Lesbian Self-Writing: The Embodiment of Experience

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Author: Carol Lynda Hall

ISBN-10: 1560231440

ISBN-13: 9781560231448

Category: Canadian Literature Anthologies

Join the process of self-discovery as lesbian writers redefine their roles in love, family, work, and society!\ “What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life?” asked the poet Muriel Rukeyser. ”The whole world would split open.” The women represented in Lesbian Self-Writing: The Embodiment of Experience tell the truth about their lives, using many forms and levels of discourse. They split the world open with their powerful words and ideas about being a woman, a lesbian, a...

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Join the process of self-discovery as lesbian writers redefine their roles in love, family, work, and society!“What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life?” asked the poet Muriel Rukeyser. ”The whole world would split open.” The women represented in Lesbian Self-Writing: The Embodiment of Experience tell the truth about their lives, using many forms and levels of discourse. They split the world open with their powerful words and ideas about being a woman, a lesbian, a writer, a person of color, a child, a mother. These identities come vigorously alive in these pages, offering the reader new models humanity. The contributors celebrate the writerly “act” of creating a sense of self through finding one's own voice and creating community for others. Through political and literary analysis, they also provide ideas toward building a queer aesthetic.Ranging from elegant expositions of critical theory to comfortable discussions of individual lives, the essays in Lesbian Self-Writing: The Embodiment of Experience represent some of the finest writers working today, including Kate Millett, Karla Jay, Mary Meigs, Jane Rule, and Maya Chowdhry. The authors’unsparing honesty and wise compassion break through the silence to celebrate individual empowerment and to share coping and survival strategies to help all women.In Lesbian Self-Writing: The Embodiment of Experience, the particular interests, needs, and concerns of lesbian writers illuminate the common concerns of all women's lives, such as: handling the conflicts of multiple identities and expectations: dyke versus lesbian, writer versus author baking bread to reconnect with the past using biomythography to understand oneself, the writing process, and other authors’work redefining the family as something that can be created, not just endured finding both community and uniqueness in shared experiences--dolls, food, Catholic confession, children, gardens, aging, gender creating a sense of self through finding one's own voice Lesbian Self-Writing brings together works that focus on the elusive place where memory, language, body, experience, and deliberations on the practice and process of writing converge. In turns hilarious, moving, and painful, this anthology stands with the very best of writing about writing. BooknewsEstablished lesbian writers offer 18 essays, interviews, and other pieces describing their experiences as women, lesbians, writers, people of color, children, and mothers. They celebrate the act of creating a sense of self through finding their own voice, and employ political and literary analysis to provide ideas toward building a queer aesthetic. Three of the essays have been previously published. The anthology is also published as the , v.4, no.4 (2000). Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Lesbians Loving Wor(l)ds: Communicating Acts1Writing Life21A State of Mind in the Garden35Voices in the Outer Room41k/not theory: a self-dialogue59To Grandmother's House I Go71Karla Jay: An Interview with Lynda Hall79Memories in Flesh and Marble87Writing My-Self-Body97A. D., A Memoir: Excerpts101Shani Mootoo: An Interview with Lynda Hall107The Truth About Writing/Writing About the Truth115Striving to Be Selfish125Mozart's Laugh131The Truth of Being133The Unfinished Moon141Why Writers Make Lousy Lovers149Nobody Ever Asked Me If I Had an Agent159Index165

\ BooknewsEstablished lesbian writers offer 18 essays, interviews, and other pieces describing their experiences as women, lesbians, writers, people of color, children, and mothers. They celebrate the act of creating a sense of self through finding their own voice, and employ political and literary analysis to provide ideas toward building a queer aesthetic. Three of the essays have been previously published. The anthology is also published as the , v.4, no.4 (2000). Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)\ \