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leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg, 2010 Published in 1993, this brave, original novel is considered to be the finest account ever written of the complexities of a transgendered existence. Woman or man? Thats the question that rages like a storm around Jess Goldberg, clouding her life and her identity. Growing up differently gendered in a blue--collar town in the 1950s, coming out as a butch in the bars and factories of the prefeminist 60s, deciding to pass as a man in order to survive when she is left without work or a community in the early 70s. This powerful, provocative and deeply moving novel sees Jess coming full circle, she learns to accept the complexities of being a transgendered person in a world demanding simple explanations: a he-she emerging whole, weathering the turbulence. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Trans Liberation Leslie Feinberg, 1999-10-10 Those who have heard Leslie Feinberg speak in person know how powerful and inspiring s/he can be. In Trans Liberation, Feinberg has gathered a collection of hir speeches on trans liberation and its essential connection to the liberation of all people. This wonderfully immediate, impassioned, and stirring book is for anyone who cares about civil rights and creating a just and equitable society. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Transgender Warriors Leslie Feinberg, 1997-06-30 “The foundational text that gave me life-changing context, helping me to understand who I was and who came before me.”—Tourmaline, activist and filmmaker Transgender Warriors is an essential read for trans people of all ages who want to learn about the towering figures who have come before them—and for everyone who is part of the fight for trans liberation This groundbreaking book—far ahead of its time when first published in 1996 and still galvanizing today—interweaves history, memoir, and gender studies to show that transgender people, far from being a modern phenomenon, have always existed and have exerted their influence throughout history. Leslie Feinberg—hirself a lifelong transgender revolutionary—reveals the origin of the check-one-box-only gender system and shows how zie found empowerment in the lives of transgender warriors around the world, from the Two Spirits of the Americas to the many genders of India, from the trans shamans of East Asia to the gender-bending Queen Nzinga of Angola, from Joan of Arc to Marsha P. Johnson and beyond. This book was published with two different covers. Customers will be shipped the book with one of the available covers. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Drag King Dreams Leslie Feinberg, 2006 A veteran of the women's and gay movement of the past 30 years, Max's mid-life crisis hits in the midst of the post-9/11 world. Max is lonely and uncertain about her future -- fearful, in fact, of America's future with its War on Terror and War in Iraq -- with only a core group of friends to turn to for reassurance. Max is shaken from her crisis, however, by the news that her friend Vickie, a transvestite, has been found murdered on her way home late one night. As the community of cross-dressers, drag queens, lesbian and gay men, and genderqueers of all kinds stand up together in the face of this tragedy, Max taps into the activist spirit she thought had long disappeared and for the first time in years discovers hope for her future. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: The Search for Identity in Leslie Feinberg's "Stone Butch Blues" Ester Schoefberger, 2010-11-16 Seminar paper from the year 2009 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature, grade: 1,0, Dresden Technical University (Institut Anglistik), course: HS „The Cultural Study of Masculinity“, language: English, abstract: Before writing this paper, I didn't know what the term “butch” meant. I tried to find out through texts and on the Internet what it meant, and I soon found out that there were many different definitions. I lost myself in blogs of people who defined themselves as butch, and the conclusion was that the definition has to do both with femininity and masculinity. After reading Leslie Feinberg's novel Stone Butch Blues (1993), the meaning of the term was at least a little more clear. I decided to write the paper on this concept, mainly driven by curiosity. It was like looking into a room full of books and feeling the desire to read them all, with the conviction that every book had to tell a different story. I decided to call the paper “The Search for Identity in Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues” because I think that Jess's search goes beyond her self-definition as a butch. The story narrates the search for identity of an individual who has to choose between given categories. At the end, Jess chooses to refuse a stable definition, because no one fits properly. I chose to follow the main character through the search, annotating every stage and trying to find confirmation in the critique. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Strange Natures Nicole Seymour, 2013-05-15 In Strange Natures, Nicole Seymour investigates the ways in which contemporary queer fictions offer insight on environmental issues through their performance of a specifically queer understanding of nature, the nonhuman, and environmental degradation. By drawing upon queer theory and ecocriticism, Seymour examines how contemporary queer fictions extend their critique of natural categories of gender and sexuality to the nonhuman natural world, thus constructing a queer environmentalism. Seymour's thoughtful analyses of works such as Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues, Todd Haynes's Safe, and Ang Lee's Brokeback Mountain illustrate how homophobia, classism, racism, sexism, and xenophobia inform dominant views of the environment and help to justify its exploitation. Calling for a queer environmental ethics, she delineates the discourses that have worked to prevent such an ethics and argues for a concept of queerness that is attuned to environmentalism's urgent futurity, and an environmentalism that is attuned to queer sensibilities. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: The Search for Identity in Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues Ester Schoefberger, 2010-12 Seminar paper from the year 2009 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature, grade: 1,0, Dresden Technical University (Institut Anglistik), course: HS The Cultural Study of Masculinity, language: English, abstract: Before writing this paper, I didn't know what the term butch meant. I tried to find out through texts and on the Internet what it meant, and I soon found out that there were many different definitions. I lost myself in blogs of people who defined themselves as butch, and the conclusion was that the definition has to do both with femininity and masculinity. After reading Leslie Feinberg's novel Stone Butch Blues (1993), the meaning of the term was at least a little more clear. I decided to write the paper on this concept, mainly driven by curiosity. It was like looking into a room full of books and feeling the desire to read them all, with the conviction that every book had to tell a different story. I decided to call the paper The Search for Identity in Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues because I think that Jess's search goes beyond her self-definition as a butch. The story narrates the search for identity of an individual who has to choose between given categories. At the end, Jess chooses to refuse a stable definition, because no one fits properly. I chose to follow the main character through the search, annotating every stage and trying to find confirmation in the critique. