated to Abigail by the size community at large, a collection of ephemera related to the annual size community convention SizeCon, and a series of desktop-published size-kink zines and artworks collected by Abigail’s collaborative partner Katharine Gates during her ethnographic investigations into niche kink scenes during the 1990s. Fully digitised copies of all materials listed above will also concurrently be archived at the Sexual Representation Archive of the University of Toronto’s Mark S. Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies.

Abigail was a 2024 Research Fellow of the California Institute for Integral Studies’ Human Sexuality PhD Summer Fellowship programme. She has previously presented research from The Giantess Speaks at the Center for Positive Sexuality’s Sexuality Scholars’ Symposium, and has documented two of her earliest interviews in a pair of zines which were acquired by the Wellcome Collection, London, in June 2024.


“NANCY. SHE’S THE SEVEN-FOOT SLUT WITH THE SEVEN-FIGURE IQ. THE GENIUS GIANTESS WHO MADE NATURE HER ABSOLUTE BITCH. THE APOCALYPTIC SAPPHIC. THE DOOMSDAY DOMINATRIX. THE DEVIL-DYKE WHOM GOD HIMSELF CALLS MOMMY. THE PATRIARCHY’S WORST NIGHTMARE…”

Appearing throughout The Giantess Speaks’ artistic outputs is an alter-ego Abigail specifically created as a creative framing device for her research work — “Nancy.” Nancy is Abigail’s queer, punk, “giantess rebel-dyke dominatrix” alter-ego, who deploys her sheer bodily scale and power to (porno)graphically shatter oppressive socio-political power structures as liberatory acts of queer/mad/crip rebellion.

Inspired originally by the 1993 HBO remake of 1958 B-movie Attack of the 50-ft Woman, “Nancy” reimagines the film’s titular monster Nancy Archer — a monstrous feminine figure representing the extreme repression and lack of independence afforded of neurodivergent women in a patriarchal, ableist world, portrayed in the 1993 remake by autistic actress Daryl Hannah — as a proudly queer, neurodivergent riot-grrrl giantess hellbent on destroying social, political, and environmental systems upholding misogyny, queerphobia and ableism. Through the media of live theatre, ritualistic participatory performance art, and experimental fiction, The Giantess Speaks tells the tale of a woman actively attempting to turn herself into an omnipotent giant goddess whose deviant body can fatally disrupt and destroy entire oppressive socio-political systems single-handedly. No longer needing to rely upon the deus-ex-machina of an extraterrestrial encounter to turn her into her oppressors’ worst nightmare — as Attack of the 50-ft Woman’s Nancy Archer did — this brand new re-imagining of the iconic character is able to mutate her misfit queer body into a sublime, sapphic harbinger of utopian potentialities using nothing but her own scientific genius and pure, irrepressible moxie — and have herself a lot of fun in the process…

 

 “After all, nuclear armageddon ain’t nothin’ but foreplay…”

AN.jpg
 

Abigail has always described The Giantess Speaks as an “autoethnographic” research project, and for very good reason. In addition to the experiences and fantasies of the sixty-plus marginalised members of the size community she has so far interviewed as part of her academic research process, The Giantess Speaks’ creative outputs are informed by her own relationship with the size community, in which she has been involved in some capacity — actively or otherwise — for over a decade, and in which she outwardly identifies as a “giantess”.

Historically harbouring an uncomfortable relationship with sexual expression and kink, as a transgender woman with an extremely non-traditional sexual identity who grew up in spaces that denied her the right to explore her sexuality freely, reclaiming the identity of “giantess” through creating her “Nancy” stage persona has helped Abigail process her traumatic adolescent relationship with cultural depictions of “giant women” under cisnormativity and patriarchy — as fetish objects for cisgender, heterosexual male consumption, as “freaks” paraded about on exploitative reality television programmes, or as monsters threatening to upend “natural” sexual hierarchies — as a deeply closeted trans girl who desperately sought depictions of feminine bodies “like hers” wherever she could find them. Pre-dating The Giantess Speaks as a project, the earliest iteration of “Nancy” was created for Abigail’s 2021 monologue performance Anguish of the Fifty-Foot Woman, which was originally given during her solo gallery exhibition of the same name in August of that year, and which has since received sporadic revivals at live-art cabarets. “Nancy’s” current form would not begin to evolve, however, until Abigail revived the character with her inaugural performance of A Session with Doctor Cushing at Bermondsey Project Space, London, in February 2023, and received DYCP funding from Arts Council England to develop her further in March of that year.


