After Sex? On Writing Since Queer Theory (Edited by Janey Hailey and Andrew Parker)

This book is not what I thought it would be. I think I assumed, based on the title, it would be people in lgbtq studies who don’t consider themselves queer theorists. But instead, it’s queer theorists being asked “is queer theory over, if it is over, what happens next, and how does your work you’ve been doing since your queer theory work still relate to queer theory, if it does?”

The pagination is continuous from other issues of this volume of the journal.

Stuff I Marked

p.437 “I have lost the sense of permission to drag readers through a complex process to reach a conclusion I might have just told them in the beginning, using the opinion form, or some other genre.”

p.438 - idea that for many, wanting to desire and wanting to be desired and wanting to have had and have been had are all better than actually being sexually intimate with someone, because being intimate is so vulnerable and scary.

p.479- “So queer denotes not an identity but instead a political and existential stance, an ideological commitment, a decision to live outside some social norm or other. At the risk (the certainty) of oversimplification, one could say that even if one is born straight or gay, one must decide to be queer.”

p.486-487- “In the field of sexuality studies, the space-time problem looked somewhat different but was related: the anachronists collapsed time by universalizing identity across time, while the ethnocentrists collapsed space by geographically universalizing a culturally specific model of “gay.”

p.497- separating the wedding as a symbolic form from “marriage” as an institution, also noting same-sex marriage as an individualistic goal rather than a collective goal like healthcare or immigration or welfare. Can you be pro-wedding but anti-marriage?

p.502-503- “the relationship between queer theory and the history of sexuality still remains an unresolved terrain. Or rather, the resolutions, fastening either on the model of absolute alterity or on the model of ultimate identity, have yet to imagine the possibility of writing a history that attends to the possibility of the non-self-identity of any historical moment.”

p.516- “Queer theory never worked out how to play multiculturalism. It could not write itself into a narrative of minority inclusion drawing on the powerful rhetorics of civil rights struggle in the United States. A formation called ‘lesbian and gay studies’ has had more success, though it has often needed to make a racial analogy in ways that have invited accusations of appropriation.”

Stuff To Look Up

Susan McCabe, “To Be and to Have: The Rise of Queer Historicism”

p.487-

Look Both Ways, by Jennifer Baumgartner

Baumgartner is a journalist who worked for Ms. in the early 90s and has covered bisexuality in her writing across her career. This book is partially history/analysis and partially memoir from her own experiences talking to people, going to events, and working in feminist and queer spaces.

Lots of good reflections/personal experiences relating to the things I’m interested in— fashion and sexual identity, conversational sign posts and bisexual identity, etc. It’s also a little more recent than books like Vice Versa (about 10 years later), so while Ms. and Ani DiFranco were still The Big Thing before “my time” (I do listen to Ani DiFranco though), the cultural references feel a bit closer to me, or I can at least point to memories in my own childhood and recognize how 3rd wave feminism, which I was unaware of, impacted me. Like “girl power" as a slogan to aspire to.

I think it’s an interesting place to be, say, in middle school or in high school, and so to be aware of a cultural phenomenon but not REALLY be able to participate in it, since you’re still too young to do a lot of things by yourself and have no money. That doesn’t directly apply to me in this respect, since I was too young even for that, but I am reflecting on the things that I DID feel that youth-induced FOMO and angst and longing about, and simultaneously thinking about how young teens have felt the same way forever. It makes me think about everyone who was too young in the 60s/70s to participate in all of the activism going on (or at least participate in the ways they may have wanted to), but old enough to know about it and want to be a part of it. I also wonder how this phenomenon works differently for people like me, who needed to ask their parents to drive them to any given thing, vs. people growing up in cities where you’re able to go places without your parents from a much younger age via public transit.

