From Lavender Menace to Queer Nation: the transformation of lesbian identity in the baby boom era.

IF 1.1 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Journal of Lesbian Studies Pub Date : 2024-04-25 DOI:10.1080/10894160.2024.2345496
Kristin G Esterberg
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Abstract

Women of the early baby boom years in the U.S. came out into an environment in which same-sex desire was stigmatized and criminalized. For working-class lesbians, the bar scene provided an environment in which women could find companionship and a way to live a life decoupled from traditional heterosexual roles. For middle class women, bar life was fraught with legal and social risk, and some-mostly white-women worked to establish a more "socially acceptable" communal life through organizations such as the Daughters of Bilitis. As the women's movement flourished in the late 1960s and 1970s, women born in the early years of the baby boom (1946-1950) created distinctive lesbian feminist cultures and identities. In contrast to early baby boomers, women born at the tail end of the baby boom (1960-1964) came out in a vastly different cultural context. Second-wave feminism had already peaked, the AIDS epidemic and debates about sexuality changed the context for lesbian identity and activism, and organizing by women of color created the development of an intersectional view of lesbian identity and activism. Through an analysis of feminist magazines, newsletters, and texts of the late 1960s through the 1990s, this paper explores the cultural contexts through which radical lesbian feminist identities arose and, for a period, flourished in the U.S. By the end of the 1980s and 1990s, as second-wave feminism declined, lesbian feminist identity shifted. Over the last decades of the twentieth century, new queer forms of identification emerged, coupled with a decline of lesbian identification among younger people. I argue that these new forms represent both continuity and disruption with earlier forms of lesbian identification.
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从 "薰衣草威胁 "到 "同性恋国家":婴儿潮时代女同性恋身份的转变。
美国婴儿潮早期的女性出柜时,她们的同性欲望被污名化和犯罪化。对于工人阶级的女同性恋者来说,酒吧场景为她们提供了一个可以找到伴侣的环境,以及一种与传统异性恋角色脱钩的生活方式。对于中产阶级女性来说,酒吧生活充满了法律和社会风险,一些女性--主要是白人女性--努力通过比莉婷丝之女协会等组织建立一种更 "为社会所接受 "的集体生活。随着 20 世纪 60 年代末和 70 年代妇女运动的蓬勃发展,出生在婴儿潮早期(1946-1950 年)的妇女创造了独特的女同性恋文化和身份。与婴儿潮早期的女性相比,婴儿潮末期(1960-1964 年)出生的女性是在一种截然不同的文化背景下走出来的。第二波女权主义已经达到顶峰,艾滋病的流行和关于性行为的争论改变了女同性恋身份和活动的背景,有色人种妇女的组织活动促进了女同性恋身份和活动的交叉性发展。通过分析 20 世纪 60 年代末到 90 年代的女权主义杂志、通讯和文本,本文探讨了激进女同性恋女权主义者身份产生的文化背景,以及在美国蓬勃发展的一段时期。到 20 世纪 80 年代末和 90 年代,随着第二波女权主义的衰落,女同性恋女权主义者的身份也发生了转变。在 20 世纪的最后几十年里,出现了新的同性恋认同形式,与此同时,年轻人对女同性恋的认同也在下降。我认为,这些新形式既是对早期女同性恋认同形式的延续,也是对其的破坏。
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来源期刊
Journal of Lesbian Studies
Journal of Lesbian Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
9.10%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: The Journal of Lesbian Studies examines the cultural, historical, and interpersonal impact of the lesbian experience on society, keeping all readers—professional, academic, or general—informed and up to date on current findings, resources, and community concerns. Independent scholars, professors, students, and lay people will find this interdisciplinary journal essential on the topic of lesbian studies!
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