Archival collaboration and support for The Giantess Speaks has been provided by kink anthropologist, former arts publisher and museum curator, and author of Deviant Desires Katharine Gates, extracts from whose own extensive collections of research materials, zines, erotic art, and correspondences are to be exhibited and archived alongside Abigail’s own at the Bishopsgate Institute. Abigail’s work has been championed by renowned performance artists/theatre-makers and former sex workers Annie Sprinkle and Kaytlin Bailey, and two self-published zines documenting her research process have been acquired by the Wellcome Collection Library.

 

 PERFORMANCES

DSC01251.jpg
 

THE GIANTESS ROARS: A MANIFESTO FOR A MAD, QUEER, FEMINIST GIANTESS REBELLION

Debuting in March 2025 at SizeCon, Portland, Oregon

 
 
If you ever needed any more convincing that creating size porn can be an act as subversive, rebellious, and politically radical as it is sexy, performance artist, sex researcher, and proud real-life rebel-grrrl giantess Abigail Jacqueline Jones (a.k.a. “Nancy, The Seven-Foot Slut”) is here to do just that.
— SizeCon Promotional Material
 
 

The Giantess Roars is a live performance lecture Abigail has produced specifically for her appearance at SizeCon 2025. Building upon her ongoing research into the experiences of queer, transgender, disabled, and neurodivergent members of the size community, this hour-long performance lecture, laced with a whole lot of sexy, sexy soapboxing about the revolutionary potential of divergent erotic expression, explores and celebrates the ways in which the pornographic art and literature from the erotic margins can be a powerful tool for building community, processing big emotions, and sharing sexual knowledge in the face of repressive, punitively sex-negative contemporary social and political cultures.

Read More
 

 

THE GIANTESS SPEAKS

Currently in development

Work-in-Progress performance, originally titled Nancy//the World: Prologue, held during ASSEMBLE Festival, Streatham Space Project, May 2024

 
 

Sharing its name with the overarching creative research project to which it is connected, The Giantess Speaks will be Abigail Jacqueline Jones’ debut full-length solo fringe theatre show. Originally titled Nancy//the World: Prologue, the name which it carried when a shortened scratch extract from the full script was performed at Streatham Space Project for ASSEMBLE Festival in May 2024, the show expands upon Abigail’s previous experience of devising and performing “giantess therapy sessions” from past live performance pieces A Session With Dr Cushing and Nancy & Dora — during each of which the artist performed a monologue to a miniature figure, representing a therapist or a counsellor, stood on top of a plinth portraying an urban skyscraper. The Giantess Speaks takes this theme one step further by depicting the artist, once again reprising the character of “Nancy,” engaging in a counselling session with an entire miniature city. 

The Giantess Speaks portrays Nancy as a “size-shifter,” able to grow and shrink on command, towering over a half-destroyed Midtown Manhattan with one of her 1,250-foot high heeled boots still embedded in the rubble left in her destructive wake. We see her discussing, as though the ruined city itself were her counsellor or psychotherapist, her trauma-rooted motivations for unleashing such violent devastation upon the metropolis beneath her sprawling body, and her desire to keep inflicting death and destruction upon humanity. Anxiously observing the world around her growing ever more hostile to her own needs as a queer, disabled, neurodivergent outcast, and growing increasingly more violent and destructive towards the planet’s most vulnerable populations and natural ecosystems, Nancy intimates to the city beneath her that she had felt a desperate urge to let her rage consume her for a while now. A compulsion to mutate her body into something so enormously sublime, omnipotent and indestructible that it could annihilate all traces of humanity’s destructiveness from the face of the Earth. Even if that meant martyring herself, or eradicating most of human civilisation, in the process...

READ THE ORIGINAL MONOLOGUE

 

THE SCRREW MANIFESTO

First performed at Nuclear Armageddon Ain’t Nothin’ But Foreplay: RUNT Transgender Awareness Week Takeover, Oslo House, November 2023

Work-in-Progress performance at Bang Average Theatre’s SCRATCH, Staffordshire Street Gallery, September 2023

 
 
While it seems unfair to have a favourite act, Abigail Jacqueline Jones as her alter-ego Nancy Motherfucking Archer, ‘the Seven-Foot Slut with the Seven-Figure IQ,’ really raised the temperature with her bloodthirsty, call-to-arms monologue. Pulse-raising stuff, hilarious but densely thought-provoking (Jones’s larger project, ‘The Giantess Speaks’, “examines queer perspectives on monstrous, abject, grotesque and sublime bodies as harbingers of liberation and utopia”), this is very much NOT ‘Live at the Apollo!’
— TO DO LIST, FROM A 5* REVIEW OF 'HEY MUM 3,' 9th MAY 2024.
 

