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Monique Wittig (1935 - )
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The
Lesbian Body by
Monique Wittig, David LeVay (Translator), Margaret
Crosland (Designer)
This book is not an
easy read, either content-wise or stylistically, but it is one of
the most satisfying books I have read. Monique Witting is a
radical feminist who believes that language itself must be
reinvented to better serve the experience of women, and this book
is her attempt to do so. She describes in painful, clinical detail
the bonding of two women lovers---their very viscera entwining and
disentangling as the relationship ebbs and flows. It is remarkable
how we all use phrases like "we were totally bonded"
without thinking--this book examines such concepts on a literal
(and often unpleasant) level. It is difficult to find, but
worth getting for anyone interested in extremely radical notions
of language and also in truly deep exploration of the extremities
of love. -- Cheryl Johnston
Fragments
of Desire: Sapphic Fictions in Works by H.D., Judy Grahn, and
Monique Wittig by Johanna Dehler
Tracing
the influence of Sappho's fragmented literary legacy on three
20th-century women writers - H.D., Judy Grahn, and Monique Wittig
- this book discusses 'Sapphic fiction' as a genre that emerged
throughout the 20th century. H.D., Grahn, and Wittig represent
three movements that have shaped the approach to the sexual
subject and her desires: modernism, cultural feminism, and
poststructuralism respectively. H.D. responds to Sappho with an
imagistic style that resembles Sappho's terse and clipped lines.
Grahn recreates the idea of Lesbos as a model for a women-centered
society. Wittig, writing from a poststructuralist background,
alludes to Sappho in her fierce critique of myth and language.
This study draws on recent debates about the history of sexuality,
the body, and the construction of the self, and is meant as a
contribution to the ongoing debate on how gender is constructed in
modernist and postmodernist discourse.
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Monique Wittig is a French author best known for
her works Les Guérillères and The Lesbian
Body. One which is not as well-known and is quite hard to
find (unfortunately) is Lesbian Peoples, Material for a
Dictionary with Sande Zeig.
Her writing is difficult to label, living
somewhere between and amidst poetry and prose. What is evident
throughout her works is a view of Lesbians as strong, capable
womyn. One can also see a questing towards new meanings and views,
beyond that which has been given to us in traditional society.
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By Felice Aull, Ph.D., New York University
Excerpt:
Wittig re-imagines the act of love, the
boundaries of the body, and masculine language. The lovers
literally take apart each other's bodies as an act of love:
"I see your bones covered with flesh the iliacs the kneecaps
the shoulders. I remove the muscles . . . I take each one between
my fingers the long muscles the round muscles the short muscles .
. . . "
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By Mitterbacher Doris
Excerpt:
In her essays "The Category of Sex"
and "One Is Not Born a Woman" Monique Wittig questions
the concept of male/female categories. The difference of sex is
stressed in our society and said to be "natural" , that
is, preexisting and therefore outside of society. This concept
prevents people from questioning those categories. But by not
questioning this "natural" difference women give away
the chance to rebel against a society where they have to do 3/4 of
public and private work and where they have to surrender to male
authority. In a heterosexual society they have to accept that they
are reduced from individuals to their sex. They have to be
sexually available all the time, their bodies have to be visible
and so they have to refrain a smiling face. By the marriage
contract they have been given to a husband who has the right to
demand unpaid work (housework, raising of children) and other
obligations (cohabitation, forced coitus,...)...
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| Wittig,
Monique - Mazarella Resource Page
Offers a highlighted biographical chronology, a
series of quotes including her noted, "lesbians are not
women," and a list of sources.
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