Susan's Place Logo

News:

Based on internal web log processing I show 3,417,511 Users made 5,324,115 Visits Accounting for 199,729,420 pageviews and 8.954.49 TB of data transfer for 2017, all on a little over $2,000 per month.

Help support this website by Donating or Subscribing! (Updated)

Main Menu

From Sappho to ‘Fried Green Tomatoes’

Started by Shana A, May 29, 2010, 08:34:16 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Shana A

From Sappho to 'Fried Green Tomatoes'
By KATHRYN HARRISON
Published: May 20, 2010

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/30/books/review/Harrison-t.html

Were an intelligent, determined scholar to set herself the task of sifting through the last thousand years of Western culture's literary output, would she be able to discern a "historical moment when something changed in the way women's love was experienced and interpreted"? The short answer is no, not really. The longer answer is "Inseparable: Desire Between Women in Literature," by the novelist, playwright and literary critic Emma Donoghue.

Those literary historians whose "scores of studies" Donoghue consulted identified two trends: After 1500, British literature betrays an "increasing interest" in love between women; and late-19th-century medicine introduced popular culture to lesbians as a "clearly defined type." Apart from these gross and easily observable shifts, the rest of Western literature has remained a relatively uncharted territory with respect to tracking the subject of desire between women.
"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken." Oscar Wilde


  •