Bisexual Women in the Twenty-First Century
Book Details
PublisherHaworth Press
ISBN / ASIN1560233036
ISBN-139781560233039
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank2,992,136
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Bisexual Women in the Twenty-First Century reflects the “brave new world” of bisexual women's lives through an eclectic collection of articles that typifies an ongoing feminist process of theory grounded in life experience. The book's broad scope addresses a “world” created in response to lesbian-feminism, homophobia within the mainstream women’s movement, and sexism within the gay rights movement. The book includes Carol Queen's memoirs of the swinging lesbian scene in the 1970s, a critical examination of Alice Walker's novel The Temple of My Familiar, and a look back at the controversy surrounding bisexual inclusion in the Northampton Lesbian and Gay Pride March in Massachusetts in the early 90s. Previous groundbreaking work on bisexuality had to focus on breaking the silence around bisexual invisibility. This collection works from that foundation to explore the complexities and histories of bisexual women's lives.
Bisexual Women in the Twenty-First Century examines:
Bisexual Women in the Twenty-First Century examines:
- tensions between lesbians and bisexual women
- the shifting place of bisexual women in society
- the use of skin color as a charged metaphor
- the inclusion of bisexuality into queer theory
- groundbreaking new work on bisexual youth
- the creative use of the “sacred whore” archetype