Passages I’ve Marked

p.5- story about how news reported that a study that found bi men don’t exist, but the actual study found that the real results were basically the opposite— almost all the men in the study sexually responded to both men and women in some way, just the extent of the arousal varied (and was small in many participants)

p.26- “AC/DC” as slang for bi, feminist atmosphere of Ms. creating the necessary conditions for JB to experiment with women, song “I Kissed a Girl” by Jill Sobule

p.50 - paragraph on the problems with the word “bisexual” and problems with its alternatives. “As a label, bisexual sounds pathological, academic, and a little embarrassed —- like the identities ‘stay at home mom’ and ‘runner up.’” “Or, as writer Jenny Weiss put it in Girlfriends magazine, “Of all the words for bisexual, the worst is probably bisexual.” This is a big mood.

p.51- “The word bisexual makes me cringe at times, but saying I’m heterosexual or a lesbian feels inaccurate- regardless of who I am in a relationship with. So, cringing all the while, I use the label. Because of my relationship with the word feminist, I have learned that cringing is often a sign of unfinished political business: the label bi sounds bad because, at least in some ways, bisexuals are an unliberated, invisible, and disparaged social group.”

p.52- references Garber’s section on Tiresias, notes that the importance of this story is that it shows that the WHOLE STORY/whole picture is what makes a bisexual, not any snapshot in time.

p.78- “The fact is, second-wave women thought about looking both ways a lot, even though they rarely described their lives or insights as bisexual. Instead, they were woman-identified women or political lesbians (gay in the streets if not in the sheets, to paraphrase rock critic Ann Powers)”

p.100 - description of the outfits of Ani DiFranco fans as emblematic of third wave feminism and bisexuality

p.105- Baumgartner and Gloria Steinem both date “when it was okay for women to be bi” as starting in the early 90s

p.108- extended quote reflecting on Liza Featherstone’s own sense of fashion and gender/sexuality presentation as a bisexual

p.123-126- different examples of bi women talking about the loss/exclusion they felt when they got into long term relationships with men

p.141- some thoughts about how dating women changes how women approach dating men and expectations for being in a relationship

p.156-157- some thoughts about bisexuality and the objectification of women and the male gaze, coming to see yourself as a sexual agent instead of perpetually as a sexual object, and how dating women changed Baumgartner’s relationship with porn

p.170- more about p.141, but also pointing out that just because dating a woman may help you clarify what you want when dating a man, sexism/internalized sexism means you might still not be good at actually COMMUNICATING those things to/with men

p.175— “stereotype threat”- the presence of someone from a dominant group diminishes the performance of a non-dominant group, subconsciously. Can make people from non-dominant groups feel less confident, less smart, like they have less agency, and so act that way.

p.189- describes the “feeling out if someone is gay and implicitly communicating to them that you are also gay” as “embroidery” and notes that her own go-to embroidery is finding ways to work in the phrase, “my ex-girlfriend”

p.194— same as above, mentions the difficulties of having “to constantly crowd every conversation with sign posts (“ex-girlfriend,” “ex-boyfriend,” “baby’s father”) to indicate the whole person I am”

p.220- more about the relationship between sexuality and gender presentation for bi women (shift in it becoming more okay in 3rd wave feminism to be lipstick/femme than it was in the 2nd wave)

Feeling Backward: Loss and the Politics of Queer History, by Heather LoveT

This book wasn’t what I expected it to be, but I found it very useful! Love’s central argument is that living in a post-Stonewall, Gay Pride, “It Gets Better” world means critics (and non-critics) have a lot of political pressure to avoid focusing on the Bad Feelings, or at least find ways to turn them into politically positive bad feelings. And the idea that we’re supposedly liberated, that things are better now than in the past (which is true!), that we’re supposed to have pride, makes people feel bad if they are still suffering, still experience shame around their sexuality, still feel isolated or like they can never achieve the life they’d like to live.

Love chooses 4 modernist novels that address these “backward” or negative queer affects in different ways. One is by a man (Pater) writing shortly before Oscar Wilde’s trial, which some consider a good benchmark for the beginning of modern homosexual identity. Love argues that the novel shows that Pater can feel the shift that is occurring, the big changes that are right on the precipice of emerging, but does not want to participate in them himself. He chooses isolation, privacy, secrecy.

