Publication

2001-01-06 - Palgrave Macmillan

Language

English

Word Count

58,250 words, Guess

Page Count

233 pages

Physical Format

Hardcover

Identifiers

  • Open LibraryOL9718178M
  • ISBN-139780312236359
  • ISBN-100312236352
  • OCLC Control Number43992940
  • Library of Congress Control Number00033306
and 1 more
  • Goodreads1139980

Classifications

  • LCCHQ76 .M14 2000

Description

"Why is so much gay male culture obsessed with women? Why do men who desire other men spend so much time and energy adoring women, bonding with women? Why is it that women seem to develop special relationships with gay men? Why is it so fabulous to be a screaming queen? In this book Stephen Maddison offers answers to these questions by looking in detail at a range of cultural texts from Tennessee Williams's classic play A Streetcar Named Desire and Forster's 'gay' novel Maurice through Pulp Fiction, queer lifestyle magazines, Roseanne, slash fan fiction and Jarman's Edward II, to Almodovar's camp classic Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. Along the way he looks at the kinds of iconic divas, dames, bitches, studs and bad boys who have formed the gender archetypes that shape gay culture. Theoretically sophisticated, yet passionate, accessible and opinionated, Fags, Hags and Queer Sisters takes issue with many of the sacred cows of contemporary gay politics, and offers a number of new concepts in lesbian and gay theory. Taking its historical cue from turn-of-the-century notions of inversion, the book uses feminist and queer work on gender to argue that third sex models of homosexuality continue to inform gay culture in the U.S. and Britain. Maddison offers a radical new reading of Eve Sedgwick's work on homosocial male bonds, and develops new terms for understanding the cultural importance of relationships between gay men and women."--BOOK JACKET.

First Sentence

The riots that took place outside the Stonewall Inn in New York's Greenwich Village in June and July 1969 have become understood as the key moment in the emergence of contemporary gay politics.

Subjects

Other Editions

  • Fags, Hags and Queer Sisters: Gender Dissent and Heterosocial Bonds in Gay CultureHardcoverPalgrave Macmillan2001-01-06

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