Generations of Ex-lovers Cannot Fail: Rethinking Lesbian Feminism Today

Q4 Social Sciences WSQ Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1353/wsq.2023.a910084
Jack Jen Gieseking
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In her CLAGSNews newsletter retrospective, Chinn delightedly records that hopeful estimates for 250 registrants were surpassed with 450 attendees(!) “filling the halls of the [CUNY] Graduate Center with more lesbians than the building has ever seen and most likely ever will see!” She adds how exciting it was that paper proposals “came from younger women (and a couple of men), who were engaging lesbian experiences in the 1970s as meaningful topics for academic study and political analysis.” Over a decade later, academic work about 1970s lesbian feminism has finally begun to accumulate—by an ever more diversely gendered authorship—including the publication of two central, insightful texts: Cait McKinney’s Information Activism: A Queer History of Lesbian Media Technologies and Rox Samer’s Lesbian Potentiality and Feminist Media in the 1970s. These books fit together; they are complementary texts. Both argue against limiting notions of lesbian feminism as any fixed, certain framework or as defined by any one group of people. Both authors write against any claim to lesbian feminism by trans exclusionary radical feminists (TERFs). Instead, lesbian feminism is multitudinous and malleable—in fact, what is lesbian (or the 1970s-style of capitalized Lesbian) is still being constructed and will be constructed again. Both books draw on new archives and texts and rethink previously studied materials in important ways, and both are packed with readable, powerful prose from which to rethink, reimagine, write, and teach about lesbians in the 1970s. While the authors do bring in [End Page 249] race and disability and provide significant theorizing around both concepts, the most significant shared weakness is the uneven attention both books pay to these positionalities, whereby some areas are stronger than others. Published in 2020, McKinney’s Information Activism, a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award, does the profound work of turning lesbian information-making and -sharing into an utterly invigorating read. The book’s principal concept, “information activism,” is the work of “women who responded to their frustrated desire for information about lesbian history and lesbian life by generating that information themselves” and thus produced “how movement-related information is stored, sorted, searched for, and retrieved by lesbian-feminist activists serving communities they care about” (2, 13). In other words, McKinney traces how this “not-so-sexy shuffling of documents . . . about sex and sexuality” was a practice of information activism (9). This massive effort was a project of survival, connection, and self-understanding and collective insight. Bridging the emergence of 1970s lesbian feminist media with the shifts to 1980s lesbian database creation and maintenance, computer use, and software selection, McKinney frames their Information Activism through the production of lesbian information infrastructure, which also will be of interest to infrastructure studies. The first of the book’s four core chapters focuses on that most popular of lesbian documents, newsletters, the “connective tissue that made readers aware of the larger information infrastructure” (35). The following chapters examine phone hotlines, indices, and, finally, the digitization practices of lesbian archival materials. McKinney is especially enthralled with—and good at—making visible the labor of lesbian information-making. Even as an expert in this area, I was repeatedly wowed by how little access lesbians had to the positive, accessible, and organized information that we could so easily rely on by the twenty-first century, even before search engines, thanks to amateur-cum-professional archivists and librarians and activists. McKinney’s book pays homage to the many excellent books that have examined lesbian print culture before it, like Agatha Beins’s (2017) Liberation in Print: Feminist Periodicals and Social Movement Identity. 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Abstract

