Rudy, Susan (2020) Gender's ontoformativity, or refusing to be spat out of reality: reclaiming queer women’s solidarity through experimental writing. Feminist Theory 21 (3), pp. 351-365. ISSN 1464-7001.
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Abstract
In this article, I argue that queer women – especially cis and trans lesbians – have more in common than contemporary fissures either allow for or acknowledge. Lesbians who recognised their queer sexuality in the 1970s have in common with trans women the shared condition of being, in the words of the 1970s radical feminist Marilyn Frye, ‘spat summarily out of reality’. We also share the experience of refusing to accept this condition. I make this argument by manoeuvring away from questions of gender identity and focusing instead on gender’s ontoformativity: the astonishing, welcome and transformative fact that new social realities are brought into being by new social practices. I turn to experimental writing to explore this matter. Through this medium, the cis lesbian poet Nicole Brossard and the trans lesbian poet Trace Peterson wrote themselves into worlds, languages and social orders that refused to acknowledge their existence. Brossard was writing in 1970s Montreal, Peterson in early twenty-first-century New York, but what they have in common, indeed what radical lesbian theory from the 1970s shares with contemporary theorising by trans women, is the insight that identifying with men is expected. It is in identifying with women that we are most at risk.
Metadata
Item Type: | Article |
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Keyword(s) / Subject(s): | Experimental writing, femininity, feminist solidarity, gender ontoformativity, gender's intransigence, lesbian existence, Nicole Brossard, (queer) women, Trace Peterson, trans lesbian |
School: | Birkbeck Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences > School of Creative Arts, Culture and Communication |
Depositing User: | Susan Rudy |
Date Deposited: | 02 Nov 2021 13:41 |
Last Modified: | 09 Aug 2023 12:52 |
URI: | https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/46414 |
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