The SCRREW Manifesto saw Abigail first attempt to truly crystallise the rebellious personality, the radical revolutionary politics, and the overt divergent eroticism of her reinterpretation of Attack of the Fifty-Foot Woman’s “monster” Nancy Archer, and to unite all three of these elements of her being within a single embodied character performing on stage. Taking the form of a fifteen-minute, semi-staged monologue, The SCRREW Manifesto sees Nancy attempt to convince her audience to join her revolutionary activist group — the Sisterhood for the Chemical and Radioactive Radical Enlargement of Women, or SCRREW for short — and to join her in consuming a superhuman growth serum that will transform them all into an army of omnipotent queer goddesses, powerful enough to annihilate the imperialistic and exploitative militaristic, governmental and economic infrastructures of the late-capitalist West, and clear the path for a more harmonious and less brutally oppressive civilisation to take root in its place. 

Interwoven amongst all the rhetoric of rebellion, destruction and rebirth present throughout the piece, The SCRREW Manifesto slowly begins to expose the complex and decidedly dark underpinnings of Nancy’s politics: the deep-cut trauma of growing up with a severely, divergent or “deviant” body which cannot be bound to the strict confines of binary gender or sexual social categorisations, in a world that is viciously hostile to physiological, psychological or behavioural abnormality. Describing the trauma of trying to survive as an ambiguously sexed, female-identifying neurodivergent queer girl in the misogynistic, queerphobic, ableist, anxious, anti-social world of 20th-century America as being akin to “piercing, penetrating psychological icepicks twisting… through your flesh and carving away at screeching bone, draining you of every single crimson drop of happiness and joy and light and life and heart and fucking soul, tearing you asunder from the inside out,” Nancy reveals that her intense, lion-hearted lust to rage against the destructive American political and economic machine is driven by an inescapable fear that she may have to destroy it before it destroys her.

The SCRREW Manifesto was originally performed during Nuclear Armageddon Ain’t Nothin’ But Foreplay, a special edition of live-art cabaret Runt of the Litter curated and hosted by the artist in November 2023 in order to commemorate Transgender Awareness Week. The artist performed an earlier, work-in-progress version of the piece at SCRATCH, a night of experimental theatrical performance hosted by Bang Average Theatre at Staffordshire Street Gallery, south London. 

read the manifesto

A SESSION WITH DR CUSHING

Originally performed during BUOYED, a group exhibition at Bermondsey Project Space, February 2023

A Session with Doctor Cushing is a tale of difference and emotional distance, a melancholy yet hopeful exploration of the disconnection that can often develop between queer and/or neurodivergent people and the world of interpersonal relationships, driven by experiences of social isolation, anxiety, dysphoria and discomfort throughout one’s formative years. This particular piece was Abigail’s second performative examination of the character of Nancy Archer, the first being her 2021 short story and performance series Anguish of the Fifty-Foot Woman, described in more detail here.

A Session with Doctor Cushing saw the artist borrowing character cues far more heavily from her original source material than she would in any subsequent performance, actively adopting the personality and mannerisms of Nancy exactly as she was portrayed in the 1993 HBO remake of Attack of the Fifty-Foot Woman in this early character performance experiment. Although performed to an entirely original script, the piece, in fact, saw Abigail mimic a scene from this 1993 adaptation; during this specific scene, which takes place soon after the incident that led to her experiencing her supernatural growth, a now-giant Nancy is being given a counselling session by her comparatively tiny long-time psychotherapist, Doctor Theodora Cushing. During this scene, we see the two women discuss Nancy’s newfound confidence and sense of self-worth, which had previously been eroded to nothing by the belittling, chauvinistic, gaslighting behaviours of the various patriarchs in her life. In addition, throughout the scene we see Nancy playing with a spool of heavy-duty pylon cable as though it were a stim toy, in possible reference to the fact that the actress playing her in this adaptation — Daryl Hannah — is an autistic woman, whose on-camera performance may therefore have been informed by her own experience of psychotherapeutic clinical settings.

Inspired by this scene, A Session with Doctor Cushing imagines an unconventional therapy session between Nancy (played by the artist) and a plinth-top figurine representing the eponymous psychotherapist, conducted sat atop a thousand-foot skyscraper at four a.m.: the only time and place Nancy feels comfortable enough to creep from hiding and explore the (silent, empty) metropolis around her. Playing with a toy car throughout the session in the same way the character Daryl Hannah portrayed in 1993’s Attack played with her pylon cable spool — to soothe her nerves and distract herself as she bore her soul to the doctor — Nancy discusses her fear of harming others with her giant body, and her extreme fawn complex in the face of interpersonal conflict. She furthermore discusses her lifelong fear of being perceived, or seen, or sensed, or spoken to by other people, which has only exacerbated since her transformation into a giantess, as well as the comfort and understanding she has begun to derive from becoming able to interpret human behaviours in macrocosm.

