Community Conversation => Non-binary talk => Topic started by: Jaimey on March 22, 2011, 01:18:19 AM Return to Full Version
Title: Published uses of "androgyne"
Post by: Jaimey on March 22, 2011, 01:18:19 AM
Post by: Jaimey on March 22, 2011, 01:18:19 AM
So I happened to read some Adrienne Rich for a class (211 pages!!! He assigned 211 pages of reading and a research paper!!! SADIST!) and I came across a poem she wrote in 1972 (I think) called "The Stranger," where she says "I am the androgyne."
Anyway, it made me happy and I was curious what other published places we've seen the word "androgyne."
Anyway, it made me happy and I was curious what other published places we've seen the word "androgyne."
Title: Re: Published uses of "androgyne"
Post by: Shana A on March 22, 2011, 04:24:36 PM
Post by: Shana A on March 22, 2011, 04:24:36 PM
The first therapist I went to for dealing with transgender issues (only a couple of sessions, after which I found someone who specialized in them) loaned me a book which mentioned androgyne. I remember the word literally jumping out at me. I can't find the book, thus I must have been a good person and returned it :(
I just tried to find that book online, but no luck, however there are 231 books listed in an Amazon.com search of androgyne.
This quote, which I have previously used as my signature, is from a source a couple of thousand years old. "The androgyne is in some things like men and in some things like women; in some things like both men and women; and in some things like neither men nor women." (Mishnah Tractate Zraim)
Z
I just tried to find that book online, but no luck, however there are 231 books listed in an Amazon.com search of androgyne.
This quote, which I have previously used as my signature, is from a source a couple of thousand years old. "The androgyne is in some things like men and in some things like women; in some things like both men and women; and in some things like neither men nor women." (Mishnah Tractate Zraim)
Z
Title: Re: Published uses of "androgyne"
Post by: Jaimey on March 22, 2011, 09:25:49 PM
Post by: Jaimey on March 22, 2011, 09:25:49 PM
Very nice. :) I don't know why, but seeing it in print makes me feel good.
Title: Re: Published uses of "androgyne"
Post by: Pica Pica on March 27, 2011, 07:34:25 AM
Post by: Pica Pica on March 27, 2011, 07:34:25 AM
I've got a book called, 'The Modern Androgyne Imagination'
amazon synopsis - 'Faced with the failure of the romantic muse and the other two-sex tropes for the imagination, writers such as James Joyce, William Faulkner and Virginia Woolf became attracted to a culturally specific notion of an androgynous imagination. This text explores the process by which this happened.'
The first chapter about the concept of androgyne was interested - but I don't like modernist writers all that much and got bored with the book.
amazon synopsis - 'Faced with the failure of the romantic muse and the other two-sex tropes for the imagination, writers such as James Joyce, William Faulkner and Virginia Woolf became attracted to a culturally specific notion of an androgynous imagination. This text explores the process by which this happened.'
The first chapter about the concept of androgyne was interested - but I don't like modernist writers all that much and got bored with the book.
Title: Re: Published uses of "androgyne"
Post by: Jaimey on March 27, 2011, 09:43:53 PM
Post by: Jaimey on March 27, 2011, 09:43:53 PM
Quote from: Pica Pica on March 27, 2011, 07:34:25 AM
The first chapter about the concept of androgyne was interested - but I don't like modernist writers all that much and got bored with the book.
Ahahaha! I don't care for them much either.