The second author is Willa Cather, which Love uses to pose the question: while contemporary critics may want to do queer reclamation projects and “rescue” historical queers to reclaim them as our own, some of these people may not want to be claimed. Cather, Love argues, is one of them. She disdained lesbian identity and homosexual activity, preferring instead the romantic friendship— or possibly non-romantic friendship. She lived with a female companion for nearly 30 years. It’s an interesting situation, wherein today’s readers say “you’re one of us” and Cather speaks back from the past, “No I’m not. That’s gross.” Love resists diagnosing these authors with internalized homophobia, because while that may be accurate, such a diagnosis explains away the feelings that are uncomfortable to contemporary critics. We like to think about historical queers as yearning for the kinds of freedom and acceptance that we have today. And probably that’s true for some of them. But some, like Cather, did not want that. So, she may be what Kent and Moore would call a proto-lesbian, but she certainly would certainly be angry about such a categorization.

The third author is Radclyffe Hall, who wrote the infamous Well of Loneliness. People hated it when it was published (it was put on trial for obscenity) and they hate it now (for being a picture of lesbian misery and upholding the stereotype of lesbians as “mannish”). But some lesbians are masculine. Some lesbians use he/him pronouns, but still do not consider themselves men. And some lesbians are miserable. Critics disagree about whether the main character, Stephen Gordon, hates herself/her body, or if she hates the society that makes it impossible to live the life she would like to live given her body. She feels like she’s too masculine for other lesbians (who want women) to want her, but too feminine for straight women to want her.

Other critics have pointed out that while WoL has been historically read as a lesbian novel, it could also be read as a novel about a trans man. This is complicated— because at the time, they didn’t have separate conceptions for gay people and trans people in the same way we do now. They had the concept of the “invert,” who was attracted to people of the same sex because they were really a heterosexual soul in the wrong body. So, Gordon is an invert, who hates other inverts, and can’t be reduced to “just” a lesbian or a trans man. Gender and sexuality are more closely tied for Gordon than how Western culture thinks about them now. I think it’s important to note that some people still feel this way, feel that their gender and their sexual identity are highly intertwined, while some people feel like they are separate issues altogether. And what if you’re non-binary, so there is no “opposite sex” or “same sex,” and “heterosexual” and “homosexual” are categorically unavailable for you? (Some non-binary people do not feel this way— like there are non-binary lesbians— but other people do.)

The last book is Summer Will Show, by Sylvia Townsend Warner, set in Paris during the 1848 revolution. Basically, the lesbian lover dies, the revolution fails, it ends unhappily. Love refers to both revolution and a romantic happy ending as “impossible,” but I’m unclear if that’s her word or Warner’s word, used in the novel. In terms of discussing books that make modern readers uncomfortable because we want to shy away from the negative affects, this is the one that I felt repulsed by the most. Specifically because of the notion of giving up that a socialist revolution is ever possible. On the one hand, it totally makes sense that both the characters would feel this way (their revolution failed) and that Warner would feel this way (the Spanish Civil War ended with the socialists getting murdered, and she was writing while Stalin was busy degenerating the Soviet Union from a real workers’ state to an isolationist bureaucracy.) But on the other hand, my emotions want to reject anything that takes this position, even though it’s a totally real and understandable position. Love talks about “Left Melancholy” - a different book I read recently talks about “political depression.” A sense of political hopelessness is super real, super widespread, and something that we on the Left need to deal with, both in ourselves and in others. So I need to let Warner and her book have those feelings, because that was/is real— and that’s Love’s point. That we need to push through our discomfort to engage with these texts as they are.

