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The Lesbian Menace - Ideology, Identity and the Representation of Lesbian Life (Paperback, New ed.)
Loot Price: R978
Discovery Miles 9 780
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The Lesbian Menace - Ideology, Identity and the Representation of Lesbian Life (Paperback, New ed.)
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Electroshock. Hysterectomy. Lobotomy. These are only three of the
many "cures" to which lesbians have been subjected in this century.
How does a society develop such a profound aversion to a particular
minority? In what ways do images in the popular media perpetuate
cultural stereotypes about lesbians, and to what extent have
lesbians been able to subvert and revise those images? This book
addresses these and other questions by examining how lesbianism has
been represented in American popular culture in the twentieth
century and how conflicting ideologies have shaped lesbian
experiences and identity. In the first section, "Inventing the
Lesbian," Sherrie A. Inness explores depictions of lesbians in
popular texts aimed primarily at heterosexual consumers. She moves
from novels of the 1920s to books about life at women's colleges
and boarding schools, to such contemporary women's magazines as
Cosmopolitan, Glamour, and Vogue. In the next section, "Forms of
Resistance," Inness probes the ways in which lesbians have
refashioned texts intended for a heterosexual audience or created
their own narratives. One chapter shows how lesbian readers have
reinterpreted the Nancy Drew mysteries, looking at them from a
distinctly "queer" perspective. Another chapter addresses the
changing portrayal of lesbians in children's books over the past
two decades. The last section, "Writing in the Margins,"
scrutinizes the extent to which lesbians, themselves a marginalized
group, have created a society that relegates some of its own
members to the outskirts. Topics include the geographic politics of
lesbianism, the complex issue of "passing," and the meaning of
butch identity in twentieth-century lesbian culture.
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