Guiding Doctor Cushing through the slowly awakening cityscape as dawn approaches, Nancy describes how she has begun to find that the chaos of bodies in motion, the confusing complexity of human emotions, and the instability and passion of interpersonal relationships she struggled to comprehend as a normal-sized neurodivergent woman viewing the social world from within, has become much more coherent to her following her growth into a giantess. Suddenly able to view the city as a whole, as a singular organic corpus from high above — a vantage point from which its human residents look like nothing more than tiny blood cells ebbing and flowing through the city’s arteries and capillaries — Nancy describes the specific, predictable patterns through which the sum of humanity’s collective actions function to sustain the life and soul of their metropolitan macro-organisms.

Read the manuscript

NANCY & DORA (WIP)

Performed at Live Art Club, VSSL Deptford, July 2023

Nancy & Dora was the first time Abigail had attempted to portray Nancy Archer and Dora Cushing — the giantess and her therapist from 1993’s Attack of the Fifty-Foot Woman — as an extremely tall, queer, ambiguously sexed, neurodivergent teenage high-school dropout having wicked dreams of destroying the misogynistic, queerphobic, ableist world that had tried so hard to destroy her, and her closest friend, the young, repressed sapphic trainee guidance counsellor who convinced her to drop out in the first place, having wished she’d once had the guts to do just that and pursue a life of rebellious queer separatism herself. In this piece, we see Nancy once again deep in conversation with Dora — represented by a figurine stood atop a plinth again, as in A Session With Doctor Cushing — venting about the repression, bullying and complex trauma she has suffered throughout her young life resulting from her anatomical inability to conform to gendered or sexed norms. Describing being made to feel like “a monster” throughout her childhood and adolescence — “gigantic and genderless and wrong… something uncategorisable, uncanny, something threatening, whose body deserved societal control and condemnation for daring to be different” — Nancy recounts her dysphoria-inducing efforts to mask her femininity and present as male throughout her high-school years, and her previous attempts to use her physical size advantage to out-bully her bullies in middle school.  She subsequently confesses to Dora her ultimate science-fiction fantasy of revenge against the oppressive social systems that had eternally sought to break her. To become more than the mere “reflection of biopolitical terror” she had always been growing up as a dramatically outsized, un-genderable, behaviourally and neurologically divergent child, but transform herself into an extremely real and present threat to the social and biopolitical infrastructures that had determined her body fit for such severe oppression.

Nancy & Dora has not been performed since its initial WIP at Live Art Club in July 2023. Intended to serve as a stepping-stone between Abigail’s relatively verbatim portrayal of Daryl Hannah’s Nancy Archer from the 1993 remake of Attack in A Session With Doctor Cushing, and the eventual development and debut of her own reimagining of the character, the artist found the piece to be sadly ineffective as a stand-alone piece. The tone of Nancy & Dora would, however, inspire the development of her eventual follow-up — The SCRREW Manifesto — and several lines and full sections of its script would be repurposed for use in future written works by the artist.

 RESEARCH

Have something you’d like to contribute? Click the button below!

i want to contribute!
 


Want to contribute to my research in a different way? Support me by donating to my Ko-fi!

SUPPORT ME ON KO-FI!
 
DSC01192.jpg
 

RESEARCH CONVERSATIONS

Since September 2023, Abigail has been conducting and archiving a series of recorded conversations with a number of prominent figures, including writers, artists and content creators, associated with the “size community.” These conversations have been conducted partly for the purpose of furthering her academic research into the intersections between queerness, neurodivergence, disability, and divergent erotic expression, and partly to create a record of the faces and voices of all those who have made the size community what it is today.

Undertaken in a loose, relatively informal fashion, these recorded conversations comprise an extensive body of oral history depicting a highly stigmatised community consigned predominantly to the margins of the Internet, whose cultural corpus has historically been extremely ephemeral. It remains a community almost entirely consigned to online space, with in-person gatherings having historically been rare. Its niche, community-managed websites and forums have come and gone over the years, taking with them huge amounts of unarchived media as their servers went offline, and its community presences on more mainstream social media and art-sharing platforms are routinely destroyed, or threatened with destruction. A proudly kinky, sex-positive community at heart, the size community has been hit hard by the growing sanitisation and gentrification of the Internet, manifest through the effects of legislation such as FOSTA-SESTA, by mainstream social media platforms prohibiting “sexually explicit content” in order to placate advertising partners, or by digital payment providers such as PayPal or Stripe withdrawing support for transactions involving the exchange of adult goods or services. Through collecting these oral testimonies and transcripts, Abigail hopes to ensure that there remains a permanent, comprehensively archived record of the size community in its current form, and of as much of its history as can be retrieved, in order to foster a stronger understanding of this community and others like it within both public and academic space.