Passages I Marked

p.12- “Literature accounts for experience at the juncture of the psychic and the social”

p.12- “For Williams, the primary value of feeling…is diagnostic. In paying attention to things like tone, dress, and habit, one may discover ‘social experiences in solution.’ It is possible to detect impulses that are not yet organized as movements,; we can understand and respond to a historical moment that is not yet fully articulated in institutions as the dominant mode of existence.”

p.18- “While the field of queer studies has emphasized the limitations of reverse discourse, its methodology remains deeply bound to the strategy; it retains a faith in the possibility of transforming the base materials of social abjection into the gold of political agency.”

p.23- about Love’s resistance to “the central methodology of cultural criticism: ideology critique.” references Sedgwick on paranoid vs. reparative reading. Makes me think about, what would it mean to write as a celebration, not as a picking apart?

p.31- “Recently, long-standing debates about gay and lesbian history have shifted from discussions of the stability of sexual categories over time to explorations of the relation between queer historians and the subjects they study. The turn from a focus on ‘effective history’ to a focus on ‘affective history’ has meant that critics have stopped asking, ‘Were there gay people in the past?’ but rather have focused on questions such as: ‘Why do we care so much if there were gay people in the past?’ or even, perhaps, ‘What relation with these figures do we hope to cultivate?’”

p.41- “Rather than making alliances with the dead through taking up and extending [identificatory] impulses, Traub offers a genealogy of identification, considering why it is that ‘looking at ourselves in the mirror’ has become the dominant methodology in gay and especially in lesbian studies….Though Traub suggests that it would be impossible to completely rid historical or political practice of the impulse to identification, she links the pleasures of identification to cognitive failure. In the final passages of her book, Traub effects a turn away from identification and toward desire, suggesting that we might approach figures from the past ‘not as subject to our identifications, but as objects of our desire’ (354). In this way, Traub hopes to borrow some of the pleasure of psychic and historical identification and reinvest it in desire, which she understands as an authentic encounter with another who is different from and external to the self.”

p.42- “Traub’s attention to the pain that is at the heart of lesbian and gay historiography is welcome, as is her call for an investigation of the psychic costs of repeated encounters with the ‘empty archive’” This is important for me!!! Psychic costs of bi invisibility and researching it! There are two more important quotes on this page about the psychic trauma that motivates a lot of queer historical and cultural work. Traub says this can be useful on a personal level but is not useful on a collective or research level.

p.43- “In his work on genealogy, Foucault argues for the need to develop a historical method that does not rely on the past to secure the stability of the present”

p.44- this is a quote from Foucault- “The purpose of history, guided by genealogy, is not to discover the roots of our identity, but to commit itself to its dissipation.”

p.44- “Queer critics have generally understood the concept of identity to be both politically and philosophically bankrupt. Although such critiques of identity have made for important changes in gay and lesbian politics and theory, it seems that the queer stance against identity has short-circuited important critical work on the history of identity. Identity is, as many of these critics have attested, a deeply problematic and contradictory concept; nonetheless, it remains a powerful organizing concept in contemporary experience.”

p.47- stuff about Foucault having emotional encounters while doing archival research in the Bastille- makes me think about how the relative lack of archival materials from the more-distant past makes it easy to decide what to look at, since there isn’t (as) much to choose from. But with the recent past (basically since the internet became widespread), there’s just SO MUCH that it’s hard to even find things.

p.51- “Such is the relation of the queer historian to the past: we cannot help wanting to save the figures from the past, but this mission is doomed to fail.”

p.129-130- “The inventiveness of a whole range of queer historical practices might be understood as a result of the paired necessities of having to ‘fight for it’ and to ‘make it up.’”

p.130- “Warner’s figuring of the revolution as an ‘impossible object of desire’ is significantly at odds with a forward-looking, scientific Marxism, but it is at the heart of the novel’s attention to a politics of affect.”

p.146- “If the gaze I have fixed on the past refuses the usual consolations—including the hope of redemption— it is not, for that reason, without its compensations. Backwardness can be, as Willa Cather suggests, deeply gratifying to the backward. Particularly in a moment where gays and lesbians have no excuse for feeling bad, the evocation of a long history of queer suffering provides if not solace exactly, then at least relief.”

p.156- quote from Queer Nation’s statement about why they chose the word Queer

Sources I Marked

Marxism and Literature, Raymond Williams

Making Girls into Women: American Women's Writing and the Rise of Lesbian Identity, by Kathryn R. Kent

This book is kind of the American counterpart to Dangerous Intimacies, despite being by different authors. Each chapter looks at a different book or set of books to see how women’s relationships with each other function in relation to the broader culture. For example, Chapter 1 takes a look at the figure of the spinster as a type of proto-lesbian.