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Gender Outlaw Kate Bornstein, 2016-11-15 “I know I’m not a man ... and I’ve come to the conclusion that I’m probably not a woman, either.... The trouble is, we’re living in a world that insists we be one or the other.” With these words, Kate Bornstein ushers readers on a funny, fearless, and wonderfully scenic journey across the terrains of gender and identity. With a new introduction by the author On one level, Gender Outlaw details Bornstein’s transformation from heterosexual male to lesbian woman, from a one-time IBM salesperson to a playwright and performance artist. But this particular coming-of-age story is also a provocative investigation into our notions of male and female, from a self-described nonbinary transfeminine diesel femme dyke who never stops questioning our cultural assumptions. Gender Outlaw was decades ahead of its time when it was first published in 1994. Now, some twenty-odd years later, this book stands as both a classic and a still-revolutionary work—one that continues to push us gently but profoundly to the furthest borders of the gender frontier. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Extreme Domesticity Susan Fraiman, 2017-01-10 Domesticity gets a bad rap. We associate it with stasis, bourgeois accumulation, banality, and conservative family values. Yet in Extreme Domesticity, Susan Fraiman reminds us that keeping house is just as likely to involve dislocation, economic insecurity, creative improvisation, and queered notions of family. Her book links terms often seen as antithetical: domestic knowledge coinciding with female masculinity, feminism, and divorce; domestic routines elaborated in the context of Victorian poverty, twentieth-century immigration, and new millennial homelessness. Far from being exclusively middle-class, domestic concerns are shown to be all the more urgent and ongoing when shelter is precarious. Fraiman's reformulation frees domesticity from associations with conformity and sentimentality. Ranging across periods and genres, and diversifying the archive of domestic depictions, Fraiman's readings include novels by Elizabeth Gaskell, Sandra Cisneros, Jamaica Kincaid, Leslie Feinberg, and Lois-Ann Yamanaka; Edith Wharton's classic decorating guide; popular women's magazines; and ethnographic studies of homeless subcultures. Recognizing the labor and know-how needed to produce the space we call home, Extreme Domesticity vindicates domestic practices and appreciates their centrality to everyday life. At the same time, it remains well aware of domesticity's dark side. Neither a romance of artisanal housewifery nor an apology for conservative notions of home, Extreme Domesticity stresses the heterogeneity of households and probes the multiplicity of domestic meanings. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: When Brooklyn Was Queer Hugh Ryan, 2019-03-05 The never-before-told story of Brooklyn’s vibrant and forgotten queer history, from the mid-1850s up to the present day. ***An ALA GLBT Round Table Over the Rainbow 2019 Top Ten Selection*** ***NAMED ONE OF THE BEST LGBTQ BOOKS OF 2019 by Harper's Bazaar*** A romantic, exquisite history of gay culture. —Kirkus Reviews, starred “[A] boisterous, motley new history...entertaining and insightful.” —The New York Times Book Review Hugh Ryan’s When Brooklyn Was Queer is a groundbreaking exploration of the LGBT history of Brooklyn, from the early days of Walt Whitman in the 1850s up through the queer women who worked at the Brooklyn Navy Yard during World War II, and beyond. No other book, movie, or exhibition has ever told this sweeping story. Not only has Brooklyn always lived in the shadow of queer Manhattan neighborhoods like Greenwich Village and Harlem, but there has also been a systematic erasure of its queer history—a great forgetting. Ryan is here to unearth that history for the first time. In intimate, evocative, moving prose he discusses in new light the fundamental questions of what history is, who tells it, and how we can only make sense of ourselves through its retelling; and shows how the formation of the Brooklyn we know today is inextricably linked to the stories of the incredible people who created its diverse neighborhoods and cultures. Through them, When Brooklyn Was Queer brings Brooklyn’s queer past to life, and claims its place as a modern classic. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Rainbow Solidarity in Defense of Cuba Leslie Feinberg, 2009 Featuring an insightful look at lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) life in Cuba, this chronicle illuminates the progress the country has made from centuries of backward attitudes and oppression to the current state of enlightenment. From the mores of the Colonial period to the roles that Hollywood, the CIA, and Wall Street played in depicting Cuba as a police state for gays and in reinforcing the oppression, this overview provides a backdrop of the past and illustrates the persecution and exploitation originally planted by Spanish colonialism and further cultivated by U.S. capitalism. Details on the gradual transformation follow as the narrative examines the impact of the political and institutional initiatives taken by Fidel Castro and the Cuban leadership to overcome bigotry and prejudice against LGBT people--among them free health care and education, guaranteed jobs and housing, special health care for AIDS victims, and widespread sex education. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: The Well of Loneliness Radclyffe Hall, 1928 Tells the story of Stephen Gordon, a girl born at the turn of century, and her struggle for acceptance as a lesbian. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Transgender Liberation Leslie Feinberg, 1992 |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Queerly Beloved Diane Anderson-Minshall, Jacob Anderson-Minshall, 2014-05-01 Imagine if, after fifteen years as a lesbian couple, your partner turned to you and said, I think I'm really a man. What would you do? How would you respond? For Diane and Jacob (ne Suzy) Anderson-Minshall this isn't a hypothetical question. It's what really happened. Eight years later, the couple not only remains together, they still identify as queer, still work in LGBT media, and remain part of the LGBT community. How did their relationship survive a gender transition? The authors explore this question and delve into their relationship to reveal the trials and tribulations they have faced along the way. In doing so, they paint a portrait of love, not only to each other, but to the San Francisco Bay Area, LGBT publishing, and the queer community. Queerly Beloved is a love story that flies in the face of expectations and raises questions about the true nature of identity, sexuality, and love. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: My Dangerous Desires Amber L. Hollibaugh, 2000 The author--a lesbian, sex radical, ex-hooker, feminist, leftist organizer, and award-winning filmmaker--presents over 20 years of her writings and five new essays, including A Queer Girl Dreaming Her Way Home. She looks at themes such as the relationship between activism and desire and how sexuality is tied to one's class identity. 41 photos. