ABSTRACT

Locating Lesbian and Gay Subjects collects some of the best papers from the Fifth Annual Lesbian and Gay Studies Conference, held at Rutgers University in 1991. These essays are distinguished by their concern with `a politics of location,' shifting emphasis from gay and/or lesbian identity to the location of these subjects in material experiences or events. Within this framework, the writers examine literature, art, psychoanalysis and personal experience. A number of the essays explore the role specific racial and ethnic constructions in the construction of gay men and/or lesbians, and conversely, the role of sexual identities in forming racial and ethnic constructs. Other are focused on the body and how it it created in reponse to American cultural forces. The diversity of the contributors--academics, filmmakers, activists and authors--results in a book of broad scope, and will be an important work for those with an interest in issues of sexuality, race and gender. Contributors : Joseph A. Boone, Julia Creet, Samuel Delany, Monica Dorenkamp, Richard Fung, Yukiko Hanawa, Richard Henke, Marcia Ian, Richard Meyer, Sylvia Molloy, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Jennifer Terry, Simon Watney.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|27 pages

Aversion/Perversion/Diversion

chapter 3|18 pages

Too Wilde for Comfort

Desire and Ideology in Fin-de-Siècle Latin America

chapter 5|20 pages

How Do You Wear Your Body?

Bodybuilding and the Sublimity of Drag

chapter 6|31 pages

Warhol's Clones

chapter 7|8 pages

The Trouble with “Asians”

chapter 8|16 pages

Inside Henry James

Toward A Lexicon for The Art of the Novel

chapter 9|30 pages

Rubbing Aladdin's Lamp

chapter 10|21 pages

Anxieties of Identity

Coming Out and Coming Undone