Abigail is currently working to transcribe and summarise all of the interviews she has conducted so far, totalling some twenty-plus hours of recordings. Details of some of these interviews can be found below. So far, Abigail has also created two zines documenting two of her earliest conversations from this project — those she conducted with author of Deviant Desires: A Tour of the Erotic Edge Katharine Gates, and with prominent size kink author and community figurehead Elle Largesse. These zines are both currently on sale through her online shop, and have both been acquired by the Wellcome Collection.

 
 

A CONVERSATION WITH ELLE LARGESSE

Elle Largesse — also known as “MightyTinyGiant” — is a size-shifting bisexual/pansexual polyamorous kinky erotica writer and blogger, who began to participate in “Giant/tiny” size kink spaces online in late 2015.

The size community has since become a safe haven that has helped her cope with feelings of size dysmorphia triggered by her experiences of living with with Alice-in-Wonderland Syndrome (AiWS) — a rare neurological condition that produces, in those who live with it, an inability to consistently gauge the true scale of objects around them or of their own physical bodies — and learn to love her body and her queer sexuality. Alongside being a prolific publisher of erotic fiction, she is also a regular panelist and community event host at SizeCon Micro, an online convention for size kinksters of various flavours.

  • Abigail first interviewed Elle in November 2023. During their almost three-hour-long conversation, the pair discussed Elle’s somesthetic (or sensory-perceptive) experiences of size-shifting and size dysmorphia in the context of AiWS, and her use of erotic fantasy as a way of managing these often disorienting sensations she experiences as a result. Also discussed were Elle’s early experiences with exploring size-kink content online as a teenager living through the era of Web 1.0 forums such as alt.sex.stories, and her eventual embrace of her queerness, kinkiness and expansive divergent erotic imagination — and the online and offline communities surrounding each — as an adult in her thirties.

    Elle’s (NSFW) blog can be found online at www.ellelargesse.com. You can read more about Elle’s experiences of living with AiWS and embracing her size kink specifically by reading her essay Size Dysmorphia: A Size-Shifter Origin Story, published on the same website.

    To read a full transcript of our conversation (coming soon), or to purchase the zine documenting the interview pictured above, click the buttons below.

READ THE TRANSCRIPT
BUY THE ZINE

A CONVERSATION WITH KATHARINE GATES

Katharine Gates is a writer, anthropologist, publisher, artist and curator based just outside New York City. She is the author of Deviant Desires: Incredibly Strange Sex, which was originally published in 2000 by RE/Search Publications, and reissued by PowerHouse Books with the amended subtitle A Tour of the Erotic Edge in 2017. Katharine was also the curator of KINK: Geography of the Erotic Imagination, an exhibition hosted by the Museum of Sex, NYC, in 2006.

Katharine was the curator, owner and proprietor of Key Gallery, an avant-garde contemporary art gallery in Richmond, Virginia, from 1991-93. Between 1992 and 2008, she also operated an independent art book publishing house — Gates of Heck — which would publish works by renowned artists such as Annie Sprinkle, Charles Burns, Gary Panter, Joe Coleman and Art Spiegelman, amongst others. In addition to her work as a writer, publisher and gallerist, Katharine is the creator of the Kinkmap, an ongoing attempt to document as many niche kinks and fetishes as possible, and chart the various connections between them within a single graphic matrix. The Kinkmap has been reprinted in Human Sexuality, a college psychology textbook, and can also be found online.

  • In this recorded conversation, conducted with Abigail in September 2023, Katharine discusses the origins of Deviant Desires — in particular the research process that went into creating both the original 2000 edition and the book’s dramatically reworked 2017 reissue, which involved tracking down and interviewing the leading figures of several niche kink communities — and the desktop publishing phenomenon of the 1990s, which triggered the printing and dissemination of numerous niche erotic magazines proudly portraying kinks that had never previously been represented in print or the public consciousness, prompting several new divergent kink communities to coalesce into being, and providing a paper trail of uncommon erotic practices and their practitioners for Katharine to follow. Furthermore, Katharine discusses her experiences visiting and speaking at SizeCon — an annual convention for Giant(ess)/tiny and body expansion kinksters, held just outside New York City — and how her personal explorations of her own sexuality, gender presentation and neurodivergence helped inform her research practice and interest in unusual kinks.

    More information about Katharine’s Kinkmap project and the 2017 reissue of Deviant Desires can be found at www.kinkmap.com. Information about Katharine’s earlier work as proprietor of Key Gallery and of art publishing house Gates of Heck can be found at www.gatesofheck.com.

    To read a full transcript of our conversation (coming soon), or to purchase the zine documenting the interview pictured above, click the buttons below.