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: A Crystal Diary Frankie Hucklenbroich, 1997 Frankie Hucklenbroich's razor-edged, compelling, often wryly humorous story hustles us from the blood-and-beer-drenched corners of her St. Louis meat-packing district '50s youth, through the dark sex-soaked Hollywood alleys of her '60s baby butch years, into the druggy metropolis of '70s San Francisco. Moving relentlessly from one woman to another until faces and bodies blur, scamming her existence, Frankie learns what the street has to teach: how to make a buck, how to make it with a woman, how to survive.These are working-class dykes who live by their wits and their guts -- not their politics. Lesbians who pimp their girlfriends and court the dangers of crystal meth. Some, like Frankie, figure out how to shake its demons. Not always a pretty story, but strong and handsomely written, A Crystal Diary exposes the author's precarious physical and emotional outlaw world. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Magnified Minnie Bruce Pratt, 2021-02-01 Finalist for Audre Lorde Award for Lesbian Poetry, given by The Publishing Triangle, 2022 This collection of love poems draws us into the sacred liminal space that surrounds death. With her beloved gravely ill, poet and activist Minnie Bruce Pratt turns to daily walks and writing to find a way to go on in a world where injustice brings so much loss and death. Each poem is a pocket lens to swivel out and magnify the beauty in the little glints, insignificant that catch her eye: The first flowers, smaller than this s. She also chronicles the quiet rooms of pain and the body's memory, bringing the reader carefully into moments that will be familiar to anyone who has suffered similar loss. Even as she asks, What's the use of poetry? Not one word comes back to talk me out of pain, the book delivers a vision of love that is boldly political and laced with a tumultuous hope that promises: Revolution is bigger than both of us, revolution is a science that infers the future presence of us. This lucid poetry is a testimony to the radical act of being present and offers this balm: that the generative power of love continues after death. Oh Death Someone sang, Oh death! Oh death! Won't you pass me over for another day? Someone said, I dreamed of you last night. I dreamed you were telling me your whole life story. Whole. Whorled. Welkin, winkle, wrinkle. The loop of time holds us all together. The pile of laundry on the bed. You folding socks one inside the other. We have had this day, and now this night. The clothes are put away, and from the bed we see the moon folding light into darkness, not death. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: We Both Laughed in Pleasure Lou Sullivan, 2019 Drawn from Sullivan's meticulously kept journals, this landmark book records the life of arguably the first publicly gay trans man to medically transition. Sensual, lascivious, challenging, quotidian and poetic, the diaries complicate and disrupt normative trans narratives. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Burning Butch Mertz, 2022-04-05 That was cool. And I think you'll agree. Cause r/b mertz is queer as hell and can really really write prose. --Eileen Myles This blistering memoir by genderqueer, nonbinary poet, and artist R/B Mertz is the book I didn't know I needed... I'm so grateful they had the courage to share their experience in such a transparent, authentic way. --One of BuzzFeed's Most Anticipated Books of 2022 When divorce moves young R/B Mertz away from rural Pennsylvania and their abusive father, Mertz's life is torn in two. Mertz's mom and new stepdad dive headfirst into conservative Catholic homeschooling, entrenching themselves in a world dominated by saints, prayers, and having as many babies as possible, just as Mertz is starting to realize they might be queer. Mertz clings to Catholicism as a rebellion against their anti-Catholic bio-dad, and to movies and musicals as beacons of the world outside the conservative closet constructed by the homeschoolers--who might actually be more concerned with being conservative than with being good, while Mertz's bio-dad just wants them to be normal. Trying to stave off the inevitable, Mertz enrolls in a conservative Catholic college in Ohio. Coming of age in the early aughts, they grapple with flirtations, sexual encounters, and confusing relationships with students and faculty, as they try to figure out how to live a life in a world hell-bent on making them choose between their community and their identity. At turns rebellious, charming, and self-effacing, Mertz struggles to navigate this oppressive environment, questioning whether or not there is a place for them inside or outside of the Catholic Church; whether they can be themselves on the left or the right; whether they can be conservative or liberal; or whether they can be at all. Ultimately, Burning Butch is the courageous story of a trans / non-binary butch on a quest to survive with their authenticity intact. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: The House of Impossible Beauties Joseph Cassara, 2018-02-06 NAMED A RECOMMENDED BOOK OF 2018 BY Buzzfeed • The Wall Street Journal • The Millions • Southern Living • Bustle • Esquire • Entertainment Weekly • Nylon• Mashable • Libary Journal • Thrillist “Cassaras’s propulsive and profound first novel, finding one’s home in the world—particularly in a subculture plagued by fear and intolerance from society—comes with tragedy as well as extraordinary personal freedom.” -- Esquire A gritty and gorgeous debut that follows a cast of gay and transgender club kids navigating the Harlem ball scene of the 1980s and ’90s, inspired by the real House of Xtravaganza made famous by the seminal documentary Paris Is Burning It’s 1980 in New York City, and nowhere is the city’s glamour and energy better reflected than in the burgeoning Harlem ball scene, where seventeen-year-old Angel first comes into her own. Burned by her traumatic past, Angel is new to the drag world, new to ball culture, and has a yearning inside of her to help create family for those without. When she falls in love with Hector, a beautiful young man who dreams of becoming a professional dancer, the two decide to form the House of Xtravaganza, the first-ever all-Latino house in the Harlem ball circuit. But when Hector dies of AIDS-related complications, Angel must bear the responsibility of tending to their house alone. As mother of the house, Angel recruits Venus, a whip-fast trans girl who dreams of finding a rich man to take care of her; Juanito, a quiet boy who loves fabrics and design; and Daniel, a butch queen who accidentally saves Venus’s life. The Xtravaganzas must learn to navigate sex work, addiction, and persistent abuse, leaning on each other as bulwarks against a world that resists them. All are ambitious, resilient, and determined to control their own fates, even as they hurtle toward devastating consequences. Told in a voice that brims with wit, rage, tenderness, and fierce yearning, The House of Impossible Beauties is a tragic story of love, family, and the dynamism of the human spirit. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Christ-like Emanuel Xavier, 1999 This first novel introduces Mikey Alvarez. Sexually abused as a child, eventually abandoned by his family, he becomes a West Side Highway hustler and drug dealer. Mikey survives the streets of New York by joining the House of X, a gang of godless gays who terrorize the underground club scene and ball circuit. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: A Restricted Country Joan Nestle, 1996 Joan Nestle tells of her own experiences as a Jewish, working class lesbian. In this collection of stories from her life, political essays and her fiction, she offers a complete politics of gender, sex and class. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: S/He Minnie Bruce Pratt, 2024-12-03 |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: TRANS/gressive Riki Wilchins, 2017-05-31 In the early 1990s, no one talked about transgender people, and no one knew one. We were not on TV or in movies. What formed the visible part of the transcommunity – overwhelmingly white, urban, and middle class – was also overwhelmingly focused on conferences, surgery or hormones and cisgender acceptance. This was still a determinedly non-political population, often in defensive crouch because it was also constantly under attack by the media, police, local legislatures, feminists and even LGB-but-never-T advocates. We were a group that still thought of ourselves as a collection of separate individuals, not a movement. What made political consciousness so difficult was that there was no “transgender section” of town, where we saw each other regularly. And mainstream society mostly ignored us. And when it didn’t, it usually made clear it despised us. We were freaks. We were gendertrash. We lived in a transient and indoor community that knew itself only a few days at a time during conferences at hotels out on the interstate. But all that was about to change. Even when politics are avoided, bringing despised and marginalized people together is itself a political act. Without realizing or intending it, the community was reaching critical mass. Even in those pre-Internet, pre-cellphone days, enough transpeople were running into one another often enough to begin realizing we could be a force, that we didn’t really need cisgender acceptance. What we needed was our civil rights. This is the inside story of how in just a few years, a handful of trans activists would come together in the face of enormous difficulties and opposition to launch from the very margins of society what would grow into the modern political movement for gender rights. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: A Cup of Water Under My Bed Daisy Hernández, 2015-09-08 The PEN Literary Award–winning author “writes with honesty, intelligence, tenderness, and love” about her Colombian-Cuban heritage and queer identity in this poignant coming-of-age memoir (Sandra Cisneros, author of The House on Mango Street). In this lyrical, coming-of-age memoir, Daisy Hernández chronicles what the women in her Cuban-Colombian family taught her about love, money, and race. Her mother warns her about envidia and men who seduce you with pastries, while one tía bemoans that her niece is turning out to be “una india” instead of an American. Another auntie instructs that when two people are close, they are bound to become like uña y mugre, fingernails and dirt, and that no, Daisy’s father is not godless. He’s simply praying to a candy dish that can be traced back to Africa. These lessons—rooted in women’s experiences of migration, colonization, y cariño—define in evocative detail what it means to grow up female in an immigrant home. In one story, Daisy sets out to defy the dictates of race and class that preoccupy her mother and tías, but dating women and transmen, and coming to identify as bisexual, leads her to unexpected questions. In another piece, NAFTA shuts local factories in her hometown on the outskirts of New York City, and she begins translating unemployment forms for her parents, moving between English and Spanish, as well as private and collective fears. In prose that is both memoir and commentary, Daisy reflects on reporting for the New York Times as the paper is rocked by the biggest plagiarism scandal in its history and plunged into debates about the role of race in the newsroom. A heartfelt exploration of family, identity, and language, A Cup of Water Under My Bed is ultimately a daughter’s story of finding herself and her community, and of creating a new, queer life. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Butch Is a Noun S. Bear Bergman, 2010-11-26 Butch is a Noun, the first book by activist, gender-jammer, and performer S. Bear Bergman,won wide acclaim when published by Suspect Thoughts in 2006: a funny, insightful, and purposely unsettling manifesto on what it meansto be butch (and not). In thirty-four deeply personal essays, Bear makes butchness accessibleto those who are new to the concept, and makesgender outlaws of all stripes feel as though theyhave come home. From girls' clothes to men'shaircuts, from walking with girls to hangingwith young men, Butch is a Nounchronicles the perplexities, dangers, and pleasures of living lifeoutside the gender binary.This new edition includes a new introduction by the author. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: The Drag King Book Del Lagrace Volcano, Judith Halberstam, Jack Halberstam, 1999 What is a drag king? Why have drag kings not been as numerous or as popular as their drag queen counterparts in popular culture? Are drag kings lesbians? The Drag King Book tells you everything you've wanted to know and more about the lives and performances of contemporary male impersonators. The book profiles many different performers, among them San Francisco's larger-than-life Elvis Herselvis and New York's mackdaddy Dred, and presents interviews with drag kings alongside descriptions and analyses of actual shows. Lavishly illustrated with over 100 pictures by transgender photographer Del LaGrace Volcano, The Drag King Book is a striking testament to the multiple forms of gender variance today. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Travels with Lizbeth Lars Eighner, 2013-12-03 A New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice, Travels with Lizbeth: Three Years on the Road and on the Streets is Lars Eighner’s account of his descent into homelessness and his adventures on the streets that has moved, charmed, and amused generations of readers. Selected by the New York Times as one of the 50 Best Memoirs of the Past 50 Years “When I began writing this account I was living under a shower curtain in a stand of bamboo in a public park. I did not undertake to write about homelessness, but wrote what I knew, as an artist paints a still life, not because he is especially fond of fruit, but because the subject is readily at hand.” Containing the widely anthologized essay “On Dumpster Diving,” Travels with Lizbeth is a beautifully written account of one man’s experience of homelessness, a story of physical survival, and the triumph of the artistic spirit in the face of enormous adversity. In his unique voice—dry, disciplined, poignant, comic—Eighner celebrates the companionship of his dog, Lizbeth, and recounts their ongoing struggle to survive on the streets of Austin, Texas, and hitchhiking along the highways to Southern California and back. “Lars Eighner is the Thoreau of the Dumpsters. Comparisons to Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe and Hamsun’s Hunger leap to mind. A classic of down-and-out literature.”—Phillip Lopate, author of Bachelorhood: Tales of the Metropolis “Eighner’s memoir contains the finest first-person writing we have about the experience of being homeless in America. Yet it’s not a dirge or a Bukowski-like scratching of the groin but an offbeat and plaintive hymn to life. It’s the sort of book that releases the emergency brake on your soul...A literate and exceedingly humane document.”