Kent’s analysis partially builds off of a subversion of the Electra Complex. Instead of saying daughters libidinally desire their fathers, Kent argues that girls desire their mothers and convert that desire into the desire to become their mothers later in life. Instead of internalizing the mother’s gaze through fear (like the panopticon), children internalize the mother’s gaze through love. Kent calls this the disciplinary-tutelary paradigm, and argues that the shift into the industrial age disrupted this model for bourgeoise white women because aspects of the mother/daughter relationship were displaced by other women’s places— women’s colleges, boarding houses, etc. Intimacy and love are vital for subject formation and identification, and identification is always also desire (the desire to be like or near). Certainly, lots of wlw joke today about the perennial problem of figuring out “Do I want to be her or do I want to be on her?” (And the answer is often both)

I think this book could have been a companion to D’Emilio’s analysis of how capitalism created the conditions for homosexual male identity, but about women, but Kent goes in a totally different direction. Instead, she sees emerging proto-lesbian intimacies as “resistances” to the conflation of reproductive labor and productive labor. This is based off of a misreading of Marx (pages 154-155), which Kent imports from Andrew Parker who imports it from Hannah Arendt. They argue that Marx is arguing in The German Ideology against all waste, excess, all labor expended without utility, that he views reproduction as the only valuable sexual expression, that productivity reigns supreme. This is just not true. Marx is saying that under capitalism, objects must have utility in order to have economic value, and labor has no economic value if the thing the labor went into isn’t sellable. And the “labor is the life-activity of the species” bit is saying that people naturally like to do and make things! The whole point of that section is that wage labor, by making us do work in order to have money instead of doing work because we like it, takes away all of the pleasure in working. Like how when people monetize their hobbies, they like those hobbies less.

So, since a lot of her argument in the book is based around this (wrong) idea, I’m not finding the book overall very useful, even though I think some of the readings are interesting. For example, Kent’s reading of Little Women and Jo March’s gender and relationship with her mother, and the next chapter about the early Girl Scouts handbook.

The Girl Scouts chapter discusses how, when the GSs were formed, people were very nervous that they were trying to make girls into Boy Scouts, and that would make them masculine, and that was bad. So, the handbook, while emulating the Boy Scouts in some ways, also makes sure to emphasize traditionally feminine qualities. The idea is that masculine women CAN be made as well as born, even though women ought to be made feminine because that is the way they naturally are. It’s a contradiction. This chapter also shows how scouting is bound up with nationalism, citizenship, and class norms. Girl Scouts is about how to become a Good Middle Class Woman, and if it did its job right, would bring some “masculine” qualities/activities into the fold as acceptable feminine activities, rather than making girls inappropriately masculine. It doesn’t challenge gender norms, just shifts around the boundaries of gender. Just like rainbow capitalism and homonationalism have shifted the boundaries of sexuality so that now there are appropriate ways to be gay without challenging bigger social structures.

(Personally, I’m glad to be affirmed in my childhood sense that Girl Scouts was an inferior version of Boy Scouts designed to make girls feel included while really just making them be Girls instead of letting them learn/do boy stuff. But since I was never in Scouts, it was also fascinating to see how the early iterations of the GS handbook emphasized nationalism and capitalist thrift- selling cookies of course, but also opening a savings account, managing one’s allowance responsibly, reciting the Pledge of Allegiance, etc.)

I was also interested to learn that Boy Scouts in England originated when the end of the colonial age meant boys didn’t get the exposure to nature and bonding and practical training in masculinity and nationalism that they would have otherwise gotten.