READ THE TRANSCRIPT (COMING SOON!)
BUY THE ZINE

Image credit: KANEDA (a.k.a. KAN 3DA) by SorenZer0

Read The Transcript

A CONVERSATION WITH MISS KANEDA

Miss Kaneda is a transfemme giantess, crush, footwear and femdom fetish content creator and erotic novelist based in Massachusetts. Active within online kink communities for over two decades, adopting feminine personas in virtual space for much of this time, Miss Kaneda — real name, Kylie — began hormonally transitioning in 2020, having begun to find the courage to publicly present as a woman in the real world around half a decade prior. She credits the exploration of gender identity and divergent sexual expression she was able to perform online as her giantess dominatrix alter-ego as being absolutely crucial to her eventual discovery, and embrace, of her transgender identity.

  • Presenting publicly as a woman for the very first time at the inaugural edition of SizeCon, held in 2016 in a photographic studio in New York City, the size kink community provided Kylie with what she considered the perfect environment in which to experiment with gender identity and presentation: an extraordinarily queer-friendly space that actively celebrated difference and divergence of sexual and gender expression. Although she is not as active as once she was in online kink and fetish spaces, having discovered her sexuality to have altered somewhat under the effects of feminising HRT regimens, she has maintained her close connection to the size kink community — attending and performing at SizeCon each year it has run.

    Our conversation together explored the intersections between Kylie’s experiences of exploring her transgender identity and her evolving relationship with the size community. We discussed her shifting relationship with violent eroticised fantasies, gendered power dynamics and the subversive dichotomy of female dominance/male submission, and her own favoured sexual and romantic rituals, fantasies and forms of expression between her post-transition queer, polyamorous relationships and the more traditionally amatonormative, heterosexual relationships she pursued before coming out as a trans woman. 

    Miss Kaneda’s (very NSFW) blog, including an archive of her short stories and novels, can be found at www.misskaneda.wordpress.com.


A CONVERSATION WITH MATTHEW HUNTLEY

Matthew Huntley is a professional fine artist and illustrator based in Indiana, specialising in oil painting. He is also a current member of the staff team responsible for organising and producing SizeCon, and he runs monthly social events, creative challenges and art critique sessions on Discord as the SizeCon community’s resident artist.

Primarily inspired by the Baroque and Academic traditions of figurative painting, and by late-20th-century cartoons and video games such as Gundam and the Powerpuff Girls, Matthew’s art explores subversions of traditional masculinity, femininity and binary gender roles — and of the cultural class divisions between what is considered to be “high art” and the DIY, pulp-fiction aesthetics of niche science-fiction subcultures completely unrepresented in mainstream culture or in fine-art spaces. The highly technical paintings comprising his ongoing Vigilant Lioness series depict giant female heroines protecting humanity from a series of monsters which, in the tradition of Japanese kaiju arising due to genetic mutations caused by nuclear detonations, were created as a result of genetic mutations caused by anthropogenic environmental pollution.

  • In 2015, as an undergraduate student at the Herron School of Art & Design in Indianapolis, Matthew began to develop Vigilant Lioness, an ongoing series of oil paintings, poster-painted illustrations and comics. Rooted deeply in science-fiction and superhero aesthetic traditions, the series features a collective of giant female heroines brought into existence by an intrepid group of rogue military scientists, who stole secret genetic modification technologies they had been working on for DARPA — the US Defense Department’s Advanced Research Projects Agency — in order to engineer a team of vigilantes tasked with saving the human race from the apocalyptic consequences of its own actions, known only as Lioness.

    Over the years since Vigilant Lioness was first conceived, Matthew has exhibited his work at exhibitions and conventions across the United States, and in publications such as Infected By Art and Studio Visit Magazine. In 2020, a successful Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign allowed Matthew to publish a book detailing the development of the series to date, and the artistic process behind the creation of each painting within it.

    During our conversation together, conducted in February 2024, Matthew and I discussed the subversive appropriation of oil painting as a “traditional” high-art medium, in order to create detailed artworks distinctly divorced from the (often highly gatekept) aesthetics, histories and artistic canons — and the baggage of upper-class cultural pretences — associated with it. We discussed our experiences of art school as relative creative contemporaries working in very different media, focusing on the difficulties Matthew faced as an artist obsessed with traditionally skilled, highly process-based and labour-intensive methods of making art — which typically involve producing numerous maquettes, models, preliminary sketches and studies, and conducting several photoshoots, per painting produced — in the context of contemporary art-school spaces which have largely moved away from prescriptively teaching such skills and processes over the last four decades, instead taking a far more conceptual, fluid, and ultimately laissez-faire approach to arts education. 

    All of Matthew’s Vigilant Lioness paintings can be viewed on his website, www.matthewjhuntley.com.

read the transcript (coming soon)

Image credit: Way Cooler Than Sea Monkeys (2024) by Matthew Huntley.