—The New York Times |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Queer Brown Voices Uriel Quesada, Letitia Gomez, Salvador Vidal-Ortiz, 2015-09-01 In the last three decades of the twentieth century, LGBT Latinas/os faced several forms of discrimination. The greater Latino community did not often accept sexual minorities, and the mainstream LGBT movement expected everyone, regardless of their ethnic and racial background, to adhere to a specific set of priorities so as to accommodate a “unified” agenda. To disrupt the cycle of sexism, racism, and homophobia that they experienced, LGBT Latinas/os organized themselves on local, state, and national levels, forming communities in which they could fight for equal rights while simultaneously staying true to both their ethnic and sexual identities. Yet histories of LGBT activism in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s often reduce the role that Latinas/os played, resulting in misinformation, or ignore their work entirely, erasing them from history. Queer Brown Voices is the first book published to counter this trend, documenting the efforts of some of these LGBT Latina/o activists. Comprising essays and oral history interviews that present the experiences of fourteen activists across the United States and in Puerto Rico, the book offers a new perspective on the history of LGBT mobilization and activism. The activists discuss subjects that shed light not only on the organizations they helped to create and operate, but also on their broad-ranging experiences of being racialized and discriminated against, fighting for access to health care during the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and struggling for awareness. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Female Masculinity Judith Halberstam, Jack Halberstam, 1998 Masculinity without men. In Female Masculinity Judith Halberstam takes aim at the protected status of male masculinity and shows that female masculinity has offered a distinct alternative to it for well over two hundred years. Providing the first full-length study on this subject, Halberstam catalogs the diversity of gender expressions among masculine women from nineteenth-century pre-lesbian practices to contemporary drag king performances. Through detailed textual readings as well as empirical research, Halberstam uncovers a hidden history of female masculinities while arguing for a more nuanced understanding of gender categories that would incorporate rather than pathologize them. She rereads Anne Lister's diaries and Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness as foundational assertions of female masculine identity. She considers the enigma of the stone butch and the politics surrounding butch/femme roles within lesbian communities. She also explores issues of transsexuality among transgender dykes--lesbians who pass as men--and female-to-male transsexuals who may find the label of lesbian a temporary refuge. Halberstam also tackles such topics as women and boxing, butches in Hollywood and independent cinema, and the phenomenon of male impersonators. Female Masculinity signals a new understanding of masculine behaviors and identities, and a new direction in interdisciplinary queer scholarship. Illustrated with nearly forty photographs, including portraits, film stills, and drag king performance shots, this book provides an extensive record of the wide range of female masculinities. And as Halberstam clearly demonstrates, female masculinity is not some bad imitation of virility, but a lively and dramatic staging of hybrid and minority genders. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Gender Failure Ivan Coyote, Rae Spoon, 2014-03-31 Being a girl was something that never really happened for me. —Rae Spoon Ivan E. Coyote and Rae Spoon are accomplished, award-winning writers, musicians, and performers; they are also both admitted gender failures. In their first collaborative book, Ivan and Rae explore and expose their failed attempts at fitting into the gender binary, and how ultimately our expectations and assumptions around traditional gender roles fail us all. Based on their acclaimed 2012 live show that toured across the United States and in Europe, Gender Failure is a poignant collection of autobiographical essays, lyrics, and images documenting Ivan and Rae's personal journeys from gender failure to gender enlightenment. Equal parts hilarious and heartbreaking, it's a book that will touch LGBTQ readers and others, revealing, with candor and insight, that gender comes in more than two sizes. Ivan E. Coyote is the author of six story collections and the award-winning novel Bow Grip, and is co-editor of Persistence: All Ways Butch and Femme. Ivan frequently performs at high schools, universities, and festivals across North America. Rae Spoon is a transgender indie musician whose most recent CD is My Prairie Home, which is also the title of a new National Film Board of Canada documentary about them. Rae's first book, First Spring Grass Fire, was a Lambda Literary Award finalist in 2013. This publication meets the EPUB Accessibility requirements and it also meets the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG-AA). It is screen-reader friendly and is accessible to persons with disabilities. A Simple book with few images, which is defined with accessible structural markup. This book contains various accessibility features such as alternative text for images, table of contents, page-list, landmark, reading order and semantic structure. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Don't Explain Jewelle Gomez, 1998 Short stories featuring lesbians. The story, Houston, is on a black lesbian vampire, while Water with Wine is on a love affair between a black professor and a white student. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Fire Power Chrystos, 1995 Eloquent words are Chrystos's tool for survival and her weapon in fighting for social justice. Chrystos is writing a poetry which indeed changes the world. -Lambda Book Report |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Gender and Sexuality in Indigenous North America, 1400-1850 Sandra Slater, Fay A. Yarbrough, 2022-11-10 Groundbreaking historical scholarship on the complex attitudes toward gender and sexual roles in Native American culture, with a new preface and supplemental bibliography Prior to the arrival of Europeans in the New World, Native Americans across the continent had developed richly complex attitudes and forms of expression concerning gender and sexual roles. The role of the berdache, a man living as a woman or a woman living as a man in native societies, has received recent scholarly attention but represents just one of many such occurrences of alternative gender identification in these cultures. Editors Sandra Slater and Fay A. Yarbrough have brought together scholars who explore the historical implications of these variations in the meanings of gender, sexuality, and marriage among indigenous communities in North America. Essays that span from the colonial period through the nineteenth century illustrate how these aspects of Native American life were altered through interactions with Europeans. Organized chronologically, Gender and Sexuality in Indigenous North America, 1400–1850 probes gender identification, labor roles, and political authority within Native American societies. The essays are linked by overarching examinations of how Europeans manipulated native ideas about gender for their own ends and how indigenous people responded to European attempts to impose gendered cultural practices at odds with established traditions. Many of the essays also address how indigenous people made meaning of gender and how these meanings developed over time within their own communities. Several contributors also consider sexual practice as a mode of cultural articulation, as well as a vehicle for the expression of gender roles. Representing groundbreaking scholarship in the field of Native American studies, these insightful discussions of gender, sexuality, and identity advance our understanding of cultural traditions and clashes that continue to resonate in native communities today as well as in the larger societies those communities exist within. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Open Secrets Anne-Lise François, 2008 Open Secrets contests the dominant influences of utilitarianism, expressive individualism, and imperatives to self-improvement by examining a series of texts in which nothing happens and arguing that these works, far from hiding from narrative demands, make an open secret of fulfilled experience and yield a revelation without insistence or rhetorical underscoring. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Touching Feeling Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, 2003-01-17 DIVA collection of essays examining theories of affect and how they relate to issues of performance and performativity./div |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Triptych Caliform Natasha Dennerstein, Julian Talamantez Brolaski, Kim Shuck, J. K. Fowler, Cassandra Dallett, 2016-08-18 Natasha Dennerstein's poetry, which she names ekphrasis (literally 'to speak out,') is to decoct the form of cinematic, kink, and Californian archetypes-the blonde noir vixen, the golden shower scene, the more-spiritual-than-thou hippie-into these seemly and seedy forms, swift as a snort of amphetamine. These poems are shapely in that they literally concern the shape of things, (the Mistress' breasts, 'burnished, onyx cantaloupes'), while they fashion themselves as rhyme, plump with undulating accent. Trebled in these modes, 'just for the thrill of it, baby,' she rides us, or drives us, all along the length of California¿ |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: When Did Indians Become Straight? Mark Rifkin, 2011-01-27 When Did Indians Become Straight? explores the complex relationship between contested U.S. notions of normality and shifting forms of Native American governance and self-representation. Examining a wide range of texts (including captivity narratives, fiction, government documents, and anthropological tracts), Mark Rifkin offers a cultural and literary history of the ways Native peoples have been inserted into Euramerican discourses of sexuality and how Native intellectuals have sought to reaffirm their peoples' sovereignty and self-determination. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Marginal Bodies, Trans Utopias Caterina Nirta, 2017-08-31 Although over the last two decades there has been a proliferation of gender studies, transgender has largely remained institutionalised as an ‘umbrella term’ that encapsulates all forms of gender understandings differing from what are thought to be gender norms. In both theoretical and medical literature, trans identity has been framed within a paradigm of awkwardness or discomfort, self-dislike or dysfunctional mental health. Marginal Bodies, Trans Utopias is a multidisciplinary book that draws primarily from Deleuze and post-structuralism in order to reformulate the concept of utopia and ground it in the materiality of the present. Through a radically new conceptualisation of the time and space of utopia, it analyses empirical findings from trans video diaries on the Internet belonging to transgender individuals. In doing so, this volume offers new insights into the everyday challenges faced by these subjectivities, with case studies focusing on: the legal/social impact of the UK’s Gender Recognition Act 2004, boundaries of public and private as evidenced within public toilets, and the narrative of the ‘wrong body’. Contextualising and applying Deleuzian concepts such as ‘difference’ and ‘marginal’ to the context of the research, Nirta helps the reader to understand trans as ‘unity’ rather than as a ‘mind-body mismatch’. Contributing to the reading and understanding of trans lived experience, this book shall be of interest to postgraduates and postdoctoral researchers interested in fields such as Transgender Studies, Critical Studies, Sociology of Gender and Philosophy of Time. |
leslie feinberg stone butch blues: Fun Home Alison Bechdel, 2007 A fresh and brilliantly told memoir from a cult favorite comic artist, marked by gothic twists, a family funeral home, sexual angst, and great books. This breakout book by Alison Bechdel is a darkly funny family tale, pitch-perfectly illustrated with Bechdel's sweetly gothic drawings. Like Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis, it's a story exhilaratingly suited to graphic memoir form. Meet Alison's father, a historic preservation expert and obsessive restorer of the family's Victorian home, a third-generation funeral home director, a high school English teacher, an icily distant parent, and a closeted homosexual who, as it turns out, is involved with his male students and a family babysitter. Through narrative that is alternately heartbreaking and fiercely funny, we are drawn into a daughter's complex yearning for her father. And yet, apart from assigned stints dusting caskets at the family-owned fun home, as Alison and her brothers call it, the relationship achieves its most intimate expression through the shared code of books. When Alison comes out as homosexual herself in late adolescense, the denouement is swift, graphic -- and redemptive. |
Stone Butch Blues - Trans Reads
11 Mar 2019 · “Leslie Feinberg has written a poignant, multilayered story involving class, race, religion, politics, and gender that touches the hearts and souls of anyone that has lived outside …
Stone Butch Blues 20th Anniversary Author Edition
Stone Butch Blues “Leslie Feinberg has written a poignant, multilayer ed story involving class, race, religion, politics, and gender that touches the hearts and souls of anyone that has lived …
QUEERING CLASS: LESLIE FEINBERG'S "STONE BUTCH …
Feinberg's first novel, Stone Butch Blues (1993), exposes the quotidian practices through which fixed gendered and sexual identities are culturally constructed and systematically imposed.
Stone Butch Blues - LEVANTA FUEGO
La foto fue tomada por Leslie Feinberg durante una visita a prisión. He sido encarcelada por los que no respetaban la ley esposada por los que alentaban el odio
Screen Shot 2017-06-22 at 12.23.30 PM - deepcenter.org
DEAR I'm bing on my bed tonight missingyu, my yes all swollen, summer lightning storm raging outride. Tonight I walked down streets look,ingforyou in even woman's fam as I hate each …
A Queer Reading in Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues
The novel Stone Butch Blues addresses the theme of prejudice and persecution faced by members of the LGBTQ community in Post-War America. It also expands upon the Queer theory.
Stone Butch Blues - Journo Portfolio
Leslie Feinberg, as it says in the official site, is someone “who identified as an anti-racist white, working-class, secular Jewish, transgender, lesbian, female, revolutionary communist…”.
Stone Butch Blues By Leslie Feinberg (Download Only)
Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg,2010 Published in 1993 this brave original novel is considered to be the finest account ever written of the complexities of a transgendered existence Woman …
Stone butch blues leslie feinberg - www.zenyatta
distribution of stone butch blues leslie feinberg that are either in the public domain, licensed for free distribution, or provided by authors and publishers with the right to share their work.