Dangerous Intimacies: Toward a Sapphic History of the British Novel, by Lisa L. Moore

This was not the book about 18th century lesbians that I had meant to read. I have a second book on the same topic, also with the word Intimate in the title, on my shelf. But, I accidentally read this one instead, and so have swapped the two on my list. I think this one goes better with the other “Sapphic History” book on my list anyway, which covers a similar time frame but in American literature.

I was pleasantly surprised by how materialist this book is, especially for a book that focuses on analyzing literature. Moore’s argument is essentially that during the 1700s, with colonization, revolution, the slave trade, and increasing industrialization going on (shift from feudalism to capitalism in its later stages), the bourgeoise had a lot of contradictions and anxieties they wanted to shore up/ignore/resolve. Gender, sexuality, and race are three ideological axes with which bourgeoise hegemony sustains itself, so figuring out the role of the Ideal Bourgeoise Woman (and therefore defining Others against her) was important. Making Others works as a justification for division and oppression. The novel, being a bourgeoise genre that rose up during this time, was one way that these ideologies were created/distributed/circulated.

— Most of the following is me summarizing Moore’s arguments

The first chapter after the introduction looks at Millennium Hall. In this book, the women who are living separately from men are depicted as non-sexual, productive, and morally superior. By controlling the working class women around them, they make these women better. Yet even though they live independently from men, Moore argues that the sphere of influence of these women is still the domestic, private sphere. Engels, D’Emilio, and others have talked about how the shift to capitalism also meant a separating of the work/life spheres, since people had to go Out to work in other places, rather than working other people’s land (which they also lived on) or running cottage industries. There is also much talk of “slavery,” but always as a metaphor, comparing women’s subjugation to men to slavery, even though the actual slave trade was very much happening in a big way at the same time. This lets “slavery” be discussed while ignoring actual slavery.

The next chapter is about Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, which is kind of the opposite— the women’s relationships to each other are automatically eroticized because of their line of work, and one character teaches Fanny (the main character) how to have sex (with her) to “prepare her” for sex with men. This book also claims homosexuality as native to England, instead of casting it as a foreign French/Italian practice. And the problem with it is framed as inconsistency/difficulty identifying who is homosexual (lack of defining physical characteristics) rather than something inherent to it. Moore also notes how while the plot is ostensibly promoting heterosexuality and women’s desire for men (it is, after all, written to arouse men), there’s times when Fanny seems to be desiring her fellow sex workers and they seem to be more concerned with her enjoyment than their clients’. In the end, she argues that the eroticism throughout the rest of the book is assembled at the end of the novel in service of national bourgeoise English identity. This series of ideological moves lets England incorporate women’s desire/sexual excess into itself while preserving what’s more important: power and money. It’s kind of rewriting the definitions of what it means to be English so that Englishness can continue being (viewing itself as) superior given shifting material conditions.

The next chapter is about Belinda, a novel from 1801. But Moore begins first by discussing a real life court case about Jane Cummings, a student who accused her teachers of having lesbian sex, and discussing Anne Lister, who dressed masculinely and did masculine things and was educated and loved women, but disdained those same traits in other women. Lister can get away with it because she’s nobility. She still wants other women (her love interests) to be appropriately feminine. In the court case, it became an issue of who was more likely to come up with the idea of lesbian sex: the student, or the teachers? Either the student had the idea and made it up, or the teachers had the idea and did it. The court ended up deciding in the teachers’ favor, but for a racist reason: because Jane was half-Indian, they decided that made it more likely that she would know about (and therefore lie about) deviant things. Similar moves to both of these real world examples can be found in the book. The only person who explicitly accuses one character of being inappropriately masculine is Juba, an African servant (slave? Wikipedia says servant) on the plantation. The book treats this as sensical because only someone who is also deviant (Black) would have the correct knowledge to know another deviant. At the same time, that character’s gender nonconformity reinforces the value of “appropriate” female relationships. (Like Lister is still feeding bourgeoise femininity even though she herself does not practice it.)

