L’historicisation de l’homosexualité dans La volonté de savoir : une des voies d’appropriation de Foucault par les études de genre

Foucault is now an major reference for gender studies and feminist studies. This raises a paradox at first sight: he never explicitly used gender as a category in his work, and he made few, if any, references to feminist studies that were contemporary to him. In this paper, we will point out one of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Julie Mazaleigue-Labaste
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Genre, Sexualité et Société 2019-06-01
Series:Genre, Sexualité et Société
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/gss/5515
id doaj-a9d15a61915a428f9f5362497454feba
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a9d15a61915a428f9f5362497454feba2020-11-25T02:03:49ZfraGenre, Sexualité et SociétéGenre, Sexualité et Société2104-37362019-06-012110.4000/gss.5515L’historicisation de l’homosexualité dans La volonté de savoir : une des voies d’appropriation de Foucault par les études de genreJulie Mazaleigue-LabasteFoucault is now an major reference for gender studies and feminist studies. This raises a paradox at first sight: he never explicitly used gender as a category in his work, and he made few, if any, references to feminist studies that were contemporary to him. In this paper, we will point out one of the ways Foucault has become a central reference for gender studies: the reception in the early gay and lesbian studies (before the queer turn) of the project of historicization of sexual identity in The Will to Knowledge. In the political and academic context of sexual liberation and gay and lesbian activism in North America in the 1970s and early 1980s, the reception of The Willing to Knowledge led gay and lesbian studies to focus on a particular moment in the text: the anti-essentialist history of homosexuality, homosexuality being conceived as a historical and political production that articulates gender identity, sexual orientation, and normalization.http://journals.openedition.org/gss/5515FoucaultThe Will to Knowledgehomosexualitygendergay and lesbian studies
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julie Mazaleigue-Labaste
spellingShingle Julie Mazaleigue-Labaste
L’historicisation de l’homosexualité dans La volonté de savoir : une des voies d’appropriation de Foucault par les études de genre
Genre, Sexualité et Société
Foucault
The Will to Knowledge
homosexuality
gender
gay and lesbian studies
author_facet Julie Mazaleigue-Labaste
author_sort Julie Mazaleigue-Labaste
title L’historicisation de l’homosexualité dans La volonté de savoir : une des voies d’appropriation de Foucault par les études de genre
title_short L’historicisation de l’homosexualité dans La volonté de savoir : une des voies d’appropriation de Foucault par les études de genre
title_full L’historicisation de l’homosexualité dans La volonté de savoir : une des voies d’appropriation de Foucault par les études de genre
title_fullStr L’historicisation de l’homosexualité dans La volonté de savoir : une des voies d’appropriation de Foucault par les études de genre
title_full_unstemmed L’historicisation de l’homosexualité dans La volonté de savoir : une des voies d’appropriation de Foucault par les études de genre
title_sort l’historicisation de l’homosexualité dans la volonté de savoir : une des voies d’appropriation de foucault par les études de genre
publisher Genre, Sexualité et Société
series Genre, Sexualité et Société
issn 2104-3736
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Foucault is now an major reference for gender studies and feminist studies. This raises a paradox at first sight: he never explicitly used gender as a category in his work, and he made few, if any, references to feminist studies that were contemporary to him. In this paper, we will point out one of the ways Foucault has become a central reference for gender studies: the reception in the early gay and lesbian studies (before the queer turn) of the project of historicization of sexual identity in The Will to Knowledge. In the political and academic context of sexual liberation and gay and lesbian activism in North America in the 1970s and early 1980s, the reception of The Willing to Knowledge led gay and lesbian studies to focus on a particular moment in the text: the anti-essentialist history of homosexuality, homosexuality being conceived as a historical and political production that articulates gender identity, sexual orientation, and normalization.
topic Foucault
The Will to Knowledge
homosexuality
gender
gay and lesbian studies
url http://journals.openedition.org/gss/5515
work_keys_str_mv AT juliemazaleiguelabaste lhistoricisationdelhomosexualitedanslavolontedesavoirunedesvoiesdappropriationdefoucaultparlesetudesdegenre
_version_ 1724945532892217344