Are You Girls Traveling Alone? Adventures in Lesbian Logic
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Type
Book
Authors
ISBN 10
1878533037
ISBN 13
9781878533036
Category
Unknown
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Publication Year
1991
Publisher
Pages
235
Description
Marilyn Murphy is a sixty year old, self-described radical feminist political activist. This is a collection of forty-three essays, written between 1982 and 1991, all originally published in The Lesbian News.
These essays are well-written, often insightful, sometimes controversial. The title essay (which brings to mind Van Gelder and Brandt's "Are you two ... together?") describes some of the travels Murphy and her lover have taken in their RV through the U.S. and Canada and the amazement voiced by women of their generation that these "girls" were traveling alone - i.e. without a man.
"Would knowing this have made a difference?" in which Murphy briefly outlines the careers of such lesbians as physicians Elizabeth Blackwell and S. Josephine Baker, and Nobel Peace Prize winner Jane Addams, is inspiring and thought provoking.
Murphy has a penchant for provocative statements like 'I believe the Lesbian is the quintessential rebel...[and] lives the profoundest non-conformity." One of the controversial essays is "Mother of the Groom" in which she describes her decision not to attend her son's wedding, despite their seemingly wann relationship, to protect his involvement in a "ceremony which celebrates the institution which is the cornerstone of ... oppression [of women]." (Murphy had been married and the mother of four when she came out at the age of forty-three.)
I would certainly recommend this title for any collection - public, academic, women's studies. It can be sampled selectively or read straight through.
Most chapters close with annotated references. There is an index and the appendix lists the publication dates of the essays. - from Amzon
These essays are well-written, often insightful, sometimes controversial. The title essay (which brings to mind Van Gelder and Brandt's "Are you two ... together?") describes some of the travels Murphy and her lover have taken in their RV through the U.S. and Canada and the amazement voiced by women of their generation that these "girls" were traveling alone - i.e. without a man.
"Would knowing this have made a difference?" in which Murphy briefly outlines the careers of such lesbians as physicians Elizabeth Blackwell and S. Josephine Baker, and Nobel Peace Prize winner Jane Addams, is inspiring and thought provoking.
Murphy has a penchant for provocative statements like 'I believe the Lesbian is the quintessential rebel...[and] lives the profoundest non-conformity." One of the controversial essays is "Mother of the Groom" in which she describes her decision not to attend her son's wedding, despite their seemingly wann relationship, to protect his involvement in a "ceremony which celebrates the institution which is the cornerstone of ... oppression [of women]." (Murphy had been married and the mother of four when she came out at the age of forty-three.)
I would certainly recommend this title for any collection - public, academic, women's studies. It can be sampled selectively or read straight through.
Most chapters close with annotated references. There is an index and the appendix lists the publication dates of the essays. - from Amzon
Number of Copies
1
Library | Accession‎ No | Call No | Copy No | Edition | Location | Availability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Main | 1097 | 306.8 MUR | 1 | Yes |