Image credit: Mankind’s Biggest Hero Isn’t A Man (2018) by Matthew Huntley.


A CONVERSATION WITH JOYCE JULEP

Joyce Julep is a professional erotica author and erotic role-player, who produces short stories and novels featuring giantess fantasy themes for commission. Publishing her works primarily on sites such as DeviantArt and erotica platform Giantess World, as well as maintaining a large following for her exclusive or early-access content on both Patreon and adult subscription service SubscribeStar, Joyce has fostered enough of a following to be able to live purely off of the income she has made as a size content creator.

Subverting many common tropes within giantess writing focused on depicting "giant/growing woman and tiny/shrinking man” dynamics, typically in ways designed to serve a cis-het male gaze, Joyce’s literature is infused with a distinctive self-awareness and queerness despite its typically heterosexual focus. Her novels in particular delve deep into exploring the fragility of contemporary masculinity and the male ego, expertly deploying the inversion of gendered social power dynamics practically inherent to giantess erotica as a genre in order to manifest both social and internalised crises of emasculsation — to render inexorably visible patriarchal masculinity’s existential fear of slipping down the gendered social hierarchy — and comment upon or satirise these anxieties.

READ THE TRANSCRIPT

A CONVERSATION WITH SCOTT GRILDRIG

Scott Grildrig is a prominent author of “giantess fetish” fiction who has been active within size kink community spaces since the late 1980s.

One of the earliest size content creators to emerge on the early Internet, in July 1993 Grildrig published a short story called Janice in the City — a simple “giantess rampage” story about a woman inexplicably growing to skyscraper-size and destroying swathes of a city loosely based on Los Angeles — to the USENET board alt.sex.stories in response to a fellow user’s request for erotic literature featuring giant women. One of the absolute progenitors of size kink fiction as we know it today, over the thirty-plus years since Janice in the City’s initial release Grildrig has consistently been one of the most prolific and well-known creators of kinky giantess fiction, establishing several of the signature styles and literary tropes commonplace within modern size literature, and comedically subverting them in turn.

  • Grildrig has collaborated with several other artists and writers within the size community, providing literary accompaniments for their visual art projects, or on occasion collaborating on stories. Having been present within size community space through several different shifts from online platform to online platform — from the aforementioned alt.sex.stories, to the IRC chatroom #!!giantess, to niche online forums such as GiantessCity and larger, more mainstream social media and art-sharing websites such as DeviantArt, Discord and Twitter more recently — his knowledge and personal experience of size community space and its evolution is invaluable to constructing an understanding of what this community is, and how it emerged in the first place. Stories such as IRC URC, published in 1997 and featuring actual users of #!!giantess as characters, and characters such as “Kathy the Giantess Wife” and “Mitzi the Ditz” (inspired by pre-Internet giantess model Kathy Castro, and by a character created by early-1990s size artist Cat, respectively) serve to document a time period in the size community’s early history that has sadly otherwise gone unarchived.

    A full list of Grildrig’s size stories can be found on his DeviantArt page here.

READ THE TRANSCRIPT
 

Image credit: Biggest Baddest Besties Forever by Aphrodite, from Grildrig’s short story Janice & Pam: Fourth Wall.


Image credit: McDead

A CONVERSATION WITH HYPERION, GUARDIAN OF NATURE

Hyperion, Guardian of Nature is a “giant” role-playing persona and community figurehead within the size community.

Putting their own gender-busting, self-aware, occasionally radical and decidedly camp twist on the traditional size-kink stereotype of the bikini-clad pornographic giantess destroying cities merely for her own sexual pleasure, Hyperion is a gigantic non-binary environmental activist of sorts, who can be most commonly found rampaging through major cities and centres of political and economic power, proudly and pleasurably annihilating  polluting human infrastructures and societal structures of oppression. Though they'll tell you that their actions are noble, they definitely seem to enjoy what they do quite a bit...

Keeping character throughout their interactions with others in the size community, Hyperion has established themselves as a muse for several size community artists, and has created safe spaces on platforms such as Discord where other queer and neurodivergent members of the size community can meet, share their creative works, roleplay with each other, and collaborate on communal projects. Hyperion is also proudly and openly autistic, and outside of size space also engages in disability and neurodiversity activism, helping run online social and creative spaces for the autistic community too.

READ THE TRANSCRIPT

 

Further Interview Transcripts

The following are links to PDFs of research conversation transcripts — including all footnotes and appendices — that Abigail has not yet created dedicated webpages and introductions for. Metadata sheets and introductions will be added to each transcript once Abigail has finished the process of transcribing all of the interviews she has conducted, and is preparing them to be archived by the Bishopsgate Institute and the University of Toronto’s Mark S. Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies.

