Looking Like What You Are by Lisa Walker

Looking Like What You Are

Sexual Style, Race, and Lesbian Identity

Lisa Walker

Looks can be deceiving, and in a society where one’s status and access to opportunity are largely attendant on physical appearance, the issue of how difference is constructed and interpreted, embraced or effaced, is of tremendous import.

Lisa Walker examines this issue with a focus on the questions of what it means to look like a lesbian, and what it means to be a lesbian but not to look like one. She analyzes the historical production of the lesbian body as marked, and studies how lesbians have used the frequent analogy between racial difference and sexual orientation to craft, emphasize, or deny physical difference. In particular, she explores the implications of a predominantly visible model of sexual identity for the feminine lesbian, who is both marked and unmarked, desired and disavowed.

Walker’s textual analysis cuts across a variety of genres, including modernist fiction such as The Well of Loneliness and Wide Sargasso Sea, pulp fiction of the Harlem Renaissance, the 1950s and the 1960s, post-modern literature as Michelle Cliff’s Abeng, and queer theory.

In the book’s final chapter, ‘How to Recognize a Lesbian,’ Walker argues that strategies of visibility are at times deconstructed, at times reinscribed within contemporary lesbian-feminist theory.


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Details

ISBN 9780814793725
Genre Literary Criticism; LGBT Studies/Social Sciences
Copyright Date 2001
Publication Date 2001
Publisher NYU Press
Format Trade Paperback
No. of Pages 281
Language English
Rating NotRated
Paper Type Electronic Format Available
Subject Literary Criticism
BookID 7553

Author: LFWBooks