Un/Popular Culture: Lesbian Writing After the Sex WarsTheorizing lesbian, Kathleen Martindale writes, is like embarking on terra incognita. In this book, Martindale offers her lucidly written analysis as a guide through the complex and provocative terrain of lesbian literary and cultural theory. Using the publication of Adrienne Rich's Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence and the outbreak of the American sex wars as a starting point, Martindale traces the emergence of lesbian postmodernism and how lesbian-feminism changed from a popular to an unpopular culture and from a political vanguard into a cultural neo-avant garde. |
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Contents
The Making of an Unpopular Culture From Lesbian Feminism to Lesbian Postmodernism | 1 |
Paper Lesbians and Theory Queens | 33 |
Back to the Future with Dykes To Watch Out For and Hothead Paisan | 55 |
Toward a ButchFemme Reading Practice Reading Joan Nestle | 77 |
Sarah Schulman Urban Lesbian Radicals in a Postmodern Mainstream | 103 |
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aesthetic Alison Bechdel American lesbian autobiography avant-garde Bechdel bian binary butch butch-femme chapter citational claims classroom comic contemporary deconstruct desire DiMassa discourse discussion Dykes To Watch Empathy erotic essay Faderman fantasy female feminism feminist and lesbian femme film gay and lesbian gender heterosexual homophobia homosexuality Hothead Paisan Ibid intellectual issues Joan Nestle Judith Butler Kennedy and Davis lesbian and gay lesbian culture lesbian fiction lesbian identity lesbian literary lesbian postmodernism lesbian readers Lesbian Representation Lesbian Sexuality lesbian studies lesbian subject lesbian theory lesbian writing lesbian-feminism lesbian-feminist Monique Wittig negotiating Nestle's novel Paper Lesbians political Postmodern Queer Pedagogy queer theory question relationship resistance Restricted Country Rich's Romantic friendship Routledge Sappho Sarah Schulman Sedgwick seems sex radicals sex wars Sexual Indifference sexual practices social Stimpson story subject positions Sue-Ellen Teresa de Lauretis texts theoretical theorists tion un/popular culture woman women women's studies working-class York zines