The last chapter (besides the conclusion) is about Emma, and Moore argues that this book does the same kinds of identity category maintenance but in a much subtler way, because it interiorizes and psychologizes what is external and material in the other books. Emma, then, is an example of how the process that was at work over the course of the decades of the other novels manifested as the 19th century got on its way.

So, how sapphism was treated in novels during this time (and it was treated/present!) was important, but not really for itself— it was important for how its ideological management enabled other capitalist and imperialist processes.

Bisexuality: A Critical Reader, Edited by Merl Storr

I finished this book several months ago but decided I would input all of my notes/highlighted quotes into Zotero before I was allowed to blog about it. I got….bored with that very quickly but kept my word to myself and so never blogged about it.

This is an anthology that “does not aim to be comprehensive, or even to offer a representative sample of published work on bisexuality. It does aim, however, to introduce its readings to the concepts of bisexuality, and to some of the key areas of debate about what bisexuality means and how the concept(s) might be used” (Storr 1). It is also intended to encourage the reader “to interrogate the concept of bisexuality: to think critically about where it has come from and how its origins continue to shape it in contemporary debates” (Storr 1).

The first section of selections is “Genealogy of the Concept of Bisexuality,” beginning with Ellis and Freud and ending with Udis-Kessler in 1992. The second section is about “Bisexual Identity and Bisexual Behavior” (and how these two sometimes overlap but often don’t). Part 3 is on “Bisexual Epistemologies,” or how we can use bisexuality as a framework for thinking about or organizing other things. Part 4 is on “Differences,” both within bisexuality and between bisexuals and other kinds of people.

Thinking back on this book a few months out and just glancing through the table of contents again, there’s a lot I don’t remember, and I will definitely need to go back through and create an index card for each selection. But I do remember that Part 1 made me regret/wish to revise my formulation of bisexuality in my article in the Journal of Bisexuality, and that Part 2 was very thought-provoking in terms of research methods. It also gave me insight into the role of what I would consider bisexual women in the political lesbian movement, which is discussed more in “Bisexuality and the Challenge to Lesbian Politics,” a book I am still at the beginning of. Some women who slept with both women and men identified as lesbians, others identified as bisexual, and others didn’t want either label.

This book definitely requires another skim-read, since pandemic-brain wiped a lot of it from my head, but I’m very glad to have read it.

The Politics of Everybody, by Holly Lewis

This book attempts to synthesize Marxist theory with feminist and queer theory— or rather, to argue for a Marxist perspective while addressing the many criticisms of Marxist thought that feminists and queer theorists have made over the years and integrating their concerns into a materialist framework.

Chapter 1 is nearly 90 pages on “Terms of the Debate,” intended to get everyone on the same page about the different sets of theory, regardless of which school of thought the reader comes from. Chapter 2 is on “Marxism and Gender,” and 3 is on “From Queer Nationalism to Queer Marxism.” Chapter 4 is conclusions, ending with “10 axioms toward a queer marxist future.”

I’m trying to keep this exam list focused on history of sexuality/sexual historiography rather than queer theory, but my tentative exception is for books that provide histories of sexual theory— like this one, and like an anthology I finished several months ago but haven’t blogged about yet.

There’s relatively little work on queer Marxism, since the American Communist Party was Stalinist and therefore pretty homophobic, so I found it useful to read an overview of the various debates between the two. I knew Foucault broke from the CP in part due to homophobia, and that impacted his writing, but I didn’t know most of the other stuff.

