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Talk is crucial to the way our identities are constructed, altered, and defended. Feminist scholars in particular have only begun to investigate how deeply language reflects and shapes who we think we are. This volume of previously unpublished essays, the first in the new series Studies in Language and Gender, advances that effort by bringing together leading feminist scholars in the area of language and gender, including Deborah Tannen, Jennifer Coates, and Marcyliena Morgan, as well as rising younger scholars. Topics explored include African-American drag queens, gender and class on the shopping channel, and talk in the workplace.
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Survol historique de la communauté gaie-lesbienne de Montréal. D'après l'auteur, ce premier volume sera suivi d'une publication ultérieure où son enquête sera présentée de façon plus globale.
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En déclarant qu' "on ne naît pas femme, on le devient", Simone de Beauvoir a posé les fondements d'une conception féministe du genre. L'analyse développée dans Le Deuxième sexe a anticipé la distinction ultérieure entre sexe et genre, et a également soulevé certains problèmes liés à cette distinction. Plutôt que l'oeuvre même de Beauvoir, ce sont les discussions récentes autour de la distinction sexe/genre qui font l'objet de cet article. Plus particulièrement, j'examine la manière dont les féministes matérialistes françaises, avec qui Beauvoir elle-même a travaillé, ont fait fructifier son héritage. En affirmant que le "sexe" est un phénomène tout aussi social que le "genre", ces féministes ont maintenu une tradition anti-essentialiste fondamentalement opposée aux perspectives "différentialistes" si souvent associées à la construction anglophone du "French feminism". Je confronte la contribution de ces féministes, notamment Christine Delphy et Monique Wittig, aux conceptions féministes du genre, avec l'approche plus déconstructive associée à des théoriciennes comme Judith Butler. Ce faisant, je plaide pour une analyse matérialiste du genre et pour une vision d'un monde sans genre plutôt que d'un monde avec de multiples genres. In claiming that 'one is not born, but rather becomes, a woman', Simone de Beauvoir laid the foundations for a feminist understanding of gender. The analysis developed in The Second Sex anticipated the later distinction between sex and gender, and also evinced some of the problems associated with that distinction. It is these more recent discussions of the sex/gender distinction which are the focus of this paper, rather than Beauvoir's work itself. More specifically, I consider the ways in which French materialist feminists, with whom Beauvoir herself worked, carry forward her legacy. In arguing that ' sex' is as much a social phenomenon as 'gender', these feminists have kept alive an anti-essentialist tradition which is fundamentally opposed to the 'difference' perspectives so often associated with the anglophone construction of ' French Feminism'. I compare the contribution that these feminists, especially Christine Delphy and Monique Wittig, have made to feminist understandings of gender with the more deconstructive approach associated with thinkers such as Judith Butler. In so doing I argue the case for a materialist analysis of gender and for a vision of a world without gender rather than a world with many genders.
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Since the beginnings of time, people have been interested in sex - the form it takes, the pleasure it can give, the circumstances in which it occurs, and what it means - both for the individuals concerned and to society more generally. Often seen as a synonym for love, sometimes as an expression of power, and infrequently as a means of exploitation and abuse, sex is a complex and multi-faceted aspect of human behaviour that has been written about by numerous writers and theorists worldwide. This book offers an introduction to the central debates in sexuality research. Among the issues examined are the social and cultural dimensions of sex, human sexuality and sex research. It will be of use to students of sociology, cultural studies, and health and behavioural studies.
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The Good-Natured Feminist inaugure une conversation soutenue entre l'écoféminisme et les écrits récents du postmodernisme féministe et de la démocratie radicale. Partant de l'hypothèse que l'écoféminisme est un corpus de théorie démocratique, le livre raconte comment le mouvement est né des débats sur la « nature » dans les féminismes radicaux nord-américains, comment il s'est ensuite mêlé à la politique identitaire et comment il cherche maintenant à inclure la nature dans la conversation démocratique et, surtout, de politiser les relations entre genre et nature dans les milieux tant théoriques qu'activistes.
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A vivid, sexy, and titillating journey into the steamy underworld of the dime novel. In the scandalous world of pulp fiction in the 1950s and into the 60s, detectives, gangsters, and mad doctors were joined on the racks by bad girls, dissolute youths, drug-crazed beatniks, and other assorted miscreants and misfits. Where romance met with soft porn there was also a surprisingly large population of butch brunettes pursuing and seducing blond femmes. This was an alternate universe of erotic pulp fiction where gals and dolls were exploring the illicit pleasures of lesbian love--much to the delight of a largely male, heterosexual readership. Before the sexual revolution of the 1960s, these books offered a thrilling peek into the deviant underworld of wild passion and scandalous sex. Strange Sisters is a collection of the cover art of these wildly wicked novels. The women who writhe across the covers of books such as Strange Lust ("She Wanted a Woman--Then She Met Another Woman Obsessed by the Same Burning Hunger") and Women's Barracks ("The Frank Autobiography of a French Girl Soldier") sizzle with sexual energy and freedom--in a high-camp defiance of the prudish, conservative 1950s. Bold, kitschy-colorful, and fraught with sexual tension, the covers of Strange Sisters are a siren call to the retro-groovin' man, or woman, in your life.