ABSTRACT

This book analyses twentieth-century writers who traffic in queer, non-normative, and/or fluid gender and sexual identities and subversive practices, revealing how gender and sexually variant women create, revise, redefine, and play with language, desires, roles, the body, and identity.

Through the model of the "switch" —someone who shifts between roles, desires, or ways of being in the realms of gender or sexual identity – Gender and Sexual Fluidity in 20th Century Women Writers: Switching Desire and Identity examines the intersecting locations of gender and sexual identity switching that six prolific, experimental authors and their narratives play with: Gertrude Stein, Jeanette Winterson, Kathy Acker, Eileen Myles, Anne Carson, and Anne Carson’s translations of Sappho. The theory and identities revealed create and give space to—by their playful, exploratory, and destabilizing nature—diverse openings and possibilities for a great expansion and freedom in gender, sexuality, desires, roles, practices, and identity.

This is a provocative and innovative intervention in gender and sexuality in modern literature and gives us a new vocabulary and conversation by which to expand women’s and gender studies, LGBTQ and sexuality studies, identity studies, literature, feminist theory, and queer theory.

 

 

 

chapter 1|53 pages

“Thinking sex”

Presentation, representation, and manifestation; an unveiling

chapter 2|41 pages

Hidden spaces and the switch

Gertrude Stein does man-space and girl pink

chapter 3|32 pages

Theory must be doing

Jeanette Winterson, Eileen Myles, and Kathy Acker switch in the spaces and language of non-normative identities and desires

chapter 4|30 pages

Memoir, girl and teen-hood

The body and deviancy in Kathy Acker, Anne Carson, and Sappho

chapter 5|17 pages

Concluding possibilities for switching

Gender, sexuality, and identity freedom