Skip to search
Skip to main content
Catalog
Help
Feedback
Your Account
Library Account
Bookmarks
(
0
)
Search History
Search in
Keyword
Title (keyword)
Author (keyword)
Subject (keyword)
Title starts with
Subject (browse)
Author (browse)
Author (sorted by title)
Call number (browse)
search for
Search
Advanced Search
Bookmarks
(
0
)
Princeton University Library Catalog
Start over
Cite
Send
to
SMS
Email
EndNote
RefWorks
RIS
Printer
Bookmark
Women together/women apart : portraits of lesbian Paris / Tirza True Latimer.
Author
Latimer, Tirza True
[Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/Created
New Brunswick, N.J. : Rutgers University Press, ©2005.
Description
1 online resource (xi, 211 pages) : illustrations
Availability
Available Online
JSTOR DDA
EBSCOhost LGBTQ+ Source
Ebook Central Perpetual, DDA and Subscription Titles
Details
Subject(s)
Lesbian artists
—
France
—
Paris
—
Biography
[Browse]
Lesbians
—
France
—
Paris
—
Biography
[Browse]
Arts, French
—
France
—
Paris
—
20th century
[Browse]
Paris (France)
—
Intellectual life
—
20th century
[Browse]
Related name
Project Muse
[Browse]
Library of Congress genre(s)
Biographies
[Browse]
Medium/Support
polychrome rdacc
illustration rdaill
Summary note
Annotation What does it mean to look like a lesbian? Though it remains impossible to conjure a definitive image that captures the breadth of this highly nuanced term, today at least we are able to consider an array of visual representations that have been put into circulation by lesbians themselves over the last six or seven decades. In the early twentieth century, however, no notion of lesbianism as a coherent social or cultural identity yet existed. In Women Together/Women Apart, Tirza True Latimer explores the revolutionary period between World War I and World War II when lesbian artists working in Paris began to shape the first visual models that gave lesbians a collective sense of identity and allowed them to recognize each other. Flocking to Paris from around the world, artists and performers such as Romaine Brooks, Claude Cahun, Marcel Moore, and Suzy Solidor used portraiture to theorize and visualize a "new breed" of feminine subject. The book focuses on problems of feminine and lesbian self-representation at a time and place where the rights of women to political, professional, economic, domestic, and sexual autonomy had yet to be acknowledged by the law. Under such circumstances, same-sex solidarity and relative independence from men held important political implications. Combining gender theory with visual, cultural, and historical analysis, Latimer draws a vivid picture of the impact of sexual politics on the cultural life of Paris during this key period. The book also illuminates the far-reaching consequences of lesbian portraiture on contemporary constructions of lesbian identity.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references (pages 185-199) and index.
Awards
Lambda Literary Awards (nominated), 2006
Source of description
Print version record.
Contents
Lesbian Paris between the wars
Romaine Brooks : portraits that look back
"Narcissus and Narcissus": Claude Cahun and Marcel Moore
Suzy Solidor and her likes.
Show 1 more Contents items
ISBN
0813541190 ((electronic bk.))
9780813541198 ((electronic bk.))
9786610947164
6610947163
OCLC
133165707
Statement on language in description
Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage.
Read more...
Other views
Staff view
Ask a Question
Suggest a Correction
Report Harmful Language
Supplementary Information
Other versions
Women together/women apart : portraits of lesbian Paris / Tirza True Latimer.
id
99125221619806421
Women together/women apart : portraits of lesbian Paris / Tirza True Latimer.
id
9946015423506421