Leslie Feinberg Stone Butch Blues - tempsite.gov.ie
author captures a diverse range of portrayals that celebrate and reflect butch identities. In the context of transgender movements, intersex activism, and genderqueer dialogues, a project …
EXISTENTIAL ANGST, AND QUEST FOR IDENTITY IN LESLIE …
Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues has depicted as a queer narrative. It looks postmodern due to how it impersonates gender as a signifier. There is a hackneyed conviction prevalent in the …
Building our own Homes: Frustrated Stereotyping in Leslie …
Leslie Feinberg’s ground-breaking 1993 novel Stone Butch Blues is one of the first American literary texts to tackle the subject of transgender subjectivity -- in fact, it is often credited with …
HARD ROAD AHEAD: STONE’S QUEER AGENCY IN STONE …
Feinberg’s stone butch, for example, is a figure of queer life that turns on the inexpressive face of grit, bringing the nonhuman stone into relation with the working-class butch identity of the 1950s.
“I’m a he-she, that’s different”: Negotiating Queer Legibility in ...
This is the case with the main characters of Leslie Feinberg’s novel Stone Butch Blues, who simply do not fit into the binary gender categories imposed/enforced.
Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg’s semi-autobiographical novel …
Leslie Feinberg’s semi-autobiographical novel Stone Butch Blues follows the turbulent experiences of Jess Goldberg, a butch lesbian who medically transitions in order to pass as …
The Queer Homes and Communities of Stone Butch Blues: On …
Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues (1993) follows the life of Jess, a Jewish, working-class, and butch protagonist. Through first-person narration, the novel explores issues of intersectional …
Trans Utopianism and the Utopia of Transness in Leslie …
Feinberg’s groundbreaking 1993 novel Stone Butch Blues, widely regarded as the first novel by a transgender writer about a transgender protagonist, offers one set of answers to these …
Stone Butch Blues and the Fictional Special Guest
Sexualities at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. The 1993 novel by writer, historian, and activist Leslie Feinberg concerns a character named Jess Goldberg whose sex/gender identity does …
Building our own Homes: Frustrated Stereotyping in Leslie …
Leslie Feinberg’s ground-breaking 1993 novel Stone Butch Blues is one of the first American literary texts to tackle the subject of transgender subjectivity -- in fact, it is often credited with …
Stone Butch Blues - 139.162.192.125
Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg,2010 Published in 1993, this brave, original novel is considered to be the finest account ever written of the complexities of a transgendered …
TRANSGENDER BUTCH - Simon Fraser University
Transgendered Narrative of Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues,” Jay Prosser sets up “F2M” as a prime example of queer theory’s fixation on the transgender body. 13 This article pits queer …
Stone Butch Blues and the Fictional Special Guest
so off-base. As I discuss later, Feinberg intended to convey truths about the lives of trans and other gender nonconforming people and the novel’s power lies partly in Feinberg’s ability to do …
Butch, Femme, and the Woman-Identified Woman
another hugely influential book: Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues. The stories are dramatically different, but the process and impact are the same. Feinberg, along with Joan Nestle and …
WeAre All Works in Progress (1998)
Lsaftg Feinberg ' Leslie Feinbergis a novelise, historian, and cransgen-der activist. Her most recent book is Transgender Liberation: A movement whose time has come. Her acclaimed …
THE SEARCH FOR IDENTITY
of Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues. Combining fiction and autobiography, Feinberg writes of Jess Goldberg, a transgendered individual attempting to deal with her own confusion in the …
Stone Butch Blues identity and LGBTQ history. I realise I haven’t
Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg, a seminal and transformative text about lesbian identity and LGBTQ history. I realise I haven’t even thought about doing the reading for my Thursday …
Leslie Feinberg - University of Utah
A Novel\Leslie Feinberg ~ e:--- ::z::a Firebrand Books . This is a work or fiction. Any similarity between characters and people, dead ... Stone butch blues : a novel / by Leslie Feinberg. p. …
How it Always Is by Laurie Frankel Cassara, Stone Butch Blues by Leslie …
Cassara, Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg, The Thirty Names of Night by Zeyn Joukhadar, This is. How it Always Is by Laurie Frankel. Didn’t Nobody Give a Shit What Happened to …
Butch-Femme
Stone butches, as described extensively in Leslie Feinberg's 1992 novel Stone Butch Blues, do not permit themselves to be touched intimately. They instead derive pleasure from making love …
Queering Home: Domestic Space and Sexuality in Postmodern …
resultant adverse economic conditions (Feinberg, Stone Butch Blues). Two novels, Dorothy Allison’s Bastard Out of Carolina and Mike Albo’s Hornito, challenge the coming-of-age …
Second Skins: The Body Narratives of Transsexuality. By Jay
Stone Butch Blues. While Prosser remains ambivalent about transgenderism because he thinks it is overly allied to performativity and a misguided post-modern investment in transgression, …
Contemporary Trans Fiction & Its History
Leslie Feinberg, Stone Butch Blues Radclyffe Hall, The Well of Loneliness Torrey Peters, Detransition, Baby Casey Plett, A Dream of a Woman Casey Plett, Little Fish Assignments & …
Stone Butch Blues Summary - investment.contify.com
Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues, published in 1993, is not just a novel; it's a landmark work of butch lesbian literature, a fiercely honest portrayal of working-class life, gender identity, and …
Postmodern Transsexed Bodies - JSTOR
Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues (1993) forms the subject of Chapter 5. In this chapter, Prosser uses Feinberg's thinly-veiled autobiographical novel to take up the distinction between …
Second Skins: The Body Narratives of Transsexuality. By Jay
Stone Butch Blues. While Prosser remains ambivalent about transgenderism because he thinks it is overly allied to performativity and a misguided post-modern investment in transgression, …
Yoty - CORE
From Radclyffe Hall’s A Well of Loneliness (1928) to Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues (1993), the lives of genderqueer people have been increasingly expressed through novels. This is a …
Download Bookey App
book, "Stone Butch Blues," but also for their passionate advocacy work, Feinberg's contribution to the social and political discourse surrounding transgender rights remains indelible. Through …
“I’m a he-she, that’s different”: Negotiating Queer Legibility in ...