So far, Abigail has conducted over sixty research interviews as part of this project, and taken short testimonies from several other figures. As of September 2025, she is currently working through the process of editing and formatting her interview transcriptions — including transcripts for all of those early interviews she conducted over Zoom, almost all of which are over two hours long, and some of which are over three. Please be patient — this webpage, and The Giantess Speaks as an overarching endeavour, are both a one-person operation maintained by Abigail herself in between her day job!

 
 
 
  • TruelySmol — Transmasc non-binary, autistic SFW Giant/tiny artist and community member based in the United States. Conducted via Discord DMs in October 2024.

  • BaronGwyn — Heterosexual, cisgender inflation/expansion kinkster, SizeCon staff member, and size community “elder” based in California. Active member of online size kink spaces since the early 1990s. Conducted via Discord DMs in October 2024.

  • Jolene — Trans woman size artist based in Scotland. Conducted via Discord DMs in November 2024.

  • Lyra, Secretary for the Divine — Transgender demisexual lesbian size-switch based in the United States. Conducted via Discord DMs in December 2024.

  • Rose the Destroyer (a.k.a. Rel) — Trans woman 3D size artist and world-builder, known for creating rendered artworks featuring “multisize” dynamics featuring giant women of various scales. Conducted via Discord DMs in December 2024.

  • Miss Willow — Trans woman, kinky size-switch, and real-life partner of fellow research participant Miss Kaneda, with particular interests in fear-play, erotic cruelty and other “dark side” kinks, the eroticism of cosmic horror and divine bodies, and the psychosexuality of extreme size differences/power imbalances. Conducted via Discord DMs in December 2024.

  • Wild Pansy — Queer man active in the SFW Giant/tiny scene on Tumblr in the early-mid 2010s, and more recently in erotic size spaces, based in the United States. Conducted via Discord DMs in January 2025.

  • Aspen Woods — Queer, transgender size fiction author based in Chile. Conducted via Discord DMs in January 2025.

  • Ruby (a.k.a bigspacebitch) — Trans woman based in France who identifies as a “giant”, active predominantly on the SFW side of the size community, though increasingly active within kinkier size spaces too. Conducted via Discord DMs in January 2025.

  • DeadBread — Pansexual, non-binary “tiny” active in size kink and BDSM spaces, based in the United States. Conducted via Discord DMs in January 2025.

  • SassyViper — Transfeminine inflation, transformation, and blueberry kinkster and kink podcaster who is also somewhat active within Giant/tiny kink spaces. Conducted via Discord DMs in January 2025.

  • Quinn (a.k.a. bug_in_a _cage) — Non-binary “giant” size kinkster, who has become well-regarded for their essays on the social and political dynamics active within erotic size fantasies, and their broader philosophical ramifications within queer and feminist contexts. Conducted via Discord DMs in January 2025.

 

Conversations To Be Transcribed

  • TinySuperVicki — Bisexual, cisgender Latina Giant/tiny community artist based in Houston, Texas. Conducted via Zoom in January 2024

  • Chris “Chwani” Nial — Gay, cisgender white man, Giant/tiny kinkster and SizeCon Showrunner based in Vermont. Conducted via Zoom in January 2024

  • Silly — Queer, white, AuDHD, transmasc non-binary Giant/tiny kinkster, community writer and artist, and founder of the #SFWGt social media tag with a particular interest in giants in mythology. Conducted via Zoom in March 2024.

  • Aphrodite — White cis woman size community writer/artist based in the English East Midlands, known for creating graphic giantess rampage/destruction scenes in erotic literature and graphic art. Conducted via Zoom in April 2024.

  • SalemSage — White non-binary Giant/tiny kinkster and community writer based in England. Conducted via Zoom in April 2024.

  • Taedis — White genderfluid Giant/tiny kinkster, erotic author, and size community archivist based in New Hampshire. Conducted via Zoom in May 2024.

  • Aborigen — White, heterosexual, cisgender, self-diagnosed autistic giantess kinkster, community blogger and prolific erotica author based in the United States. Conducted via Zoom in June 2024.

  • Goddess Tina — Cisgender woman giantess kinkster, multidisciplinary size-kink content creator, and community figurehead based in France. Presents in-character as a vast “goddess” figure — usually ranging between being the size of several city blocks, to being several times larger than planets, stars, or even galaxies — throughout her online community interactions. Conducted in multiple parts via Discord, beginning in August 2024.


 

If you would like to support me in continuing this research endeavour, please do consider supporting my work on Ko-fi! Any donations would mean the world to me — particularly as I am currently fundraising to ensure I can continue to have access to the critical mental health and disability access support that have allowed me to make this wild endeavour a reality.

SUPPORT ME ON KO-FI