Generations of Ex-lovers Cannot Fail: Rethinking Lesbian Feminism Today Jack Jen Gieseking (bio) Cait McKinney’s Information Activism: A Queer History of Lesbian Media Technologies, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2020 Rox Samer’s Lesbian Potentiality and Feminist Media in the 1970s, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2022 Executive Director Sarah Chinn of the (then) Center of Lesbian and Gay Studies (CLAGS)1 co-organized the Lesbians in the 1970s conference in 2010 to “commemorate, celebrate, and evaluate the diverse contributions of lesbians over the course of the 1970s” (Chinn 2011). In her CLAGSNews newsletter retrospective, Chinn delightedly records that hopeful estimates for 250 registrants were surpassed with 450 attendees(!) “filling the halls of the [CUNY] Graduate Center with more lesbians than the building has ever seen and most likely ever will see!” She adds how exciting it was that paper proposals “came from younger women (and a couple of men), who were engaging lesbian experiences in the 1970s as meaningful topics for academic study and political analysis.” Over a decade later, academic work about 1970s lesbian feminism has finally begun to accumulate—by an ever more diversely gendered authorship—including the publication of two central, insightful texts: Cait McKinney’s Information Activism: A Queer History of Lesbian Media Technologies and Rox Samer’s Lesbian Potentiality and Feminist Media in the 1970s. These books fit together; they are complementary texts. Both argue against limiting notions of lesbian feminism as any fixed, certain framework or as defined by any one group of people. Both authors write against any claim to lesbian feminism by trans exclusionary radical feminists (TERFs). Instead, lesbian feminism is multitudinous and malleable—in fact, what is lesbian (or the 1970s-style of capitalized Lesbian) is still being constructed and will be constructed again. Both books draw on new archives and texts and rethink previously studied materials in important ways, and both are packed with readable, powerful prose from which to rethink, reimagine, write, and teach about lesbians in the 1970s. While the authors do bring in [End Page 249] race and disability and provide significant theorizing around both concepts, the most significant shared weakness is the uneven attention both books pay to these positionalities, whereby some areas are stronger than others. Published in 2020, McKinney’s Information Activism, a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award, does the profound work of turning lesbian information-making and -sharing into an utterly invigorating read. The book’s principal concept, “information activism,” is the work of “women who responded to their frustrated desire for information about lesbian history and lesbian life by generating that information themselves” and thus produced “how movement-related information is stored, sorted, searched for, and retrieved by lesbian-feminist activists serving communities they care about” (2, 13). In other words, McKinney traces how this “not-so-sexy shuffling of documents . . . about sex and sexuality” was a practice of information activism (9). This massive effort was a project of survival, connection, and self-understanding and collective insight. Bridging the emergence of 1970s lesbian feminist media with the shifts to 1980s lesbian database creation and maintenance, computer use, and software selection, McKinney frames their Information Activism through the production of lesbian information infrastructure, which also will be of interest to infrastructure studies. The first of the book’s four core chapters focuses on that most popular of lesbian documents, newsletters, the “connective tissue that made readers aware of the larger information infrastructure” (35). The following chapters examine phone hotlines, indices, and, finally, the digitization practices of lesbian archival materials. McKinney is especially enthralled with—and good at—making visible the labor of lesbian information-making. Even as an expert in this area, I was repeatedly wowed by how little access lesbians had to the positive, accessible, and organized information that we could so easily rely on by the twenty-first century, even before search engines, thanks to amateur-cum-professional archivists and librarians and activists. McKinney’s book pays homage to the many excellent books that have examined lesbian print culture before it, like Agatha Beins’s (2017) Liberation in Print: Feminist Periodicals and Social Movement Identity. The first chapter in Information Activism, “The Internet That Lesbians Built: Newsletter...