Legibility in Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues Renata DALMASO Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brasil rldalmaso@gmail.com The idea behind the concept of “gender …
Butch, Femme, and the Woman-Identified Woman - York University
another hugely influential book: Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues. The stories are dramatically different, but the process and impact are the same. Feinberg, along with Joan Nestle and …
Stone Butch Blues - 45.79.9.118
Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg,2010 Published in 1993, this brave, original novel is considered to be the finest account ever written of the complexities …
Stone Butch Blues identity and LGBTQ history. I realise I haven’t
Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg, a seminal and transformative text about lesbian identity and LGBTQ history. I realise I haven’t even thought about doing the reading for my Thursday …
Begin Anywhere: Transgender and Transgenre Desire in Qiu
study of Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues, the ambivalently auto-biographical “story of a transsexual who . . . like Feinberg hirself, halts her transition through surgery and hormones to …
30 Years of Stone Butch Blues - zgd-hamburg.de
30 Years of Stone Butch Blues Memories and Visions interdisciplinary online conference, 5 & 6 May, 2023 . 2 PROGRAM FRIDAY, MAY 5 times in CET ... Eine Reminiszenz an Leslie …
Stone Butch Blues Pdf - staff.ces.funai.edu.ng
Stone Butch Blues Pdf Leslie Feinberg Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg,2010 Published in 1993, this brave, original novel is considered to be the finest account ever written of the …
Butch is a Noun - Trans Reads
23 Dec 2021 · Thanks also to Leslie Feinberg for. writing Stone Butch Blues (without which this book would not be possible), Greg and Ian at Suspect Thoughts for taking a chance on me, the …
Stone Butch Blues Summary
Stone Butch Blues Summary Radclyffe Hall Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg,2010 Published in 1993, this brave, original novel is considered to be the finest account ever written of the …
CHAPTER 2 LITERATURE RIVIEW 2.1 Theoretical Framework
Another study about Leslie Fienberg’s Stone Butch Blues is written by Monika I. Hogan. The study is entitled Still me on the inside, trapped: Embodied Captivity and Ethical Narrative in Leslie …
A Sheffield Hallam University thesis
not received such attention. Leslie Feinberg’s 1993 novel Stone Butch Blues is one of the only trans authored novels to have been substantially studied (see Prosser, 1998; Crawley, 2002; …
Stone Butch Blues - putnamarc.org
Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg,2010 Published in 1993, this brave, original novel is considered to be the finest account ever written of the complexities of a transgendered …
LGBTQ+ Literature: A Guide
3) Stone Butch Blues, Leslie Feinberg (1993) 19 4) Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, John Berendt (1994) 25 5) Tipping the Velvet, Sarah Waters (1998) 29 6) Call Me by Your Name, …
Stone Butch Blues - jobs.scienceandsociety.duke.edu
Stone Butch Blues Ria Brodell Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg,2010-11 Published in 1993, this brave, original novel is considered to be the finest account ever written of the complexities of a …
Stone Butch Blues [PDF] - time.colineal.com
Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg,1993 Jess, a working-class woman living as a man, survives a period of homelessness, tries to unionize fellow workers, worries about being found out, and …
Leslie Feinberg - asteriscoedizioni.com
STONE BUTCH BLUES Leslie Feinberg. 7 1 Cara Theresa, Stasera sono distesa sul letto e mi manchi, ho gli occhi gonfi, lacrime calde mi scorrono sul viso. Fuori infuria un feroce temporale …
Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro - UERJ
in The well of loneliness and Stone butch blues / Janine de Oliveira Fontenla. – 2009. 105 f. Orientadora: Eliane Borges Berutti. Dissertação (mestrado) – Universidade do Estado do Rio …
Stone Butch Blues - data.veritas.edu.ng
Stone Butch Blues Stone Butch Blues, Leslie Feinberg’s 1993 first novel, is widely considered in and outside the U.S. to be a groundbreaking work about the complexities of gender. Feinberg …
TransSisters: the journal of transsexual feminism - Trans Reads
23 May 2020 · Issue#1 TramsSisters September/October1S93 FromtheEditor WelcometoTransSisters theJournalofTranssexual …
by Leslie Feinberg $2750 - digitaltransgenderarchive.net
by Leslie Feinberg Comprehensive survey of CD and TS throughout hi tory. Absolutely a must-read by author of Stone Butch Blues. $2750 #164 plus $3.00 S&H International Foundation for …
QUEERING CLASS: LESLIE FEINBERG'S 'STONE BUTCH BLUES'
socioeconomic structures, and resistance to oppression in Stone Butch Blues. The achievement of Feinberg's award-winning novel is not that it is the first novel to tell the story of a …
Stone Butch Blues - media.journoportfolio.com
Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg I went out into the wild with my translator eyes, the nature of culture was full of paper vultures, ... The cultural artefact that has been selected for this project …
Stone Butch Blues Summary - investment.contify.com
Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues, published in 1993, is not just a novel; it's a landmark work of butch lesbian literature, a fiercely honest portrayal of working-class life, gender identity, and …
Egg Theory’s Early Style - Grace Lavery
nuanced, sophisticated orientation toward gender. Like Leslie Feinberg, whose Stone Butch Blues Lamb (n.d.) positions as a futurological egg theory, the post-detransition text that completes …
A Memorial Resolution Honoring Leslie Feinberg
forward thinking leader on November 15, 2014, with the death of Leslie Feinberg; Whereas Leslie Feinberg was a tireless and outspoken advocate of the rights of transgendered people; …
Archive.org
© 1993 and 2014 by Leslie Feinberg 10th Anniversary Edition Afterword, Excerpts © 2003 by Leslie Feinberg. Preface to Chinese Edition © 2003 by Leslie Feinberg ...
Stone Butch Blues Pdf - admin.ces.funai.edu.ng
Stone Butch Blues Pdf Leslie Feinberg Stone Butch Blues Leslie Feinberg,2010 Published in 1993, this brave, original novel is considered to be the finest account ever written of the …
Nature Held Me Close, Volume 3 - Ansereg
- Leslie Feinberg, Stone Butch Blues. When I launched the first edition of Nature Held Me Close in early 2020, I had no idea how strange the rest of the year was going to become -- or how …
QUEERING CLASS: LESLIE FEINBERG'S 'STONE BUTCH BLUES'
socioeconomic structures, and resistance to oppression in Stone Butch Blues. The achievement of Feinberg's award-winning novel is not that it is the first novel to tell the story of a …