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Feminist Theory
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Feminism and its ghosts

The spectre of the feminist-as-lesbian

Victoria Hesford

State Unversity of New York at Stony Brook, vhesford{at}notes.cc.sunysb.edu

This article contends that feminism is haunted by its past, and that to be haunted means that feminists need to bear witness to the possibilities, often unrealized, of that past and to actively resist the policing and defensiveness that have marked feminism's relationship to its diverse history in recent years. It engages with the work of Terry Castle and Avery Gordon in order to make this argument, and to map out a methodology for looking for the ghosts of the recent feminist past. In looking for one such ghost - the figure of the feminist-as-lesbian - the article asks, how does the trope of the apparitional in lesbian cultural visibility structure cultural memories of the second wave movement? To that end the article discusses the presence of the ghost in a recent feminist/queer study of feminist historicity and in the popular press respectively. The final section looks back to the 1980s in order to trace the connections between then and now, and, therefore, something of what the ghost wants us to remember.

Key Words: feminist-as-lesbian • ghosts • haunting • history • queer • second wave feminism

Feminist Theory, Vol. 6, No. 3, 227-250 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/1464700105057361


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