At the Borders of Queer Nation
< < Radicalesbians || But, one for all? > >
Can you?
I was in a class once where there was a serious discussion of whether you could be
feminist without being
lesbian. I'm pretty sure that we decided you could. However, the class was mostly not lesbian, and generally all
identified as feminist, so I guess they were only putting in votes for their own existence and
authenticity. However, there have been a number of women who feel that existing
heterosexually is existing for men, and if one really cares about
women, one doesn't go home at night to sleep with the enemy. "Many lesbians feel that bisexual women's asociations with men disqualify them completely from
political alliances or
comradeship with lesbians." (Rust 1995:61) After all, "Since
sexuality was a
political choice, and lesbianism the
politically correct choice, any other kind of sexuality was considered
counter-revolutionary."(Newitz and Sandell 1994) Lesbian feminism in some senses created an
asexual lesbian, the
woman-centered-woman, as the political
ideal: "what has been accepted in lesbian feminism is not the lesbian, but the
Lesbian - the politically/sexually/
culturally correct being, the carrier of
the lesbian feminist conciousness."(Phelan 1989:57)(emphasis in original) But bisexuals choose the wrong thing, when they choose sex instead of politics
1: the parts of their identities did not
mesh into a "
seamless web of the expression of the self."(Phelan 1989:103)
- I mean this, not as the choice that bisexuals might make, but as how it would be perceived.
< < Radicalesbians || But, one for all? > >