ABSTRACT

What are the meanings behind constructed lesbian identities?

This unique collection brings together writing, photography, artwork, and poetry about lesbian butch and femme gender. Femme/Butch: New Considerations of the Way We Want to Go distinguishes itself by celebrating a wide span of intellectual engagement, from reflection to traditional academic work, including both disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches.

In addition to more “serious” writing, lesbian comediennes offer their irreverent takes on femme/butch in this book. Their perspectives are almost never found in academic publications, but what Lea DeLaria, Vickie Shaw, Karen Williams, and other edgy comics have to say about femme/butch sexuality deserves to be heard. You’ll also find that Femme/Butch is essential for the global perspective it brings to lesbian gender. With chapters focused on lesbians in Chinese cultures and on the emerging lesbian community in Bulgaria, this book explores the role of femme/butch identification in cultures without recognizable lesbian institutions.

Here are a few of the questions the contributors to Femme/Butch examine in this remarkable book:

  • Can theory about femme/butch exist in the electric realm of sex and sexuality, or does theory necessarily neutralize sexuality?
  • What role does popular culture play in helping us to theorize about lesbian gender?
  • What are the relationships between history and femme/butch lesbian gender?
  • Does lesbian identity development come in individual stages or is it more of a free-flowing process?
  • How does social class relate to how we think about femme/butch race, ethnicity, and butch-femme?

Femme/Butch is an ideal guide to understanding:
  • the similarities between stone-butch and transgender identities—using Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues as a reference point
  • the erotically resignified roles of Mommy, Daddy, girl, and boy in butch-femme
  • femme/butch issues of power, trust, love, and loss
  • the “female husbands” of the 18th century and their “wives”
  • the meanings of cross-dressing for lesbians
  • the variety of lesbian-queer genders—butch, femme, androgynous, and “other”
  • and much more!

chapter 1|2 pages

Femme/Butch

chapter 2|6 pages

Introduction

The Way We Want to Go

chapter 3|2 pages

Dark Chocolate

chapter 4|14 pages

Prioritizing Audiences

Exploring the Differences Between Stone Butch and Transgender Selves

chapter 5|15 pages

Explorations of Lesbian-Queer Genders

Butch, Femme, Androgynous or “Other”

chapter 6|17 pages

Butches with Babies

Reconfiguring Gender and Motherhood

chapter 7|1 pages

The Butch/Femme Tango

chapter 8|11 pages

Genesis of a Femme and Her Desire

Finding Mommy and Daddy in Butch/Femme

chapter 9|12 pages

Femme/Butch Family Romances

A Queer Dyke Spin on Compulsory Heterosexuality

chapter 11|1 pages

Illustration

chapter 12|14 pages

Female Fem(me)ininities

New Articulations in Queer Gender Identities and Subversion

chapter 13|1 pages

Emotional Butch

chapter 14|16 pages

Listening to the “Wives” of the “Female Husbands”

A Project of Femme Historiography in Eighteenth-Century Britain

chapter 15|1 pages

I'll Set You Straight!

chapter 18|1 pages

Ruth the Butch

chapter 19|10 pages

Clothes Make the (Wo)man

Marlene Dietrich and “Double Drag”

chapter 21|1 pages

The Perfect Child