Making Emends: Adrienne Rich, Audre Lorde, Anne Bradstreet

2016 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-125
Author(s):  
Marion Rust
1984 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 613
Author(s):  
Laura Rice-Sayre ◽  
Wendy Martin

1984 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 601
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Salska ◽  
Wendy Martin

Author(s):  
Patricia Mateo Gallego

Resumen de Transdeseantes: de la heterosexualidad obligatoria al deseo lesbianoPatricia Mateo GallegoEn este artículo nos aproximamos a las teorías de cuatro autoras de referencia ineludible en el pensamiento feminista: Audre Lorde, Adrienne Rich, Monique Wittig y Judith Butler. Todas ellas, y en este trabajo por extensión, se ocuparon de desentrañar la lógica que hace que unos grupos opriman a otros. Más concretamente, la lógica por la que la opresión de los hombres se ejerce sobre las mujeres. Nos referimos a la heterosexualidad obligatoria entendida como una institución política al servicio de un sujeto hegemónico que no desea perder su lugar privilegiado. Especialmente nos aproximaremos a posturas vitales desde las que desestabilizar este modo perverso de mantener a las mujeres en una posición de otredad.This article approaches the theories of four main authors in feminist thought: Audre Lorde, Adrienne Rich, Monique Wittig and Judith Butler. All of them focused �as this article does� on the logic relations that makes some groups oppress others. Specifically, the logic that allows and perpetuates the tyranny exercised by men over women. We refer here to the compulsory heterosexuality that functions as a political institution by which an hegemonic subject preserves his privileged position. Moreover, we approach some personal positions from which it is possible to destabilize that established perverse way of keeping women in a position of otherness.


Author(s):  
Giovanna Covi

This paper considers literary texts by women writers that trouble mainstream definitions of family and love to figure shared knowledges. Through intercultural performances, they stage conversations between Euro-American, African-American, and African-Caribbean cultures to re-present kinship (Judith Butler) as a concept which by being as elastic as intimacy (Ara Wilson) and affects (Leela Gandhi), enables figurations (Donna Haraway) and hence actions that point towards a shared planetarity (Gayatri C. Spivak). I argue that these cultural products nourish creolizing agency (Edouard Glissant and Kamau Brathwaite) which prevents us from falling into a regime of terror, where crisis is equated to public and domestic paralysis under a state of emergency. This is so because they effectively show how to join poetics with politics and ethics, and thus to build collectivities of belonging (Audre Lorde and Adrienne Rich). I seek to demonstrate that the creolizing capability of such discourse, as articulated for example by Toni Morrison, Kim Ragusa, Joan Anim-Addo, and Jamaica Kincaid, deconstructs otherness without assimilating it, because it embraces translation as the mode (Walter Benjamin) of the always already necessary impossibility. In tune with Rajagopalan Radhakrishnan’s emphasis on translation as a mode which allows us to imagine conjunctures and intersections that have no originals and cannot speak in a single language, this paper insists on the primary importance of critique to confront questions of power; It offers figurations of the global that, by incorporating intimacy, affects, and by troubling kinship, map material and discoursive reality in a manner that is widely inclusive, through affiliation (Edward Said) rather than filiation. By thematizing love as political practice, the literary texts here examined contribute to the phenomenological grounding of the discourse on affects inaugurated by Eve K. Sedgwick and further elaborated by Rosi Braidotti. Kincaid’s See Now Then provides the wording of my argument: because these figurations never forget the then of colonialism, they bring forward a now of globalization that is populated by subjectivities—Radical Others—capable of subverting and transgressing the establishment, without erasing their own vulnerability.


2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-143
Author(s):  
Ana Schwartz
Keyword(s):  

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