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几代前恋人不会失败:重新思考今天的女同性恋女权主义
几代前恋人不能失败:重新思考女同性恋女权主义今天杰克·珍·吉斯金(传记)凯特·麦金尼的信息行动主义:女同性恋媒体技术的酷儿历史,达勒姆,北卡罗来纳州:杜克大学出版社,2020年罗克斯·萨默的女同性恋潜能和女权主义媒体在20世纪70年代,达勒姆,北卡罗来纳州:(当时的)男女同性恋研究中心(CLAGS)的执行主任Sarah Chinn在2010年共同组织了1970年代的女同性恋会议,以“纪念、庆祝和评估女同性恋在1970年代的各种贡献”(Chinn 2011)。在她的CLAGSNews时事通讯回顾中,Chinn高兴地记录了250名注册者的期望,450名参与者超过了预期(!)“让[纽约市立大学]研究生中心的大厅充满了更多的女同性恋者,这是这座大楼从未见过的,而且很可能永远不会看到的!”她补充说,论文提案是多么令人兴奋,“来自年轻女性(和几个男性),他们在20世纪70年代将女同性恋经历作为学术研究和政治分析的有意义的主题。”十多年后,关于20世纪70年代女同性恋女权主义的学术著作终于开始积累起来——由一个性别更加多样化的作者——包括两本具有深刻见解的核心文本的出版:凯特·麦金尼的《信息行动主义:女同性恋媒体技术的酷儿历史》和罗克斯·萨默的《女同性恋潜力和20世纪70年代的女权主义媒体》。这些书合在一起;它们是互补的文本。两人都反对将女同性恋女权主义的概念限制为任何固定的、特定的框架或任何一个群体所定义的。两位作者都反对排斥跨性别的激进女权主义者(terf)对女同性恋女权主义的任何主张。相反,女同性恋女权主义是众多且可塑的——事实上,什么是女同性恋(或20世纪70年代风格的女同性恋)仍在被构建,并将被再次构建。两本书都借鉴了新的档案和文本,并在重要的方面重新思考了以前研究过的材料,两本书都充满了可读性强的散文,从中可以重新思考、重新想象、写作和教授20世纪70年代的女同性恋。虽然作者确实引入了种族和残疾,并围绕这两个概念提供了重要的理论,但最重要的共同弱点是,两本书都对这些立场给予了不平衡的关注,其中一些领域比其他领域更强。麦金尼的《信息行动主义》(Information Activism)于2020年出版,入围了拉姆达文学奖(Lambda Literary Award),它做了深刻的工作,将女同性恋信息的制作和分享变成了一本完全令人振奋的读物。这本书的主要概念是“信息激进主义”,这是“女性通过自己创造信息来回应她们对女同性恋历史和女同性恋生活信息受挫的渴望”,从而产生了“与运动相关的信息是如何被服务于她们所关心的社区的女同性恋女权主义者存储、分类、搜索和检索的”(2,13)。换句话说,麦金尼追溯了这种“不那么性感的文件混乱……”这是一种信息行动主义的实践(9)。这种巨大的努力是一项关于生存、联系、自我理解和集体洞察力的项目。McKinney将20世纪70年代女同性恋女权主义媒体的出现与20世纪80年代女同性恋数据库的创建和维护、计算机使用和软件选择的转变联系起来,通过女同性恋信息基础设施的生产来构建她们的信息激进主义,这也将是基础设施研究的兴趣所在。这本书的四个核心章节中的第一个集中在最受欢迎的女同性恋文件,时事通讯,“使读者意识到更大的信息基础设施的结缔组织”(35)。接下来的章节考察了电话热线,索引,最后,女同性恋档案材料的数字化实践。麦金尼特别着迷于——并且擅长于让人们看到女同性恋信息制作的劳动。即使作为这方面的专家,我也一再惊叹于女同性恋者很少能接触到积极的、可获取的、有组织的信息,而在21世纪,甚至在搜索引擎出现之前,我们可以如此轻易地依赖这些信息,这要归功于业余和专业的档案管理员、图书管理员和活动家。麦金尼的书向之前研究女同性恋印刷文化的许多优秀书籍致敬,比如阿加莎·拜恩斯(2017)的《印刷中的解放:女权主义期刊和社会运动身份》。信息行动主义的第一章,“女同性恋建立的互联网:时事通讯……”
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WSQ Social Sciences-Gender Studies
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Nocturne with hysterectomy Palmetto, from Black Girl in Triptych , Part 1 Generations of Ex-lovers Cannot Fail: Rethinking Lesbian Feminism Today Trans Visibility Cloak #Nonbinary Joy—Tristan
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