QueerTheory.com
Books Used Books Book Series News Music Film Travel Shopping

 

Lillian Faderman

Online Resources
Texts:  Lillian Faderman
Texts:  Queer Histories
Texts:  Authors Index
Films:  Queer History
Used Books:  LGBT Studies
Add a Resource
Suggest a Name
      

      

Free Newsletter

Surpassing the Love of Men : Romantic Friendship and Love Between Women from the Renaissance to the Present

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers : A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth-Century AmericaOdd Girls and Twilight Lovers : A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth-Century America by Lillian Faderman

For those readers unfamiliar with Stonewall, Lesbian Nation, Daughters of Bilitis, lipsticks, or the difference between "romantic friendships" and lesbian-feminists, or for those readers who want to learn more, Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers provides an accessible, wide-ranging, meticulously researched history. Using information drawn from varied sources including literature, sociological and psychological studies, newspaper articles, military pamphlets, and movies, Lillian Faderman sets out to show the metamorphosis of a movement. At times the generalizations that occur as a result work against her stated acknowledgment of the diversity among individual lesbians, yet these generalizations also serve to show the broader sweeps and clashes in what has been a rapidly changing and often tumultuous history. 

Beginning with nineteenth-century romantic friendships and the first all-women's colleges, progressing through the sexologists of the 1920s and the openness of the war years, on to the McCarthy era, the radical 1960s and 70s, and the more diversified 1980s and 90s, Lillian Faderman documents "the extent to which sexuality, and especially sexual categories, can be dependent upon a broad range of factors that are extraneous to 'sexual drive.' " Perhaps the most revolutionary and exciting thing about this history, beyond the very fact of its existence, is its ability to present lesbianism not only as a sexual orientation, but as a movement that has been both affected and defined by a constantly shifting economic, political, and cultural climate. -- Erica Bauermeister From 500 Great Books by Women

Click here for more info

Chloe Plus Olivia : An Anthology of Lesbian Literature from the Seventeenth Century to the PresentChloe Plus Olivia : An Anthology of Lesbian Literature from the Seventeenth Century to the Present by Lillian Faderman (Compiler)

This landmark work is the most complete compilation of its kind, offering an enlightened view of a diverse and long-neglected genre. Arranged in thematic sections are a generous and wide range of selections--fiction, poetry, and essays from writers past and present, including Emily Dickinson, Carson McCullers, Christina Rossetti, and Rita Mae Brown.

"Faderman has compiled a homosexual 'tour de force' with this anthology. Ranging from Emily Dickinson to Audre Lorde to Pat Califia, this generous volume encompasses psychoanalytic theory (Sigmund Freud), historical documents, a play, poetry, and short stories. The poetic inclusions offer the largest assortment of both encoded and straightforward lesbian poetry that is available in one book. Faderman's notes for each author offer insight (the clitoral imagery in Emily Dickinson's poetry, Angelina Weld Grimke's background). The short stories are humorous, romantic, sexy, sad, and touching in turn. Altogether this book is worth much more than its price because it offers many hours of entertaining reading for any woman who has ever been attracted to another woman." -- Anonymous Review

Click here for more info

To Believe in Women: What Lesbians Have Done For America - A HistoryTo Believe in Women: What Lesbians Have Done For America - A History by Lillian Faderman

Taking up where her 1981 classic, Surpassing the Love of Men, left off, Lillian Faderman reveals that many of the early leaders who fought for women's suffrage, higher education for women, and women's entrance into "male" professions would in today's parlance be called lesbians: "women who lived in committed relationships with other women." Unencumbered by the duties of marriage and motherhood, they were more likely to have the time, energy, and freedom to work for women's rights. In fact, they were more or less obliged to try to better women's lives, Faderman argues, for there was no man to represent them at the polls or support them financially. (Although Elizabeth Cady Stanton's husband and seven children failed to distract her from the cause, her friend Susan B. Anthony used to help her with the children and housework before they settled down for political strategy meetings.) During the Depression, when women's social and economic gains began to dwindle, it was these "single" women who kept professions open while married women were being fired in favor of men. Faderman gracefully surveys a century of advancement and retreat, shedding light on America's debt to women-loving women. --Regina Marler

  Click here for more info  

The June L. Mazer Lesbian Archives

The Archives is committed to gathering and preserving materials by and about lesbians of all classes, ethnicities, races and experiences. Included are personal letters and scrapbooks, lesbian artwork, manuscripts, books, records, newspapers, magazines, photographs, videotapes, flyers, papers of lesbian organizations, private papers, and even clothing, such as softball uniforms from the 1940s and 50s. -- Lillian Faderman

 

28 Questions

Interview by Kristin Keith for Philadelphia's City Paper

Excerpt:

Did you encounter any resistance in getting your materials?

I didn’t at the archives. Part of the reason for that may be that when I was asked what I was doing I generally said that I was working on women pioneers but I didn’t use the "L word." They wouldn’t have used the "L word" about themselves, in fact, because it would have been associated with the French lesbienne, which in French novels and poetry of the 19th century suggested decadence and they didn’t think they were decadent at all. The problem that I encountered was a historical problem, and what I mean by that is that despite the fact that I found some incredible letters, many of them clearly erotic and others very passionate, although not specifically erotic, I know there must have been much more...

 

Acting "Woman" and Thinking "Man":  The Ploys of Famous Female Inverts

By Lillian Faderman, GLQ, A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 5.3 (1999) 315-329

Excerpt:

In the 1880s, early in her career, the American suffrage leader Anna Howard Shaw sported what was at that time a distinctly mannish hairdo. When someone snidely asked her in a roomful of people why she wore her hair so short, she retorted, "I will admit frankly that it is a birthmark. I was born with short hair."  Shaw was obviously intending to be clever, but she had unintentionally delivered a Krafft-Ebingism. It was only a few years before her witticism that the sexologists had defined the female sexual invert as congenitally "a man trapped in a woman's body." Whether or not Shaw was aware of how she had revealed herself as a sexual invert, shortly after this incident she began to grow her hair longer and to arrange it in a decorous bun--a style she continued to wear until her death thirty years later. As she later observed of her willingness to adopt a more conventional hairstyle: "No woman in public life can afford to make herself conspicuous by an eccentricity of dress and appearance. If she does so she suffers for it herself, which may not disturb her, and to a greater degree, for the cause she represents, which should disturb her."  Shaw saw the suffrage cause as so crucial that she would make whatever concessions to conformity she was convinced she must make in public. As her personal correspondence indicates, however, at home with her lover, Lucy Anthony, she was as butch as she pleased...

 

Click here for Resource Query Click HERE for Sources for the Biographies

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

up

 

Click Here for Queer History Books

| Home | Bookshop | CFP | Add URLEmporium |

Associate PartnershipTLA Video Affiliate
In Association with the Philosophy Research Base at  erraticimpact.com
Web Design Copyright © 2000 by queertheory.com