Identity Politics
Identity Politics: Lesbian Feminism and the Limits of Community
SHANE PHELAN
Series: Women in the Political Economy
Copyright Date: 1989
Published by: Temple University Press
Pages: 256
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt14bt8f8
Search for reviews of this book
Book Info
Identity Politics
Book Description:

"Lesbian feminism began and has fueled itself with the rejection of liberalism.... In this rejection, lesbian feminists were not alone. They were joined by the New Left, by many blacks in the civil rights movement, by male academic theorists.... What all these groups shared was an intense awareness of the ways in which liberalism fails to account for the social reality of the world, through a reliance upon law and legal structure to define membership, through individualism, through its basis in a particular conception of rationality."

In tracing how lesbian feminism came to be defined in uneasy relationships with the Women's Movement and gay rights groups, Shane Phelan explores the tension between liberal ideals of individual rights and tolerance and communitarian ideals of solidarity. The debate over lesbian sado-masochism-an expression of individual choice or pornographic, anti-feminist behavior?-is considered as a test case.

Phelan addresses the problems faced by "the woman-identified woman" in a liberal society that presumes heterosexuality as the biological, psychological, and moral standard. Often silenced by laws defining their sexual behavior as criminal and censured by a medical establishment that persists in defining homosexuality as perversion, lesbians, like blacks and other groups, have fought to have the same rights as others in their communities and even in their own homes. Lesbian feminists have also sought to define themselves as a community that would be distinctly different, a community that would disavow the traditional American obsession with individual advancement in the world as it is.

In this controversial study of political philosophy and the women's movement, Phelan argues that "the failure to date to produce a satisfying theory and program for lesbian action is reflective of the failure of modern political thinking to produce a compelling, nonsuspect alternative to liberalism."

In the seriesWomen in the Political Economy, edited by Ronnie J. Steinberg.

eISBN: 978-1-4399-0412-1
Subjects: Sociology
You do not have access to this book on JSTOR. Try logging in through your institution for access.
Log in to your personal account or through your institution.
Table of Contents
Export Selected Citations Export to NoodleTools Export to RefWorks Export to EasyBib Export a RIS file (For EndNote, ProCite, Reference Manager, Zotero, Mendeley...) Export a Text file (For BibTex)
Select / Unselect all
  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-iv)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. v-vi)
  3. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. vii-2)
  4. ONE Liberalism and Its Problems
    ONE Liberalism and Its Problems (pp. 3-18)

    Lesbian feminism began with and has fueled itself by the rejection of liberalism. This rejection occurred initially as a response to the fact that liberal theorists and writers had been unable or unwilling to condemn the oppression of gays and lesbians, as they had avoided some of the deeper challenges of feminism emerging in the 1960s. It developed as lesbian feminist thinkers and activists came to see deeper connections between liberal assumptions and perspectives, and the problems faced by lesbians.

    In this rejection, lesbian feminists were not alone. They were joined by the New Left, by many blacks in the...

  5. TWO Lesbianism and Medical Discourse
    TWO Lesbianism and Medical Discourse (pp. 19-36)

    The second side of the problem facing lesbians before feminism was the opposite of, and yet inextricably bound to, the first problem, that of liberalism. The scientific perspective and practice does not have more power in a liberal society than in a nonliberal one; the difference, and the danger, lie in the way in which liberalism serves to mystify and deny the power of that perspective and those practices. In such a system, the lives of lesbians (as of all of us) may be controlled and normalized by persons whose power is not elective, not even fully publicly recognized.

    The...

  6. THREE The Woman-Identified Woman
    THREE The Woman-Identified Woman (pp. 37-58)

    The rejection of liberalism and of psychiatry opened a door for lesbians. Previously, self-esteem had required that one demonstrate one’s reasonableness and emotional balance by listening politely to those who said lesbianism was pathological; it required that one dress “like a woman” in public, that one minimize one’s difference. The combination of gay liberation and feminism changed that almost overnight.

    The price of membership was high, however. Lesbians in the gay rights and gay liberation movements found themselves in the position of women in the civil rights, antiwar, and New Left movements: conceptual appendages and organizational housekeepers/secretaries/sexual partners.¹ I In...

  7. FOUR Definition and Community
    FOUR Definition and Community (pp. 59-80)

    The fundamental issue for lesbian feminism has been that of lesbian identity. The construction of a positive identity requires a community that supports that identity. Building such a community requires both a withdrawal of support or belief in the values and structures of the prior community or culture and the creation of new values and structures. However, the extent to which and the ways in which the values and structures will be “new” cannot be assumed from the beginning; often, they can change their surface to meet new needs without undergoing a basic change. We must pause, then, to examine...

  8. FIVE Pornography: Male Violence and Female Desire
    FIVE Pornography: Male Violence and Female Desire (pp. 81-98)

    I begin with a caution. Adrienne Rich states that while “lesbian existence comprises both the breaking of a taboo and the rejection of a compulsory way of life,” while it is “a direct or indirect attack on male right of access to women,” it is also “more than these.”¹ This “more” is the love for women that is manifested in a variety of ways. Lesbianism is not simply resistance; to see it as such would be to remain bound to men, to view it as “mere refuge from male abuses, rather than as an electric and empowering charge between women.”²...

  9. SIX Sadomasochism and the Meaning of Feminism
    SIX Sadomasochism and the Meaning of Feminism (pp. 99-134)

    Lesbian feminist discourse about sex has arrived at a curious place. At the beginning of the movement, issues of sexuality were conceived of and discussed in terms of partner choice. The need to form a positive understanding of lesbianism found a home in feminist discussions of sex and gender oppression and the role of personal relations in maintaining larger social and political inequalities. The insight that we must examine all aspects of our lives if we are to see what Marilyn Frye has called the “birdcage” of oppression, that network of minor barriers that composes a system of immobilization, was...

  10. SEVEN The Limits of Community
    SEVEN The Limits of Community (pp. 135-152)

    What are we to make of lesbian feminism? How might the development of lesbian feminist theory and its particular issues illuminate the problems of society and politics? Does analysis of this development shed any light on the fortunes and misfortunes of liberalism? What is to be gained by reading lesbian feminism as political theory?

    The first lesson we can learn from lesbian feminism is the extent to which relations of power manifest themselves in and through language. The struggles for a positive self-understanding and a sense of historical community have been conducted as a struggle to redefine and redescribe lesbians...

  11. EIGHT Rethinking Identity Politics
    EIGHT Rethinking Identity Politics (pp. 153-170)

    The history of lesbian feminism and the insight it offers into the problems of liberalism may afford us an opening into what changes are needed to make a perspective so basic to America as liberalism is not pathological to it. In particular, this history may help us to distinguish the heart of liberalism from its unnecessary appendages and parasitic growths, and to free it from the misunderstandings of both defenders and opponents. At the same time, we may now more thoroughly evaluate the problems and possibilities of identity politics.

    Liberalism has been fueled by an abiding skepticism. Far from being...

  12. Notes
    Notes (pp. 171-190)
  13. Bibliography
    Bibliography (pp. 191-200)
  14. Index
    Index (pp. 201-207)