However, I was frustrated with this book at times since I think it gives a bad-faith reading of postmodernism and queer theory. Or at least, whatever works Lewis is referring to when she critiques “postmodernism” and “queer theorists” are making pretty different arguments than the works I’m familiar with, and she often doesn’t refer to specific authors or titles. I think there are super valid materialist criticisms to be made of postmodernism and queer theory, but this book alternately either doesn’t make them or obscures and undermines them in the eyes of anyone who is somewhat familiar with them via what I feel are disingenuous (or maybe just mistaken?) readings of their arguments. For example, Lewis criticizes the idea that gender/other things are “discursively constructed” but then argues that they are “socially constructed.” I still don’t understand how those are meaningfully different. But then again, because my education has definitely been a mix of postmodern-influenced theory and Marxist-influenced theory, maybe my understanding of various postmodern/poststructuralist concepts is “wrong” because they were taught to me with Marxist components already integrated.

When I got to Chapter 3, which includes a similar critique of postcolonial thought, I really wasn’t sure how to react, because I’m much less familiar with those theories. I just don’t know if this had an accurate portrayal of po-co theory or if it was similarly strawmanning.

In other parts of the book, though, I do think Lewis does a good job of being sympathetic to why political movements developed in the directions that they did (like queer nationalism) and how they led to positive developments in comparison to what came before. Part of what took me so long to finish this book is that I was reading it alongside a reading group that was discussing similar issues, and I was spending a lot of time arguing with other people in the reading group about queer theory and doing background research to see which of us was actually correct. (I still think I’m correct but bought some other books to read to make sure.)

This is one of those books that made me think about how everyone says you should read for main ideas and connections with other texts, you don’t necessarily have to closely read the whole book, but….I definitely did read the whole book, and I think that’s part of why it went so slowly for me. Need to go through all the pages I marked and compile a doc of my notes/things I thought were important.

History of Sexuality, Vol. 1 (Foucault)

I put this on my list because it’s the foundation of so much of modern sexuality studies that I thought it was important to actually read the text instead of just others’ citations and interpretations of key parts (mostly the scientia sexualis part). Unfortunately, I feel like the parts I already knew through quotations were the only parts (with only minimal hyperbole) that are going to be useful to me.

For a “history of ____” book, I definitely expected there to be more historical examples and evidence cited. There’s the Jouy case (highly contentious in its own right), but not much else. Since the “we inherited sexual repression from the Victorians” idea is so commonly agreed upon, I don’t mind there not being evidence for that, because the whole point is that it’s an idea NOT grounded in evidence, but Foucault makes pretty sweeping claims about all of Western civilization after the 18th century that I would like more examples of.

I wondered if perhaps I ought to have added additional Volumes to my list— maybe what I was looking for was simply in those volumes! But it seems that the other volumes are about antiquity, not the modern era that Volume 1 mostly deals with.

Other ideas that stuck with me/seem useful:

  • Sex is a topic that happens to be particularly discursively dense/able to be manipulated in lots of different ways

  • Movements of power always have a purpose, even if no individual person or group consciously planned it. There is always something GAINED from a particular mobilization of discourse. Like water flowing downwards. This seems vaguely materialist to me (and Foucault was a former Communist so that makes sense), but he doesn’t really talk about what factors might shape the path— this kinda makes it sound like the flows of power are more or less evenly distributed, which is ofc not the case.

I highlighted and then re-read Foucault’s definition of Power several times and I still don’t understand what he is actually saying power is.

Also even though he does clarify that he’s talking about Western society several times instead of just saying “society” and erasing all other traditions, it seems racist to suggest that all other societies have a mystical sexual tradition that’s just about pleasure and technique and cultivation, and that it’s all so uniform that you can just say ars erotica, when he’s so clear that in Western civ, every individual situation must be locally analyzed.

In skimming some summaries of criticism of the book online, it seems like a lot of the positive comments are crediting the book with a) criticizing the repressive hypothesis and b) arguing for how sex and sexuality are not universals but are culturally dependent. I guess it speaks to the ubiquity of that influence that my reaction to the text was “Well, yeah” — my education has taken place entirely post-Foucault, so of course this doesn’t feel new or revolutionary to me. I’m glad to have read it, because it IS a big deal in the field, but I think its utility to me is primarily in the broader effects it’s had on sexuality studies and not any particular argument or theoretical tool. I don’t see myself utilizing his definitions, for example, to make my own arguments.